What Is Remote Online Notarization?
Remote Online Notarization — universally abbreviated as RON — is the process of completing a notarization via live two-way audio-video technology, without the notary and signer occupying the same physical location. The notary witnesses the signing in real time over a secure video connection, verifies the signer’s identity using a combination of credential analysis and knowledge-based authentication, and applies a tamper-evident digital seal and electronic signature to the document.
The result is a legally executed notarized document that was never touched by the notary — yet carries the same legal weight as a traditional in-person notarization in all states that have enacted RON legislation.
RON isn’t new technology — it’s been available in Virginia since 2011 and Florida since 2020 — but adoption accelerated dramatically after 2020, and the legal framework across the country has matured significantly. As of 2026, RON is the fastest-growing segment of the notary industry, with platforms connecting millions of signers with commissioned notaries around the clock.
How the RON Process Actually Works
Understanding the mechanics of a RON session is important whether you’re a notary looking to add this service or a signer who needs to get a document notarized remotely. The process is more structured than a simple video call — each step serves a specific legal purpose.
For the Signer
Upload Your Document
Create an account on a RON platform and upload the document you need notarized as a PDF. The platform queues it for the notarization session.
Identity Verification
Complete a multi-factor identity check: scan your government-issued photo ID, and answer knowledge-based authentication (KBA) questions drawn from public records — questions only you would know, like prior addresses or vehicle history. This is the legal equivalent of presenting your ID to a notary in person.
Connect With the Notary
A commissioned notary joins the secure video session. They confirm your identity, administer any required oath, and witness you click-to-sign the document in real time on your screen.
Digital Seal Applied
The notary applies their official digital notary seal — a tamper-evident, cryptographically secured credential embedded in the PDF. The sealed document cannot be altered without the seal becoming invalid.
Download Your Notarized Document
Receive your completed document by email and in your account portal. It’s valid, sealed, and ready to submit to banks, courts, government agencies, or wherever it’s needed.
The Legal Landscape: Which States Authorize RON?
RON legality is determined at the state level, and the map has changed significantly since 2020. As of 2026, the large majority of US states have enacted full RON legislation. Here’s a representative snapshot of major states and their current RON status:
| State | RON Status | Governing Law | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Florida | ✓ Authorized | Florida Statute §117.265 | One of the most robust RON frameworks in the country |
| Virginia | ✓ Authorized | Va. Code Ann. §47.1-6.1 | First state to enact RON legislation (2011) |
| Texas | ✓ Authorized | Tex. Gov’t Code §406.101+ | Full RON with platform approval requirements |
| Pennsylvania | ✓ Authorized | 57 Pa.C.S. §306+ | Enacted 2020; robust signer ID requirements |
| Ohio | ✓ Authorized | ORC §147.60+ | Requires Secretary of State registration for RON notaries |
| New York | ✓ Authorized | Executive Law §135-c | Enacted 2022; specific platform requirements apply |
| California | ⚠ Limited | Pending broader legislation | Limited RON; many document types still require in-person |
| Illinois | ✓ Authorized | 5 ILCS 312/Art. VI-A | Full RON authorization with approved platform requirement |
| Georgia | ✓ Authorized | O.C.G.A. §45-17-1+ | Enacted 2021 with comprehensive framework |
| North Carolina | ✓ Authorized | N.C.G.S. §10B-134.1+ | Full RON with electronic journal requirements |
Major RON Platforms: What You Need to Know
RON is delivered through approved technology platforms that handle the video connection, identity verification, electronic signature, digital seal, and session recording. Not all platforms are created equal — they differ in pricing models, document types supported, notary network size, and signer experience.
Notarize (Proof)
The largest consumer-facing RON platform. On-demand notary network, 24/7 availability, $25 for the first seal. Accepts most document types. Strong signer experience. Available in all RON-authorized states.
DocVerify
Enterprise-focused platform popular with title companies and law firms. Supports high-volume real estate closings and legal document workflows. Pricing typically volume-based.
Snapdocs
Primarily a mortgage and real estate closing platform connecting lenders, title companies, and signing agents. Strong loan signing workflow. Less consumer-facing than Notarize.
SIGNiX
Enterprise RON and eSign platform with strong compliance tools. Used by financial institutions, government agencies, and healthcare organizations. Robust audit trail and tamper-evident certification.
Pavaso
Digital closing platform focused on real estate transactions. Integrates deeply with lender and title workflows for hybrid and full eClose transactions.
OneNotary
Consumer-friendly platform with competitive pricing. Growing notary network, strong document variety support. Good option for individuals needing one-off notarizations.
Which Platform Should You Use?
For individual signers needing a quick notarization — Notarize (Proof) is the most seamless experience with the largest on-demand notary network. For notaries who want to build a RON practice — our complete RON tutorial covers platform setup, registration steps, equipment requirements, and how to get your first clients on each major platform. The platform landscape evolves fast; the tutorial is updated to reflect current approvals.
For Notaries: Building a RON Practice
RON isn’t just convenient for signers — it’s a significant income opportunity for commissioned notaries. The ability to work from home, serve clients across an entire state, and complete sessions outside traditional business hours changes the economics of the notary business fundamentally.
What RON Notaries Earn
RON income varies widely by platform model and volume:
- Platform-employed notaries (working on Notarize’s on-demand network) typically earn $12–$20 per notarization. Volume can be substantial — experienced platform notaries complete 15–30 sessions per day.
