State knowledge

State-by-state apostille notes

Research state timing, official-source links, certified-copy requirements, online notary notes, and practical document handling before you send documents.

State knowledge

State-by-state research lives here.

The state service pages answer the immediate question. This library holds the broader research: timing, certified-copy rules, state quirks, online notary interactions, non-Hague legalization notes, shipping caveats, and official-source links.

Use these notes as practical guidance

Use this page as practical guidance, not a guarantee. State offices, couriers, document requirements, and counter rules can change without notice.

The machine-readable version is available at /state-knowledge.json, with per-state feeds at /state-knowledge/florida.json, /state-knowledge/california.json, and other state slugs.

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Current state notes

Timing, requirements, and official-source links.

This library will keep growing as state offices change and more practical questions come up.

Florida

Florida apostille notes

Florida is central to the Notary Geek online notary service because Florida commissioned online notaries commonly handle signer-created documents before apostille or legalization.

Common documents: Florida agency records, Florida notarized documents, court or clerk records, vital records, school records, vehicle titles, and signer-created documents notarized by a Florida online notary.

Timing: Florida apostilles tied to the online notary service are usually back on the 3rd business day, sometimes sooner. In-person Florida handling usually needs an extra business day for FedEx transit.

Keep in mind: What is needed depends on whether the document is an official record, a certified copy, or a document that first needs a Florida notary act.

Source confidence: Medium until the exact document, issuing authority, destination country, and current official-office instructions are confirmed.

Last reviewed: 2026-05-10

What must be confirmed
  • The exact document type and whether it is an official record, certified copy, notarized signer-created document, or federal document.
  • The issuing authority and whether that authority is state, county, court, federal, school, business, or private.
  • The destination country or receiving institution, including whether apostille, authentication, embassy legalization, or another route is required.
Florida law highlights
  • Florida Statutes Chapter 117 separates general notary provisions from Part II online notarizations.
  • Under s. 117.209, a Florida online notary physically located in Florida may perform an online notarization regardless of where the principal or witnesses are located, and validity is determined by Florida law.
  • Florida law includes specific credential rules that support foreign signer identity verification for principals outside the United States.
  • Under s. 117.265, online notarization uses audio-video communication technology and requires identity confirmation through credential analysis and identity proofing.
  • Under s. 117.245, online notarization electronic journals and audio-video recordings are retained for at least 10 years after the notarial act.
  • Under s. 117.225, Florida online notary registration requires a current notary commission, online-notary education, a $25,000 bond, and $25,000 errors and omissions insurance.
  • Under s. 117.275, the online notarial act fee is capped, while services other than notarial acts, including online notary service-provider services, are not governed by that section.
  • Under ss. 117.05 and 117.107, blank or incomplete documents, prohibited family notarizations, financial-interest conflicts, and notarized copies of vital or public records remain important guardrails.

Florida Department of State apostille and notarial certification page

Open Florida JSON

Florida Notary Law, Chapter 117

Florida Department of State notary public and online notary resources

Open Florida misconception note

California

California apostille notes

California apostille service often depends on whether the document must be apostilled directly from a California public official signature or whether it can be notarized first through a different valid notary route. California notary law only matters when the issue actually turns on a California notarial act.

Common documents: California state records, county-issued records, California notarized documents, business records, non-certifiable California-origin documents, signer-created private documents, and questions about California acknowledgments, jurats, subscribing witnesses, copy certification, journal entries, or staged online-notarization rules.

Timing: California handled apostille turnaround is usually 1-2 business days for eligible requests because Notary Geek uses the in-person California handling method when the document must go through California.

Keep in mind: The 1-2 business day California turnaround is a practical Notary Geek handled-route expectation based on live-person/in-person California handling, not a blanket California Secretary of State guarantee. Timing starts from receipt in California when physical delivery is required. County-level steps, document defects, state counter rules, and the difference between California-notary issues and broader apostille-routing issues can change what is needed.

