Pennsylvania requires all notary public applicants to pass a state-administered exam before receiving their commission. Unlike many other states that simply appoint notaries after an application, Pennsylvania tests your knowledge of the state's notary laws and regulations. That exam requirement makes practice tests an essential part of preparation—not optional.
The Pennsylvania notary exam covers the Revised Uniform Law on Notarial Acts (RULONA), the Pennsylvania Notary Public Law, and the rules that govern when, how, and for whom you can perform notarial acts. The exam is designed to ensure that new notaries understand both the procedural requirements and the legal limits of their authority before they start signing documents.
This guide walks you through what the PA notary practice test covers, how to use practice questions strategically, and what to prioritize in your preparation.
The Pennsylvania notary exam is a 30-question multiple-choice test. You need to score at least 80% (24 correct answers) to pass. The exam is administered online through the Pennsylvania Department of State's approved testing provider.
The exam is open-book in the sense that you can reference the Pennsylvania Notary Public Law and RULONA-related materials, but the time limit requires genuine familiarity with the content—you can't look up every answer from scratch. Candidates who prepare with practice questions consistently outperform those who try to wing it with the reference materials.
The exam must be completed within a specific timeframe after submitting your notary application. Review the Pennsylvania Department of State's current requirements for the exact window and any recent format changes.
Pennsylvania's notary exam draws from the statutory framework governing notaries in the state. Key content areas include:
You need to know what constitutes a valid notarial act in Pennsylvania, the required elements for each type of act, and what records or certificates must be generated. Pennsylvania RULONA covers acknowledgments, jurats (verifications on oath or affirmation), copy certifications, signature witnessing, and more. Each type has specific requirements for what the notary must do and what certificate language is needed.
How do you verify who you're notarizing for? Pennsylvania law specifies acceptable forms of identification, personal knowledge of the signer as an alternative, and what to do when identification is unclear or insufficient. This is one of the most heavily tested areas because it's also one of the most legally significant—improperly verified identity is a common source of notarial fraud.
Pennsylvania notaries must use an official seal (ink stamp) that meets specific requirements. The seal must include your name, commission number, state (Pennsylvania), and commission expiration date. Pennsylvania also has specific rules about maintaining a notary journal—including what information must be recorded for each act and how long records must be kept.
What can't a Pennsylvania notary do? The exam tests your understanding of the limitations on notarial authority: notaries can't notarize their own documents or documents in which they have a beneficial interest, can't provide legal advice, and can't perform certain acts that fall outside notarial authority. Knowing the limits is as important as knowing what you can do.
Pennsylvania law outlines what constitutes notarial misconduct and the disciplinary consequences. Exam questions on this topic often test whether you can identify prohibited conduct and understand why it's prohibited.
Pennsylvania has enacted laws permitting Remote Online Notarization (RON). The exam includes questions on the requirements for electronic notarizations and RON, including the technological standards and how identification works in remote contexts.
The 30-question format and 80% passing threshold mean you can only miss six questions. That's tighter than it sounds—preparation needs to be thorough, not just general.
Before studying, take a full practice test to identify your starting point. Which content areas do you already understand? Where are the gaps? This tells you where to focus your study time instead of reviewing everything equally.
Pennsylvania's notary laws are your primary study material. Read through the relevant sections of the Pennsylvania Notary Public Law and RULONA carefully before doing extensive practice. Understanding the legal framework helps you reason through questions you haven't seen before—pure memorization of practice question answers doesn't prepare you for novel scenarios.
Don't just check whether you got the right answer—understand why each wrong answer was wrong. On the actual exam, you'll encounter scenarios that don't exactly match any practice question you've seen. Reasoning from principles is what gets you through those questions. Knowing that "answer C was wrong because the identification requirement specifies current government-issued photo ID" trains you better than just noting "the answer was A."
Practice at least one timed test in the days before your exam. Familiarity with the question types reduces the cognitive load on exam day, letting you focus on the actual content rather than the process.
Based on the Pennsylvania notary exam's documented content areas, these topics deserve extra attention in your preparation:
Passing the exam is one piece of becoming a PA notary. Pennsylvania's full requirements include:
Pennsylvania's requirements are more involved than many other states—the mandatory education course, exam, and bond are all required before you can operate as a notary. Knowing this helps you plan your timeline: budget 2–4 weeks from application to commission, depending on how quickly each step moves.
Pennsylvania is in a smaller group of states that mandate a formal exam for notary commission. Many states don't test applicants at all. Pennsylvania's approach reflects the General Assembly's judgment that the stakes of notarial acts—authentication of legal documents, identity verification, prevention of fraud—warrant a competency check before someone receives the authority to perform them.
For candidates coming from states without a notary exam, Pennsylvania's exam can feel surprising. But with the right preparation, the 30-question format is manageable. Most candidates who study with practice questions and review the relevant statutes pass on the first attempt.
Explore the PA Association of Notaries for continuing education resources and member support after you're commissioned.