- Independent RON notaries setting their own rates through direct client relationships can charge $50–$200 per session, particularly for complex documents, international signers, or concierge scheduling.
- Loan signing agents using RON for remote mortgage closings earn $75–$200 per closing through title companies and signing services — the same rates as in-person signings, without the drive time.
Requirements to Become a RON Notary
The general path — though requirements vary meaningfully by state — follows this pattern:
- Hold a valid notary commission in a RON-authorized state
- Complete state-required RON training or registration (e.g., Ohio requires Secretary of State registration; Florida requires completion of the RON process before performing acts)
- Select and register with an approved RON platform — state-approved platform lists vary
- Obtain your digital notary seal/certificate — different from your physical stamp
- Set up proper equipment — reliable webcam, microphone, stable internet, and a dedicated workspace
- Understand the electronic journal requirements — RON sessions require an electronic journal entry and most platforms auto-generate this, but you need to understand what’s being recorded
🎓 Notaries: Ready to Add RON?
$27
Complete RON tutorial covering platform registration, equipment setup, digital seal configuration, and how to build a client pipeline on the major RON platforms.
📄 Need a Document Notarized?
From $25
Connect with a commissioned online notary right now via Notarize — 24/7, no appointment, starting at $25 per seal. Works from any device.
RON vs. Traditional In-Person Notarization
RON doesn’t replace in-person notarization entirely — certain document types still require physical presence in most jurisdictions. Understanding the differences helps you choose the right path for each situation.
| Factor | In-Person Notarization | Remote Online Notarization |
|---|---|---|
| Location | Notary and signer must be present together | Signer can be anywhere in the world (for US RON) |
| Availability | Business hours, scheduled appointment | 24/7, on-demand or scheduled |
| Speed | Travel + appointment time | Under 15 minutes start to finish |
| Identity Verification | Visual ID check | Credential analysis + KBA + live video |
| Document Security | Ink seal and signature | Cryptographic tamper-evident digital seal |
| Session Recording | Not typically recorded | Audio-video recording required and retained |
| Cost | Varies widely by location | $25–$50 for most documents |
| International Use | May require apostille for foreign use | May still require apostille; check receiving jurisdiction |
Documents Commonly Notarized via RON
RON is accepted for a wide range of document types, though specific acceptance varies by the receiving institution. The most common include:
- Real estate documents — deeds, mortgage documents, refinancing paperwork, closing documents (where lender and title company accept eClosings)
- Powers of attorney — financial, healthcare, and general POAs for individuals managing affairs remotely or abroad
- Affidavits and sworn statements — commonly used in legal proceedings and immigration matters
- Estate documents — wills (in states that permit electronic wills), trust certifications, and estate administration documents
- Business documents — corporate resolutions, operating agreement signatures, loan documents
- IRS and financial forms — W-8BEN, authorization letters, account opening documents
- International documents — US documents for foreign nationals, particularly combined with apostille services
Identity Verification: The Core of RON Integrity
One of the most common questions about RON is how identity verification works — and whether it’s as rigorous as in-person ID presentation. The answer is that in many respects, RON identity verification is more rigorous, not less.
The typical RON ID verification stack includes:
- Credential analysis — the platform’s technology analyzes your uploaded government ID (driver’s license, passport) for authenticity markers, security features, and data consistency
- Knowledge-based authentication (KBA) — a series of multiple-choice questions drawn from public records that only the real identity holder would likely answer correctly (prior addresses, vehicles registered, relatives’ names)
- Live video identification — the notary visually compares your face to your ID photo during the session in real time
- Session recording — the entire audio-video session is recorded and retained as part of the notarial record, typically for 5–10 years depending on state law
This multi-layer approach creates a more defensible identity verification record than a notary simply glancing at an ID across a desk — which is part of why RON has gained broad acceptance from courts, financial institutions, and government agencies.
The Future of RON: Where This Is Going
RON is not a trend — it’s a structural shift in how notarization works. Several developments are accelerating adoption:
Interstate Recognition
The SECURE Notarization Act — federal legislation that would require all states to recognize RON notarizations performed in any RON-authorized state — has been introduced repeatedly in Congress. Even without federal passage, the majority of states already include reciprocal recognition provisions in their RON statutes.
Real Estate Integration
The mortgage industry is the single biggest driver of RON adoption. As lenders, title companies, and GSEs (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac) have updated their acceptance policies, the volume of RON-enabled real estate closings has grown dramatically. The fully digital closing — where every step from origination to recording happens electronically — is becoming the norm in many markets.
International Demand
US expats, foreign investors in US real estate, and international business operators increasingly rely on RON to get US documents notarized without embassy appointments. Florida’s RON framework, in particular, is designed to accommodate international signers using passport-based identity verification — creating a significant market for internationally-focused RON notaries.
AI-Enhanced Verification
RON platforms are integrating AI-powered biometric verification, liveness detection, and document forensics that make identity verification faster and more accurate with each iteration. The security gap between RON and in-person notarization continues to narrow.
Mark Sias is a Florida-commissioned notary public and legal document preparer, founder of Noble Notary & Legal Document Preparers. He is not a licensed attorney. This article is for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. RON laws and platform requirements change frequently — always verify current requirements with your state’s notary-regulating authority before performing or relying on a RON.
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