Source confidence: High for Notary Geek operating experience about loose-certificate acceptance risk; official California source should still be checked for the exact notarial act, certificate wording, and apostille instructions.

Last reviewed: 2026-05-10

What must be confirmed
  • Whether the document is a California public-official record, a county record, a California-notarized document, a federal document, or a signer-created private document.
  • Whether the document is directly apostillable from a California public official or certified California official record; if not, whether a Florida online notarization plus Florida apostille is the cleaner route.
  • If the document is already notarized by a California notary, whether the notarization was done correctly before deciding to apostille it through California.
California law highlights
  • The 2026 California Notary Public Handbook calls itself the official source of laws related to notaries in California and should be used together with the statute when a California notary issue is in play.
  • California's Online Notarization Act is operative in stages. Recognition provisions and some related sections became operative on January 1, 2024, Government Code section 8231.18 became operative on January 1, 2025, and the broader remote-online-notary appointment and duty provisions become operative when the Secretary of State completes implementation or by January 1, 2030, whichever is earlier.
  • California notary rules matter when the question turns on a California notarial act, certificate, identification rule, journal rule, subscribing witness issue, signature-by-mark issue, or tangible copy certification question.
  • The handbook emphasizes one active sequential journal at a time, detailed identification recording requirements, thumbprint rules for specified documents, and refusal of incomplete documents.
  • The handbook also highlights California-specific guardrails around jurats, subscribing witnesses, signature by mark, and tangible copy certification tied to Government Code section 27201.1.
  • California notaries should not be treated like Florida or Texas notaries for copy-certification authority. California copy-certification options are narrow, and a California notary generally cannot simply certify a printout from a record or certify copies in the broader way Florida or Texas may allow.

California Secretary of State apostille request page

Open California JSON

California Government Code Chapter 3, Notaries Public

California Secretary of State notary handbook and forms

Open California service resources

Open California misconception note

Wyoming

Wyoming apostille notes

Wyoming requests are common for international company documents where a business record and a signer-created document may need separate handling.

Common documents: Wyoming company records, certified copies, status documents, registered-agent or address-adjacent questions, USPS Form 1583/mailbox questions, and related signer-created documents such as operating agreements, authorizations, POAs, or UBO letters.

Timing: Wyoming handled turnaround is usually around 4 days or less, but it can vary with the Wyoming state queue.

Keep in mind: Wyoming timing can change when the state queue slows down or the person who processes the request at the state is out of the office. Many Wyoming customers are forming or have recently formed companies and may also be choosing addresses, mailboxes, or registered-agent services. Signer-created documents in the same order may still need a separate online notary step.

Source confidence: medium: strong operating knowledge about company/address/1583 adjacency, with state timing and official-record requirements confirmed against Wyoming sources before quoting

Last reviewed: 2026-05-10

What must be confirmed
  • whether the company already exists or is still being formed
  • company name and Wyoming filing status
  • whether the customer needs a certified company record, status document, apostille, address/mailbox support, USPS Form 1583, or a notarized signer-created document

Wyoming Secretary of State apostille request form

Open Wyoming JSON

Open Wyoming service resources

Delaware

Delaware apostille notes

Delaware apostille requests are often business-record focused and require careful separation between certified records and signer-created documents.

Common documents: Delaware business records, certified copies, status documents, formation records, registered-agent or address-adjacent questions, USPS Form 1583/mailbox questions, and related company paperwork for international use.

Timing: Notary Geek generally orders Delaware apostilles and certified Delaware documents only when the Delaware 24-hour rush tier or higher service level is being used. In most handled Delaware matters, the rush tier is 24-hour and the practical customer turnaround is usually around three days after the route and document availability are confirmed.

