Affidavits, acknowledgments, jurats, oaths, copy certifications, and single-document signings — mobile across all of Orange County.
California Government Code §8211 sets the maximum notary fee at $15 per notarized signature. This covers identity verification, witnessing the signature, completing the notarial certificate, and affixing the official stamp. Travel is a separate, unregulated fee.
A notary public in California is not an attorney and cannot:
If you need legal guidance on which form to use or whether your document is correct, consult an attorney before the notary appointment.
An acknowledgment confirms your identity and that you signed willingly — you can pre-sign the document before the notary arrives. A jurat requires you to sign in front of the notary and swear or affirm the document's contents are true — the document must be unsigned when we arrive. If you're not sure which applies, leave it unsigned to be safe.
California accepts: current driver's license or state ID, U.S. passport or passport card, foreign passport with valid USCIS entry stamp, U.S. military ID (active or retired). ID must be current or issued within the last 5 years — expired ID cannot be accepted under California law, regardless of how recently it expired.
Yes — California notaries can notarize documents in any language. The notarial certificate is completed in English. However, you must understand what you are signing. If you need a translator, arrange one before the appointment; the notary cannot serve as both translator and notary for the same document.
Travel + $15 per signature