New Mexico Notary Guide

Notary Record Retention — Journal Requirements by State

Every remote online notarization must be recorded and retained. Understanding your state's record retention requirements protects you legally and ensures compliance. Here's what you need to know. This guide is specific to New Mexico and reflects current state laws and best practices.

The Electronic Journal Requirement

Most RON states require notaries to maintain an electronic journal of all remote notarizations. Each journal entry must typically include: date and time of the notarization, type of notarial act, description of the document, signer's name and identity verification method, and the notary's electronic signature.

Audio-Visual Recording Requirements

A complete AV recording of every RON session is required in virtually all RON states. The recording must capture the entire session from KBA through final signature. Storage requirements vary: most states require 5–10 years. Your RON platform typically handles recording storage — confirm their policy.

Retention Periods by State (Summary)

Common retention requirements: 5 years (majority of states), 7 years (some states), 10 years (a few states like Texas require 10 years for some records). When in doubt, retain longer. Our complete guide has the exact requirement for every state.

What Happens If You Don't Comply?

Failure to maintain required records can result in: suspension or revocation of your notary commission, civil liability if a dispute arises and records can't be produced, and fines from your state regulatory body. The good news: compliant RON platforms handle most of this automatically.

Best Practices for Record Management

Beyond your platform's automatic recording: (1) Maintain your own separate electronic journal as a backup, (2) Keep a copy of each signer's identity documents (some states require this), (3) Set up automated retention reminders, (4) Review your platform's data retention policy annually, (5) Know your state's rules for what happens if you move or retire your commission.

How This Applies in New Mexico

New Mexico Status

✅ RON Authorized

Key Information

Commission fee: $20

Note: Notary laws change frequently. For the most current New Mexico notary regulations, always check the New Mexico Secretary of State.

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