Keep in mind: Ordinary non-rush Delaware orders are usually better handled directly through the Delaware source office or another self-service path. Business-record timing can change around state office handling and courier needs, and the three-day practical turnaround is an operating expectation rather than a state guarantee. Many Delaware customers are forming or have recently formed companies and may also be choosing addresses, mailboxes, or registered-agent services. Confirm the document type and company status before assuming a timeline.

Source confidence: medium-high for Notary Geek operating scope on Delaware rush handling; official Delaware timing, fees, and document eligibility still need confirmation before quoting

Last reviewed: 2026-05-10

What must be confirmed
  • whether the company already exists or is still being formed
  • company name and Delaware filing status
  • whether the customer needs a certified copy, certificate of status, apostille, address/mailbox support, USPS Form 1583, or a notarized signer-created document

Delaware Division of Corporations apostille and authentication page

Open Delaware JSON

Open Delaware service resources

Georgia

Georgia apostille notes

Georgia state apostille work exists in the Notary Geek knowledge base, but it is lower-volume than Florida, California, Delaware, Wyoming, and country-of-Georgia destination work.

Common documents: Georgia state or county records, Georgia Corporations Division certified copies, Georgia notarized documents, school records, court records, vital records, and business records for international use.

Timing: Georgia state timing should be checked against GSCCCA before quoting. It is not currently a high-volume Notary Geek state lane.

Keep in mind: Do not confuse GA state apostille work with GE country-of-Georgia destination work. Many legacy Georgia company requests are about documents for use in the country of Georgia, not records issued by the U.S. state.

Source confidence: Medium: official GSCCCA source identified, but Notary Geek treats GA state as lower-volume and confirms live office rules before quoting.

Last reviewed: 2026-05-11

What must be confirmed
  • Whether Georgia means GA, the U.S. state, or GE, the country.
  • Whether the document originated from a Georgia state, county, court, school, or business-record authority.
  • Whether the destination country is a Hague Apostille Convention country or needs another route.
Georgia law highlights
  • GSCCCA says it is the only state agency authorized to issue apostilles for documents originating in the State of Georgia.
  • GSCCCA separates apostilles from Georgia Secretary of State Great Seal certification for documents going to non-Hague destination countries.
  • Georgia state and county records should be handled as official records or certified copies, not casually converted into notarized copy statements.

Georgia Superior Court Clerks' Cooperative Authority apostille information

Open Georgia JSON

GSCCCA walk-in service suspension notice

Open Georgia misconception note

Ohio

Ohio apostille notes

Ohio apostille requests often depend on whether the document is a state record, county record, court record, school record, business record, notarized document, or signer-created document.

Common documents: Ohio birth, marriage, death, court, school, business, notarized, county, and signer-created documents for international use.

Timing: Ohio state processing is currently about 1 business day in Notary Geek operating experience. Practical Notary Geek round-trip turnaround is usually about 3 days after the route and document availability are confirmed.

Keep in mind: The 1-day Ohio state processing note is an operating timing signal, not a guarantee. Total customer timing still depends on document source, courier movement, certified-copy or county/court/school prerequisites, notarization defects, and whether the original must move physically.

Source confidence: medium-high for Notary Geek operating timing; official Ohio source, prerequisite steps, and document eligibility still need confirmation before quoting

Last reviewed: 2026-05-10

What must be confirmed
  • whether the document is an Ohio official record, county record, court record, school record, business record, notarized document, or signer-created private document
  • whether a certified copy, county/court/school prerequisite, or notary correction is needed before apostille
  • whether an original or certified copy must move physically

Ohio Secretary of State apostilles and certifications page

Open Ohio JSON

New York

New York apostille notes

New York apostille requests often depend on whether the document is a state record, county or city record, court record, school record, business record, or signer-created document.

Common documents: New York birth, marriage, death, court, school, company, notarized, county, city, and signer-created documents for international use.

Timing: New York handled apostille turnaround is usually 1-2 business days for eligible company-record requests when Notary Geek can obtain the company record online and the route is clean. Other New York document types may take longer.

