Are you interested in becoming a North Carolina notary? Are you interested in generating extra income, starting your own North Carolina notary business, adding a notary title to your resume, or helping people in your community? The State of North Carolina appoints notaries to serve the public as unbiased impartial witnesses to document signing. Becoming a notary in North Carolina is a straightforward process, and as long as you meet the eligibility requirements listed below, you can apply to become a North Carolina notary. The America Association of Notaries has been helping individuals become notaries since 1994.
This North Carolina notary guide will help you understand:
To become a North Carolina notary public, a notary applicant must meet the following requirements:
To become a North Carolina notary public and receive a North Carolina notary public commission, a notary applicant must:
Note: If 45 days lapse before the oath is taken, a new application and a $50 filing fee must be resubmitted. Notary appointments are NOT valid until the oath of office is taken.
North Carolina notaries public may apply for reappointment as a notary public no earlier than ten weeks before the expiration date of their current notary public commission. To qualify for reappointment as a notary public, North Carolina notaries must pass a written examination approved and administered by the Secretary of State with a score of 80% or better. Renewing notaries may submit their application for reappointment online with the Secretary of State for a fee of $52.
If a notary public does not submit his or her application for reappointment before his or her notary public commission expires, this individual:
The Department of Secretary of State is not bound by prior determinations of eligibility. To apply for reappointment as a notary public, go to the North Carolina Secretary of State's website.
The North Carolina Secretary of State appoints North Carolina notaries public. The North Carolina Secretary of States receives applications for appointment and reappointment as a notary public or electronic notary, administers the commissioning process, and maintains an electronic database of active notaries. Contact information for the North Carolina Secretary of State is as follows:
NC Department of the Secretary of State
Notary Public Section
PO Box 29626
Raleigh, NC 27626-0626
(919) 814-5400
https://www.sosnc.gov/divisions/notary
Yes. An individual who resides in a state adjoining North Carolina may apply to become a North Carolina notary public if the non-resident meets the following requirements (GS §10B-5). The non-resident must:
The commission term of a North Carolina notary public is five years commencing with the date specified in the notary public commission (GS §10B-9). However, a notary’s commission may be rendered void:
Yes. Every new applicant seeking a commission as a North Carolina notary public must take and successfully complete a six-hour notary course of classroom instruction approved by the Secretary of State (GS §10B-8a). The content of the course of instruction and the written examinations must involve notarial laws, procedures, and ethics. Furthermore, every applicant for an initial notary public commission must submit an application within three months of successfully completing the mandatory notary course and written examination. A first-time notary applicant must have his or her instructor sign and date the notary application. These approved notary courses are offered by local community colleges.
All new applicants and notaries reapplying for a subsequent notary public commission must:
Exempt from the mandatory notary course and written examination are licensed members of the North Carolina State Bar (GS §10B-8). North Carolina licensed attorneys, although exempt, are strongly encouraged by the Secretary of State to take the mandatory notary course. Attorneys are also required to possess the most current notary public manual. Also exempt from the written examination requirement are notaries public who have been continuously commissioned in North Carolina since July 10, 1991 and have never been disciplined by the Secretary State (GS §10B-11[b][3]). The first-time notary applicants or renewing notaries can take the written examination three times in thirty days; however, if such individuals fail to pass the examination, they must take the mandatory notary course again.
A North Carolina notary applicant’s expenses may include the following:
A North Carolina errors and omissions insurance policy is optional in North Carolina. It is not mandatory to have E&O insurance policy when applying for appointment or reappointment as notary public. The American Association of Notaries, however, highly recommends that North Carolina notaries public obtain an errors and omissions insurance policy for their personal protection against liability. Errors and omissions insurance is designed to protect notaries public from liability against unintentional notarial mistakes or omissions that could result in financial or other type of loss to the public or a document signer and for which a notary public might be sued for recovery. An E&O insurance policy customarily covers legal fees and damages based on the coverage a North Carolina notary public selects. To obtain information regarding an E&O insurance policy, visit the American Association of Notaries website, or call 713-644-2299.
New applicants seeking an appointment as a notary public and renewing notaries are not required by state notary statute to obtain a notary bond to be commissioned as a notary public in North Carolina. A notary public is liable to any person for damages that result from his or her negligence, errors, official malfeasance, or omissions. North Carolina notaries are encouraged to purchase a notary surety bond to insure themselves against such claims.
The North Carolina notary statute requires all North Carolina notaries public to use an official seal or stamp near the notary’s official signature on the notarial certificate of a record (GS §10B-36). The official seal shall be affixed only after the notarial act is performed. Section 10B-37 provides the legal specifications regarding the layout and the information required on all official seals and stamps.
Dimensions: The notary seal may be either circular or rectangular in shape. The circular seal must not be less than 1 ½ inches or more than 2 inches in diameter. The rectangular seal must not be over 1 inch high and 2 ½ inches long. The perimeter of the seal must contain a border that is visible when impressed.
Required Elements: A notary’s official seal or stamp shall include all of the following elements:
Note: A notarial seal, as it appears on a record, may contain the permanently imprinted, handwritten, or typed date the notary’s commission expires. Alterations to any information contained within the seal as embossed or stamped on the record are prohibited. A notary public must notify the appropriate register of deeds and the Secretary of State in writing within ten days of discovering the notary’s seal has been lost or stolen. In the case of theft or vandalism, a notary public must inform the appropriate law enforcement agency. After resignation, revocation, expiration of a notary commission, or death of a notary public, the notary’s official seal must be delivered to the Secretary of State for disposal (GS §10B-36).
