Notary Journal Requirements by State: What to Know (and How to Stay Compliant)
Notary journals protect you as much as they protect the public. The challenge: journal rules vary widely by state, and some states require journals for every notarization while others make them optional (or required only in certain cases).
Why a notary journal matters
- Creates a clear record if a notarization is questioned
- Helps prevent fraud and identity disputes
- Supports your professionalism with repeat clients
Common items journals require
Depending on your state, you may need to record:
- Date/time of notarization
- Type of notarial act
- Document type (not the content)
- Signer name and address
- ID method and ID details (as allowed)
- Fee charged
- Signer signature and sometimes thumbprint (specific states/cases)
How to find your state’s requirements
Look up your commissioning authority’s handbook or statutes and confirm:
- Whether a journal is required
- Whether it must be bound (vs. loose-leaf)
- Retention period and storage rules
- Thumbprint requirements (if any)
Best practices (even if your state doesn’t require a journal)
- Use a bound journal with numbered pages
- Keep it under your control at all times
- Never leave it in your car overnight
- Record entries immediately after each notarization