Keep in mind: The 1-2 day New York turnaround is a Notary Geek handled-route expectation for clean eligible paths, not a blanket state guarantee. Vital records and other physical originals or certified copies may need to be shipped to Notary Geek before the apostille handling clock starts. Timing can also change when the document needs county clerk authentication, city/county source work, court handling, school verification, a notary correction, courier movement, or another prerequisite before the state apostille step.

Source confidence: medium-high for Notary Geek handled-route timing; official New York source, prerequisite authentication, and document eligibility still need confirmation before quoting

Last reviewed: 2026-05-10

What must be confirmed
  • whether the document is a New York official record, county/city record, court record, school record, notarized document, business record, or signer-created private document
  • whether county clerk, city, school, court, or other prerequisite authentication is needed before apostille
  • whether the original or a certified copy must move physically

New York Department of State apostille or certificate of authentication page

Open New York JSON

New Mexico

New Mexico apostille notes

New Mexico is useful to track separately because the apostille process is more manual than some faster states and because some customers are also thinking about company, address, mailbox, or formation choices.

Common documents: New Mexico state records, notarized documents, certified copies, business or company records, address-adjacent questions, USPS Form 1583/mailbox questions, and documents that require state authentication before foreign use.

Timing: New Mexico is a semi-manual process and usually takes about a week.

Keep in mind: Timing can vary with state handling, document defects, mail or courier timing, whether the document needs a notary or certified-copy step first, and whether the customer is still choosing a company/address/mailbox setup.

Source confidence: medium: timing and state-source path are known at a practical level, but company/address/1583 adjacency should be confirmed from customer intent before routing

Last reviewed: 2026-05-10

What must be confirmed
  • whether the customer needs a state apostille, company/address help, mailbox support, lease option context, USPS Form 1583, or a notary-first document route
  • whether a company already exists or is still being formed
  • issuing office and certified-copy status

New Mexico Secretary of State authentication and apostille information

Open New Mexico JSON

Texas

Texas apostille notes

Texas notary and online notarization questions often turn on Chapter 406 itself, especially when people mix traditional notary rules, online notarization rules, and tangible-document procedures.

Common documents: Texas traditional notarizations, Texas online notarizations, tangible documents signed during online sessions, oath administration questions, bond and exemption questions, and record-keeping issues.

Timing: Texas entries in this library are usually about legal standards and online-notary procedures rather than apostille timing.

Keep in mind: Texas notary questions should be checked against Chapter 406, current Texas Secretary of State materials, and current Texas online-notary standards. The statute and SOS materials matter more than recycled training summaries.

Source confidence: Medium until the exact document, issuing authority, destination country, and current official-office instructions are confirmed.

Last reviewed: 2026-05-10

What must be confirmed
  • The exact document type and whether it is an official record, certified copy, notarized signer-created document, or federal document.
  • The issuing authority and whether that authority is state, county, court, federal, school, business, or private.
  • The destination country or receiving institution, including whether apostille, authentication, embassy legalization, or another route is required.
Texas law highlights
  • Texas Chapter 406 governs both traditional notaries and online notaries, with Subchapter C covering online notarization.
  • Texas online notarization identity verification uses personal knowledge or the combination of remote presentation, credential analysis, and identity proofing.
  • Texas section 406.1103 addresses online notarization procedures for tangible documents, including the declaration and timing requirements tied to the signed paper document.
  • Texas section 406.1107 addresses online oath and affirmation procedures.
  • Texas Secretary of State materials should be checked alongside the statute for current online-notary application, record, and digital-certificate guidance.

Texas Government Code Chapter 406

Open Texas JSON

Texas Secretary of State online notary getting started

Texas Government Code Chapter 406

Open Texas misconception note

Virginia

Virginia apostille notes

Virginia remote online notarization questions often become law-and-identity questions because platform habits, title-industry policies, and training summaries do not always track the statute.