To order a North Carolina notary stamp, notary seal, complete notary package, and notary supplies please visit the American Association of Notaries website, or call 713-644-2299.
North Carolina notary fees are set by state notary statute (GS §10B-31). The maximum allowable fees that a North Carolina notary public may charge for notarial acts are listed below:
Note: “A notary shall not discriminatorily condition the fee for a notarial act on any attribute of the principal that would constitute unlawful discrimination” (GS §10B-30[b]). Notaries public may not charge a fee for mileage or travel when performing a notarial act. “A notary may not charge any fee for witnessing and affixing a notarial seal to an absentee ballot application or certificate under GS 163-231” (GS §10B-30[d]). “Notaries who charge for their notarial services shall conspicuously display in their places of business, or present to each principal outside their place of business, an English-language schedule of fees for notarial acts. No part of any notarial fee schedule shall be printed in smaller than 10-point type” (GS §10B-32).
A notary journal (also known as a record book, log book, or register book) is your first line of defense in proving your innocence if a notarial act you performed is questioned or if you are requested to testify in a court of law about a notarial act you performed in the past. A properly recorded notarial act creates a paper trail that will help investigators locate and prosecute signers who have committed forgery and fraud. Properly recorded notarial acts provide evidence that you followed your state laws and notary’s best practices.
Notary journal requirements in North Carolina:
The American Association of Notaries offers a wide variety of notary journals.
Click here to purchase a tangible notary journal.
Click here to become a member and access our electronic notary journal.
For Traditional Notarizations and Electronic Notarizations – Although notaries performing traditional and electronic notarizations are not required to maintain a notary journal, they should follow best practices and record the following information:
For Emergency Video Notarizations – North Carolina requires notaries to chronicle the following information in their notary journals when performing emergency video notarizations:
North Carolina notaries public may perform notarial acts anywhere within the geographic borders of the state of North Carolina (GS §10B-9). A North Carolina notary public commission is only valid in North Carolina.
A North Carolina notary public is authorized to perform the following notarial acts (GS §10B-20a):
Very Important. No notary public commissions shall be effective prior to the administration of the oath of office. Any notarial acts performed before the administration of the oath of office, either the original commissioning or recommissioning, are invalid (GS §10-9).
North Carolina law allows the following three types of notarizations.
Traditional Notarization – This type of notarization requires the signer and the notary to meet physically in the same room within face-to-face proximity of one another. Traditional notarization involves an individual signing a tangible document with an inked pen and a notary public signing and affixing an inked notary stamp impression to the tangible notarial certificate.
Electronic Notarization (in-person) – This type of notarization requires the signer and the notary to meet physically in the same room within face-to-face proximity of one another. However, the notarization is performed on an electronic document using electronic signatures, an electronic notary seal, and an electronic notarial certificate.
Remote Electronic Notarization (EFFECTIVE MARCH 1, 2025) – The signer appears remotely before the notary via audio-video communication technology. The notarization is performed on an electronic document using electronic signatures, an electronic notary seal, and an electronic notarial certificate. For more information regarding this type of notarization, please visit the North Carolina Secretary of State’s website.
To become an electronic notary public in North Carolina, you must:
Remote Electronic Notarizations will become effective March 1, 2025. We will update this section once the steps have been published by the North Carolina Secretary of State. For more information on remote electronic notarizations, please visit the North Carolina Secretary of State’s website.
“Within 45 days after the change of a notary’s residence, business, mailing address, telephone number, or county, the notary shall send to the Secretary by fax, email, or certified mail, return receipt requested, a signed notice of the change, giving both the old and new addresses or telephone numbers” (GS §10B-50). A notary public who has moved to another county in North Carolina remains commissioned until the current commission expires. The notary may continue to notarize using the official seal for the previous county of commission. Upon renewal of the notary’s commission, the notary public must purchase a new seal containing the name of the new county of commission (GS §10B-52). To update your notary information online, click here: https://www.sosnc.gov/forms/by_title/_notary.
Within 45 days after the legal change of a notary’s name, the notary public must send to the Secretary of State by fax, email, or certified mail, return receipt requested, a signed notice of the change by including both the notary’s former name and new name (GS §10B-51). A North Carolina notary public with a new name may continue to use the former name in performing notarial acts until all of the following steps have been completed:
Upon completion of the above-mentioned requirements, the notary shall use the new name. A notary public who fails to follow the name change steps may be disciplined by the Secretary of State. To update your notary information online, click here: https://www.sosnc.gov/forms/by_title/_notary.
Legal disclaimer: The information provided on this page is for general informational purposes only and should not be relied upon as legal advice. We do not claim to be attorneys and we do not guarantee the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of the information provided. You should always seek the advice of a licensed attorney for any legal matters. It is your responsibility to know the appropriate notary laws governing your state. In no event shall the American Association of Notaries, its employees, or contractors be liable to you for any claims, penalties, losses, damages, or expenses, howsoever arising, including, and without limitation, direct or indirect loss, or consequential loss, out of or in connection with the use of the information contained on any of the American Association of Notaries website pages. Notaries are advised to seek the advice of their state’s notary authorities or attorneys if they have legal questions.
Notary bonds and errors and omissions insurance policies provided by this insurance agency, American Association of Notaries, Inc., are underwritten by Western Surety Company, Universal Surety of America, or Surety Bonding Company of America, which are subsidiaries of CNA Surety.