Oklahoma Notary Guide
What Documents Can a Remote Online Notary Notarize?
Remote online notaries can notarize a wide range of documents. Understanding which documents have the highest demand — and which have restrictions — helps you target the right market and maximize your income. This guide is specific to Oklahoma and reflects current state laws and best practices.
Common Documents for RON
The most frequently notarized documents via RON include: Affidavits and sworn statements, Power of Attorney documents, Medical directives and healthcare proxies, Wills and trusts (where state law permits), Real estate deeds and title transfers, Loan documents and refinancing packages, Business agreements and contracts, Vehicle title transfers, Immigration documents, and Financial account opening documents.
High-Value: Loan Signing Packages
Loan signing packages (refinances, purchase mortgages, HELOCs) are the highest-earning document type for notaries. A single loan package can earn $100–$200+. These require the notary to guide signers through 100–200 pages of loan documents, notarizing the key pages. Loan Signing Agent (LSA) certification is strongly recommended.
Estate Planning Documents
Wills, trusts, powers of attorney, and medical directives are growing RON segments. Many attorneys now use RON services for client document execution. Note: Some states have specific restrictions on remotely notarized wills — always check state law. Our guide covers every state's rules.
Documents with Restrictions
Certain documents may not be remotely notarizable in all states: I-9 Employment Eligibility forms (require physical presence), some vital records (birth/death certificates in certain states), and notarizations for use in countries that don't recognize RON. Always verify state-specific rules before accepting certain document types.
International Documents and Apostilles
Documents for international use often require an apostille (a certification verifying the notary's authenticity). RON notarizations are increasingly accepted internationally, but some countries still require traditional (wet ink) notarization. The Secretary of State's office in each state processes apostille requests.
How This Applies in Oklahoma
Note: Notary laws change frequently. For the most current Oklahoma notary regulations, always check the Oklahoma Secretary of State.
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