Common documents: Virginia remote online notarizations, identity-method questions, digital certificate questions, knowledge-based authentication questions, platform-compliance claims, and document-acceptance disputes.

Timing: Virginia questions in this library are usually about legal standards, identity methods, and common misconceptions rather than courier timing.

Keep in mind: Virginia's statute should be read carefully. A platform certification, title-company policy, industry habit, or attorney statement is not the same thing as statutory authority. Identity methods, digital certificates, credential analysis, biometric wording, and knowledge-based authentication are often discussed loosely in practice.

Source confidence: Medium until the exact document, issuing authority, destination country, and current official-office instructions are confirmed.

Last reviewed: 2026-05-10

What must be confirmed
  • The exact document type and whether it is an official record, certified copy, notarized signer-created document, or federal document.
  • The issuing authority and whether that authority is state, county, court, federal, school, business, or private.
  • The destination country or receiving institution, including whether apostille, authentication, embassy legalization, or another route is required.
Virginia law highlights
  • Virginia defines satisfactory evidence of identity in the statute itself, including personal knowledge, credible witnesses, and several remote identity methods. One key phrase is 'valid digital certificate accessed by biometric data,' which should not be casually collapsed into ordinary selfie or face-match platform flows. Most ordinary signers do not already have an X.509-backed certificate identity, smart card, or PIV-style credential.
  • Before July 1, 2024, KBA was not one of the listed Virginia remote/electronic notarization identity methods. The 2024 amendment added knowledge-based authentication as one listed option under Virginia's remote identity framework. That matters because Virginia's earlier public electronic-authentication guidance did not treat KBA as a high-assurance secret; the later statutory change should be read as a deliberate change in available notary identity methods, not as proof that KBA was always the Virginia remote-notary baseline.
  • Notary Geek's current Virginia position is broader than foreign signers. For pre-July-1-2024 on-demand Virginia online notarizations involving unknown signers, the central question is what statutory satisfactory-evidence path the Virginia notary actually used under the law in force on the transaction date. A platform-completed KBA, selfie, liveness, face-match, or credential-analysis workflow should not be backread as satisfying either the 2011 federal-credential structure or the later pre-KBA multi-method structure unless the statutory path is shown.
  • The wording around digital certificates, PIV credentials, biometric access, and other identity methods has caused widespread confusion in practice. The biometric reference should not be reduced to a generic selfie-to-ID comparison without checking the statutory language.
  • Virginia's public ITRM/IMSAC electronic-authentication guidance treats identity proofing, credentials, authenticators, KBA, and biometrics as distinct technical concepts. It defines KBA around public-database knowledge and says KBA does not constitute an acceptable secret for electronic authentication. Source: https://townhall.virginia.gov/L/GetFile.cfm?File=C%3A%5CTownHall%5Cdocroot%5CGuidanceDocs%5C1011%5CGDoc_IMSAC_6046_v1.pdf
  • The same public guidance explains that biometrics are behavioral or biological characteristics, a something-you-are factor, and may support enrollment, fraud detection, or unlocking authenticators. The requirements for biometric use depend on the governing trust framework. That supports Notary Geek's caution that biometric identity concepts should not be casually reduced to selfie capture, liveness checks, document analysis, or KBA.
  • Notary Geek operating note from a March 2025 Persona support exchange: Persona said KBA was offered in the past, but Persona does not offer Knowledge-Based Authentication to customers who do not already have it because of security limitations. Persona also described its current technology as credential analysis, not the KBA identity-proofing layer required in some state online-notary frameworks. This creates an important 2024-2025 compliance tension: Virginia added KBA as an option effective July 1, 2024, while a major identity vendor was limiting KBA availability for new customers. Grandfathered customers may still have KBA, so older platform assumptions should be checked carefully.
  • MISMO, platform certification, or vendor assurance should not be treated as a substitute for reading the state law. The notary still has to understand whether the notarial act and identity method are legally authorized.
  • For Virginia questions, Notary Geek compares the claim against the actual statutory language and separates law, platform behavior, title-industry policy, and repeated misconception.

