Florida Notary Guide

Real Estate Closing Document Notarization

Real estate closings involve multiple notarized documents. Understanding the nuances of closing documents helps you perform notarizations correctly and avoid costly errors. This guide is specific to Florida and reflects current state laws and best practices.

Key Real Estate Documents That Require Notarization

Primary documents in a real estate closing that require notarization: warranty deeds, quit claim deeds, mortgages and deed of trust, promissory notes, title transfer affidavits, and closing disclosure documents. Each has specific notarization requirements.

Deed Notarization Requirements

Deeds typically require acknowledgment (not jurat). Both grantor and grantee must appear and acknowledge their signatures. For married couples, both spouses must sign and acknowledge (in most states). Verify the deed is properly prepared before notarizing—improper deeds cause title issues later.

Mortgage and Promissory Note Considerations

Mortgages and notes require acknowledgment of all signers (borrower and co-signer). Some states have specific requirements for mortgage notarization. Verify the mortgage matches the property and loan amount—errors compound downstream in the transaction.

Settlement Statement Notarization

Settlement statements (HUD-1 or Closing Disclosure) may require notarization depending on the transaction type. Verify what documents actually need notarization with the title company—not every closing document requires a notary seal.

Closing Day Coordination

For in-person closings: coordinate with the title company on timing, ensure all parties are present, prepare the right notary certificates for each document, have blue pens available, and allow time for questions. RON closings require similar preparation but with platform coordination instead.

How This Applies in Florida

Florida Status

✅ RON Authorized (Pioneer State)

Key Information

Commission fee: $39

Note: Notary laws change frequently. For the most current Florida notary regulations, always check the Florida Department of State.

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