Ohio Notary Requirements: How to Become a Notary 2026
Ohio notary requirements guide. Learn eligibility, education, exam, application, and online notary rules to become a notary public in Ohio.
Ohio Notary Requirements: What You Need to Know
Becoming a notary public in Ohio isn't complicated, but there are specific notary requirements in Ohio you need to meet before you can start notarizing documents. The Ohio Secretary of State oversees notary commissioning in the state, and the process has been modernized significantly over the past few years — including the addition of online notarization options that have expanded what Ohio notaries can do.
Whether you're looking to become a notary for your employer, as a side service, or to meet the needs of your community, this guide covers everything from basic eligibility through the exam, application, and commission process. We'll also cover the Ohio online notary requirements, which are separate from traditional in-person notarization.
Basic Ohio Notary Eligibility
Before you can apply for a notary commission in Ohio, you need to meet these baseline requirements:
- Age: You must be at least 18 years old.
- Residency or employment: You must either reside in Ohio or have a place of employment in Ohio. You don't have to live in Ohio — working in the state qualifies you.
- No felony convictions: You cannot have been convicted of a felony or a crime involving dishonesty or moral turpitude. Misdemeanors don't automatically disqualify you, but felonies do.
- Legal eligibility: You must be legally authorized to work in the United States.
Ohio doesn't require that you be a U.S. citizen — legal work authorization is the standard. This is worth knowing if you're on a work visa and want to become a notary in connection with your employment.
The Ohio Notary Education Requirement
Ohio requires all new notary applicants to complete a three-hour notary education course before applying for their commission. This requirement was introduced as part of the Notary Public Modernization Act and applies to all first-time applicants — there's no exemption for attorneys or other professionals.
The course must be taken through a provider approved by the Ohio Secretary of State. Several providers offer the course online, making it easy to complete at your own pace. Topics covered include:
- Ohio notary law and statutory requirements
- Types of notarial acts (acknowledgments, jurats, copy certifications, etc.)
- Signer identification requirements
- Proper completion of notarial certificates
- Misconduct, prohibited acts, and liability
- Recordkeeping and journal requirements
After completing the education course, you'll receive a completion certificate from your provider. Keep it — you'll need it for your application.
The Ohio Notary Exam
After completing the education course, you must pass a notary exam administered through the Ohio Secretary of State's approved testing system. The exam tests your knowledge of Ohio notary law and the content covered in the required education course.
Key details about the Ohio notary exam:
- The exam is taken online through an approved testing provider
- You need to pass with a score of at least 80%
- The exam is multiple choice
- If you don't pass, you can retake it — most providers allow retakes after a waiting period
Most candidates who complete the three-hour education course find the exam straightforward. The content directly mirrors what's covered in the course, so thorough engagement with the course material is your primary preparation tool. Using Ohio notary test questions in practice format helps reinforce the concepts before you sit for the official exam.
Applying for Your Ohio Notary Commission
Once you've passed the exam, here's the application process through the Ohio Secretary of State:
- Submit your application online. The Ohio Secretary of State's office processes notary applications through their online portal. You'll need to create an account if you don't have one.
- Pay the application fee. The state filing fee is $15. Your education provider may also charge its own fees separately.
- Provide your exam completion documentation. Your testing provider will typically submit this directly to the Secretary of State's system, but confirm this with your provider.
- Background check. Ohio requires a background check as part of the application process. This is handled through the state system and is not something you need to arrange separately.
- Receive your commission. Once approved, your commission certificate is issued electronically. Print it and keep it with your notary supplies.
Ohio notary commissions are valid for five years. Renewal requires taking the education course and passing the exam again — there's no grandfather clause for experienced notaries.
Ohio Online Notary Requirements
Ohio is one of a growing number of states with an active remote online notarization (RON) framework. Ohio online notary requirements are separate from and in addition to the standard notary requirements — you need to be a commissioned traditional notary first, then apply for authorization to perform online notarizations.
Additional requirements to perform remote online notarizations in Ohio:
- Traditional Ohio notary commission: You must hold an active Ohio notary commission before applying for RON authorization.
- Approved RON platform: You must use a technology platform that has been approved by the Ohio Secretary of State for remote notarization. These platforms handle identity verification, audio-visual recording, and digital signature requirements.
- Additional education: Ohio requires additional training specifically on remote notarization procedures before you can perform online notarizations.
- Electronic seal and signature: You need an electronic notary seal and signature that meets Ohio's technical standards.
RON authorization in Ohio lets you notarize documents for signers anywhere in the country (and in many cases, internationally) without anyone being physically present in the same room. This is particularly valuable for real estate closings, estate planning documents, and business transactions where parties are in different locations. Review the full Ohio notary rules for complete statutory details on both traditional and online notarization procedures.
Ohio Notary Supplies and Recordkeeping
After you're commissioned, you'll need to get your supplies in order. Ohio notaries are required to:
Maintain a notary journal. Ohio law requires notaries to keep a journal of all notarial acts they perform. The journal must record the date and time of the notarization, the type of notarial act, a description of the document notarized, the signer's name and address, the type of identification used to verify the signer, and the fee charged (if any).
Use a compliant notary seal. Your seal must include your name, the words "Notary Public, State of Ohio," and your commission expiration date. You can use either an inked rubber stamp or an embossing seal for paper documents.
Protect your seal and journal. If your seal is lost or stolen, you must report it to the Ohio Secretary of State immediately. Your journal is your official record of notarial acts and should be stored securely.
Understanding Ohio notary services you're authorized to perform — and prohibited from performing — is also essential. Ohio notaries cannot give legal advice, cannot prepare legal documents for others, and cannot notarize their own signature or documents in which they have a financial interest.
Notary Misconduct and What to Avoid
Ohio takes notary misconduct seriously. The Secretary of State has authority to revoke or suspend commissions and may refer cases to the attorney general for additional action. The most common violations that get Ohio notaries into trouble include:
Notarizing without the signer present. In-person notarization requires physical presence unless you're authorized for RON. Notarizing a document for someone who signed it elsewhere — even if you know them and trust them — is misconduct. Full stop.
Failing to verify identity. You must properly verify the signer's identity using acceptable forms of ID. Relying on personal familiarity or skipping ID verification entirely is prohibited.
Incomplete certificates. A notarial certificate that's missing required information — your signature, seal, commission expiration date, or the venue — isn't valid. Knowingly completing an incomplete certificate creates liability for you.
Practicing law without a license. Ohio notaries who are not attorneys cannot give legal advice, explain the legal effect of documents, or recommend legal courses of action. Many clients will ask for your opinion on what a document means — the right answer is always to refer them to an attorney.
The Ohio notary misconduct practice tests here cover the types of prohibited conduct that appear on the official exam. Working through these before your exam is worthwhile — the misconduct scenarios are among the more nuanced questions you'll face, and they require understanding not just what the rules say but why they exist. Knowing how to become a notary in Ohio is only the beginning — staying commissioned requires operating within the rules consistently throughout your five-year term.
About the Author
Attorney & Bar Exam Preparation Specialist
Yale Law SchoolJames R. Hargrove is a practicing attorney and legal educator with a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School and an LLM in Constitutional Law. With over a decade of experience coaching bar exam candidates across multiple jurisdictions, he specializes in MBE strategy, state-specific essay preparation, and multistate performance test techniques.