Virginia Code section 47.1-2 definitions

Open Virginia JSON

Virginia Code section 47.1-2 satisfactory evidence of identity

Virginia Secretary of the Commonwealth notary public resources

Open Virginia misconception note

Florida source note

Florida notary misconception note

Florida questions often get blurred when people mix Florida official-record handling, Florida online notarization rules, and destination-country routing into one answer. These notes are for Florida-notary issues, not for replacing apostille-versus-legalization analysis.

Statute

Florida Notary Law, Chapter 117

Use the statute when the question is about a Florida notarial act, certificate, journal rule, identity method, or online-notarization procedure.

Open the Florida statute source

Secondary source

Florida Department of State notary public and online notary resources

Use the companion official guidance when the question is practical Florida procedure rather than general apostille routing.

Open the Florida companion source

Scope

Only when the issue is Florida notary law

Do not use Florida guidance as a shortcut for destination-country routing, federal authentication, or another state's notary law.

Florida online notarization rules matter when the issue is a Florida notarial act, a Florida online-notary procedure, or a signer-created document that actually uses a Florida notary step. They do not replace destination-country routing or another state's document rules.

A Florida online notary physically located in Florida may perform an online notarization regardless of where the principal or witnesses are located, when Florida's online-notary requirements are met. That point should not be blurred with destination-country acceptance or foreign-agency policy.

Foreign signers and signers outside the United States are a Florida-notary-law issue only for the identity and online-notary side of the act. That does not mean the customer decides apostille versus legalization afterward.

Florida online-notary identity confirmation, credential analysis, identity proofing, record retention, bond, and insurance requirements come from Chapter 117 itself. Platform summaries should be checked against the statute.

Blank or incomplete documents, prohibited family notarizations, financial-interest conflicts, and notarized copies of vital or public records remain Florida guardrails even when people casually talk as if 'online notarization' changes everything.

Florida online-notary fees and other service charges should not be collapsed into one loose rule. Chapter 117 caps the online notarial act fee, while other services are treated separately.

Florida-notary guidance should not be used as a shortcut for destination-country routing, federal authentication, or another state's notary law.

California source note

California notary misconception note

These points matter only when the issue actually turns on a California notary or California notarial certificate. They should not be used as shortcuts for destination-country routing, federal authentication, or non-California notary law.

Statute

California Government Code Chapter 3, Notaries Public

Use the statute when the question is about a California notarial act, certificate, journal rule, identity method, or online-notarization procedure.

Open the California statute source

Secondary source

California Secretary of State notary handbook and forms

Use the companion official guidance when the question is practical California procedure rather than general apostille routing.

Open the California companion source

Scope

Only when the issue is California notary law

Do not use California guidance as a shortcut for destination-country routing, federal authentication, or another state's notary law.

California notary law is not the deciding source just because the customer is in California. It matters when the notarial act itself is a California act or the document defect is in a California notarial certificate or procedure.

The customer does not decide apostille versus legalization. The destination country and the issuing authority determine that route. California notary law is a separate question from apostille routing.

California's online-notarization law is not a blanket signal that ordinary California remote online notarization is fully live in the same way people casually describe it. The handbook says the Online Notarization Act is operative in stages, with broader remote-online-notary implementation tied to the Secretary of State's project completion or January 1, 2030, whichever is earlier.

A California jurat still requires personal appearance, an oath or affirmation, the signature in the notary's presence, and the correct jurat wording. The handbook expressly says a jurat cannot be attached to a mailed or delivered document when the signer did not personally appear, take the oath, and sign in the notary's presence.

A subscribing witness is not a general workaround. The handbook and statute place important limits on proof of execution by a subscribing witness, especially for powers of attorney and instruments affecting real property.

