Last updated September 11, 2024
Online Notary Oklahoma
Online Notary, also known as remote online notarization (RON), is an easy-to-use virtual service that allows you to validate your legal documents in Oklahoma or anywhere else in the United States.
LawDepot’s Online Notary services connect you to a notary public using your device's microphone and camera. It’s a safe, secure, and cost-effective way to verify signatures on your legal documents from work or home.
Does Oklahoma accept online notarization?
Yes, remote online notarization is accepted and legal in Oklahoma. Senate Bill 915, signed in May 2019, authorized online notarization through the Oklahoma Remote Online Notary Act.
Oklahoma further accepts documents notarized from other states under the Uniform Law on Notarial Acts. Additionally, the Full Faith and Credit Clause allows notarization performed in one state to be legal in another. Therefore, U.S. citizens can utilize online notaries from whichever state they live in.
The Electronic Signatures in Global and National Commerce Act also supports online notarization as it recognizes e-signatures as a legally valid form of document signing.
How much can online notaries charge in Oklahoma?
In Oklahoma, online notaries can charge up to $25 to notarize a document.
LawDepot’s online services align with Oklahoma’s pricing regulations. With our online services, it’s just $25 for the first seal and $10 for each additional seal, making it easy to save time and notarize your documents from work or home.
What documents can Oklahomans notarize with LawDepot?
LawDepot’s Online Notary service can notarize many documents for Oklahomans. This includes, but is not limited to:
- Child Travel Consents and Child Medical Consents
- Mortgage Agreements and Mortgage Satisfactions
- Powers of Attorney
- Loan Agreements
- Property deeds
- Assignments
- Bills of Sale
- Affidavits
Documents Oklahomans cannot notarize with LawDepot
There are certain documents that notaries cannot notarize. An example of this is vital documents. These documents contain personal information about a person’s life events (e.g., birth and marriage certificates). Only authorized government agencies that keep these documents on record can validate them.
LawDepot cannot notarize copy certification, also known as certified copies. Other documents LawDepot can’t notarize include:
- Last Wills and Testaments
- Cohabitation Agreements
- Separation Agreements
- Prenuptial Agreements
- Pour-Over Will
- USPS Form 1583
- Documents for use outside of the U.S.
- True copies of birth, marriage, and death certificates
- Court-issued documents
- Certificates of Naturalization
- Certificates of Citizenship
- Declarations of Intention to become a citizen