How to Become a Notary Public by State: 2026 Guide

How to become a notary public by state: requirements, applications, exams, bonds, and fees. Includes Indiana notary exam prep and free practice tests.

How to Become a Notary Public: State-by-State Overview

Becoming a notary public isn't the same process in every state. Each state sets its own requirements — some require a written exam, some require education courses, and some just require an application and a fee. If you're planning to become a notary in Indiana or looking for a general state-by-state comparison, this guide covers what you need to know.

A notary public is a state-appointed official who serves as an impartial witness when important documents are signed. Real estate closings, powers of attorney, affidavits, oaths — these all require a notary's signature and seal. The notary's role is to verify identity, confirm the signer is acting voluntarily, and deter fraud. It's a trusted position, which is why states take the credentialing process seriously.

General Requirements to Become a Notary Public

Across all states, notary applicants typically must meet these baseline requirements:

  • Age: At least 18 years old (some states require 21)
  • Residency or employment: Most states require you to live or work in the state where you're applying
  • No felony convictions: Criminal background standards vary — some states disqualify all felonies, others only those involving dishonesty or fraud
  • Citizenship or legal residency: U.S. citizen or permanent legal resident in most states

Beyond these basics, state requirements diverge significantly — especially around education, testing, and bonding.

States That Require a Notary Exam

Several states require applicants to pass a written exam before being commissioned. These states have some of the most rigorous notary credentialing processes in the country:

  • California: State-administered exam at a county clerk's office. Covers California notary law, authorized acts, and procedures.
  • New York: State-administered written exam. Tests knowledge of NY notary law and procedures. Must score 70% or above.
  • Indiana: Education course and passing score required on a knowledge exam. The Indiana notary exam covers bonds, authorized acts, document handling, record-keeping, and liability.
  • Louisiana: One of the most demanding — requires an extensive written exam, and in most parishes, applicants must prepare a notarial act (a legal document) to demonstrate competency. Louisiana's civil law tradition makes its notary role uniquely comprehensive.
  • Montana, Nebraska, and several others also have exam requirements, though the specifics vary.

States With Education Requirements (No Exam)

Many states require completion of a notary education course but don't require a formal proctored exam:

  • Florida: Three-hour notary education course required for first-time applicants.
  • Colorado: Online education course required; the course concludes with a test, but it's course-completion based, not a separate state exam.
  • North Carolina, Oregon, Texas, and others have similar education requirements without a separate state exam.

States With No Education or Exam Requirement

In many states, becoming a notary is primarily a paperwork process:

  • Submit an application to the Secretary of State (or county clerk, depending on state)
  • Pass a background check
  • Pay the application fee (typically $10–$50)
  • Purchase a surety bond (most states require this)
  • Purchase your notary seal and journal
  • Take an oath of office

States like Georgia, Ohio, and Tennessee have relatively streamlined processes without formal education or exam requirements.

How to Become a Notary in Indiana Specifically

Indiana has more rigorous requirements than many states. Here's the full process for the Indiana notary commission:

Step 1: Complete the Required Education Course

Indiana requires completion of an approved notary education course before applying. The course covers Indiana notary law — authorized acts, bond requirements, record-keeping, and the limits of what a notary can and cannot do. The course is available online through providers approved by the Indiana Secretary of State.

Step 2: Pass the Knowledge Exam

After completing the education course, you must pass an Indiana notary exam. The exam is administered as part of the approved education curriculum — it's not a separate state-administered proctored exam. Passing scores are set by the education provider within Secretary of State guidelines.

Step 3: Obtain a Surety Bond

Indiana requires a $25,000 surety bond from a licensed surety company. The bond protects the public if you make a mistake or commit fraud in your notarial duties. Annual cost is typically $25–$75, depending on the surety company.

Step 4: Submit Your Application

Apply online through the Indiana Secretary of State's website. You'll need to upload your education course completion certificate, bond information, and pay the application fee. Indiana notary commissions are issued for an 8-year term.

Step 5: Take the Oath of Office

New Indiana notaries must appear before a circuit court clerk in their county to take the oath of office. This is a formal step — you're taking a legal oath of official duty. You typically have 30 days from commission issuance to complete this step.

Step 6: Purchase Your Seal and Journal

Indiana notaries must use an official stamp/seal and maintain a sequential journal of all notarial acts. Both are typically purchased from office supply or notary supply vendors after your commission is issued.

What Does the Indiana Notary Exam Cover?

The Indiana notary exam (administered as part of the required education course) covers the following areas:

  • Authorized acts: What acts Indiana notaries can perform — acknowledgments, oaths and affirmations, signature witnessing, copy certifications, verbal ceremonies
  • Bonds and liability: The $25,000 surety bond requirement, what it covers, and the notary's legal liability for improper acts
  • Document handling: How to properly complete a notarial certificate, what must be included, avoiding defective notarizations
  • Record-keeping: Journal requirements, what entries must include, retention requirements
  • Prohibited acts and disqualifications: What Indiana notaries are prohibited from doing, when they must decline to act, conflict of interest rules

Remote Online Notarization (RON) in Indiana

Indiana has authorized Remote Online Notarization (RON), which allows notaries to perform notarial acts via audiovisual technology — the signer doesn't have to be physically present. Indiana RON requires additional approval and technology platform registration through the Secretary of State. Standard notary commission holders don't automatically have RON authority — it's a separate application.

Prepare for the Indiana Notary Exam

The Indiana notary knowledge exam isn't as demanding as state bar exams or professional licensing tests, but it does require you to know Indiana law — not just general notary concepts. The specific rules around authorized acts, bond requirements, and what constitutes a defective notarization are Indiana-specific. Understanding those details is what the exam actually tests.

Our Indiana notary practice tests cover the key exam areas: authorized acts, bonds and liability, document handling, and record-keeping. Working through these questions before you complete the required education course — or as a final review before the course exam — helps you walk in with confidence rather than guessing at the details that determine whether your notarial acts are legally valid.

Notaries who genuinely understand the law they're operating under make fewer errors and serve their clients and employers better. That practical value goes well beyond passing the initial exam.

About the Author

James R. HargroveJD, LLM

Attorney & Bar Exam Preparation Specialist

Yale Law School

James R. Hargrove is a practicing attorney and legal educator with a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School and an LLM in Constitutional Law. With over a decade of experience coaching bar exam candidates across multiple jurisdictions, he specializes in MBE strategy, state-specific essay preparation, and multistate performance test techniques.