California copy-certification questions are narrower than many people think. The handbook describes a specific tangible copy certification workflow tied to Government Code section 27201.1 and distinguishes that from broader assumptions about what a California notary can certify.

A copy-certification shortcut from Florida or Texas should not be imported into California. California notaries cannot be used as if they have broad authority to certify record printouts or copies of documents that should come from the issuing public office.

At the same time, a California-origin document does not automatically need a California notary or California apostille. If the document is signer-created, privately issued, not yet notarized, incorrectly notarized, or not available as a directly apostillable California certified record, Notary Geek may be able to use a Florida online notary public and then obtain a Florida apostille.

A California notarial certificate should not be casually assumed to be a loose certificate on a separate page. In Notary Geek operating experience, foreign recipients, judges, and document reviewers often prefer the notarial wording to appear on the same page as the signature when that can be done cleanly.

Loose certificates can work in the right situation, but treating them as the normal or preferred method creates unnecessary acceptance risk. A same-page notarial certificate is usually easier for a receiving party to connect to the signature and document.

California journal, identification, thumbprint, and incomplete-document rules are not cosmetic. They are part of whether the California notarial act was performed correctly in the first place.

Georgia source note

Georgia abbreviation note

Georgia is ambiguous in apostille search data. GA can mean the U.S. state; GE usually means the country. Notary Geek treats these as separate routing problems.

Statute

Use the statute when the question is about a Georgia notarial act, certificate, journal rule, identity method, or online-notarization procedure.

Open the Georgia statute source

Secondary source

GSCCCA walk-in service suspension notice

Use the companion official guidance when the question is practical Georgia procedure rather than general apostille routing.

Open the Georgia companion source

Scope

Only when the issue is Georgia notary law

Do not use Georgia guidance as a shortcut for destination-country routing, federal authentication, or another state's notary law.

GA state work starts with the Georgia issuing authority, GSCCCA, and the state or county record source.

GE country work starts with a document for use in the country of Georgia, often a POA, passport/ID copy, company opening document, residency document, or banking authorization.

Legacy company-document Georgia traffic should not automatically be treated as U.S. state Georgia just because the word Georgia appears in the URL.

Texas source note

Texas notary misconception note

Texas questions often get muddied when people blend traditional notary rules, online-notary rules, and tangible-document procedures into one loose answer. These notes are for Texas-notary issues, not general destination-country routing.

Statute

Texas Secretary of State online notary getting started

Use the statute when the question is about a Texas notarial act, certificate, journal rule, identity method, or online-notarization procedure.

Open the Texas statute source

Secondary source

Texas Government Code Chapter 406

Use the companion official guidance when the question is practical Texas procedure rather than general apostille routing.

Open the Texas companion source

Scope

Only when the issue is Texas notary law

Do not use Texas guidance as a shortcut for destination-country routing, federal authentication, or another state's notary law.

Texas Chapter 406 is the controlling source when the issue is a Texas notarial act. Platform behavior and training summaries should be checked against the statute and current Secretary of State materials.

Texas online notarization is not the same thing as ordinary electronic signatures. Chapter 406 separates online notarization procedures, identity verification, records, and fees from casual assumptions about e-sign workflow.

Tangible-document online notarization has its own procedure. Section 406.1103 matters when the principal signs with a tangible symbol rather than an electronic signature.

Texas online oath and affirmation procedures have their own statutory section. Section 406.1107 should be checked instead of assuming a normal online session automatically covers every oath issue.

Texas identity verification for online notarization is statutory. The usual online path is personal knowledge or remote presentation plus credential analysis and identity proofing under section 406.110.

Texas-notary guidance should not be used as a shortcut for destination-country routing, apostille-versus-legalization analysis, or another state's notary law.

Virginia source note

Virginia remote-identity misconception note

Virginia is one of the easiest states to misunderstand because platform behavior, title-industry preference, and repeated training language often get reported as if they were the statute. These notes are for Virginia-notary-law questions, especially remote identity and platform-compliance claims.

Statute

Virginia Code section 47.1-2 satisfactory evidence of identity

Use the statute when the question is about a Virginia notarial act, certificate, journal rule, identity method, or online-notarization procedure.

Open the Virginia statute source

Secondary source

Virginia Secretary of the Commonwealth notary public resources

Use the companion official guidance when the question is practical Virginia procedure rather than general apostille routing.

Open the Virginia companion source

Scope

Only when the issue is Virginia notary law

Do not use Virginia guidance as a shortcut for destination-country routing, federal authentication, or another state's notary law.

Virginia's statute is the starting point for remote identity questions. Platform certification, MISMO-style claims, title-company policy, or vendor assurance do not replace the law.

The 2024 amendment added knowledge-based authentication as one listed option effective July 1, 2024. That change should not be backread into earlier Virginia practice as if KBA had always been listed there; Virginia's older public electronic-authentication guidance treated KBA as weaker because it relies on public-database knowledge rather than a true authentication secret.

Do not narrow the issue to foreign signers. Foreign signers are one scenario inside the larger pre-July-1-2024 unknown-signer problem for Virginia on-demand platform workflows. Always ask which statutory version was in force on the transaction date.

The biometric wording in Virginia's statute should not be collapsed into a generic selfie-to-ID comparison. Biometrics means something-you-are behavioral or biological characteristics, while selfie capture, liveness checks, and face matching are possible workflow signals or implementations. The statutory language around digital certificates, PIV credentials, and biometric access has to be read carefully, especially the phrase 'valid digital certificate accessed by biometric data.'

Virginia's public electronic-authentication guidance reinforces the distinction: KBA, biometrics, authenticators, credentials, identity proofing, and authentication are related but not interchangeable.

KBA should not be conflated with Persona-style identity-document verification or any biometric feature. A vendor may support liveness checks, selfie capture, face matching, ID document analysis, phone 2FA, or credential analysis without offering KBA identity proofing. Persona told Notary Geek in March 2025 that KBA had been offered in the past but was no longer offered to customers who did not already have it, which makes the 2024 Virginia KBA amendment especially important to evaluate in real platform workflows.

Virginia platform behavior and Virginia legal authority are separate questions. A platform may offer a workflow without that workflow being the same thing as statutory compliance.

Receiving-party preference and legal validity are not the same thing. Title-company policy, underwriter preference, or document-acceptance habit should be separated from the statute itself.

Virginia-notary guidance should not be used as a shortcut for destination-country routing, apostille-versus-legalization analysis, or another state's notary law.

Future expansion

What belongs in this library.

Over time, each state can have deeper notes on document types, official-copy sources, county or court steps, timing, mail-in versus counter handling, notarized-document rules, embassy legalization interactions, and common points of confusion.

How we try to keep it useful

We separate official facts from practical experience, link the government source when possible, use timing ranges instead of hard guarantees, and keep state records separate from signer-created documents that may need notarization first.

Source standards

Law, rules, official sources, and real practice.

Notary rules can get unclear in real life. This library is meant to be practical and well-sourced, using law, administrative rules, official state sources, case law when relevant, and clearly labeled practical experience.

Platform certification, title-company policy, training summaries, and "an attorney said" explanations can be useful context, but they are not authority by themselves. We compare those claims against the law and the source record before treating them as guidance.

If something here is wrong, we want to know. The goal is education and correct execution, not repeating industry folklore.

Why source quality matters

Remote online notarization has many repeated misconceptions, especially around identity proofing, foreign signers, platform compliance, and document acceptance. Notary Geek separates the law, the platform behavior, the receiving-party preference, and the practical operating experience.

We do not treat the National Notary Association as an authority source for this knowledge base. NNA material may sometimes be useful context, but it does not anchor Notary Geek legal or process claims.

Read why we call this out