How to Become a Remote Online Notary in California (2026)

Step-by-step authorization requirements, costs, timeline, and official links for California.

Updated May 2, 2026 4 min read

Need the next step after this state guide? Confirm the matching California legal page, review the general how-to guides, or compare remote notary platforms before you commit to a workflow.

Overview

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Summary

California approved a Remote Online Notarization framework under SB 696, signed into law in September 2022. However, California RON is not yet operational for California-commissioned notaries. The California Secretary of State must first build a registration system, publish vendor approval criteria, and activate the training requirements before any California notary can legally perform RON sessions. This guide explains where things stand, what to do now, and how to prepare.

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SB 696 added California Government Code sections authorizing remote online notarization, but the law included an implementation delay tied to regulatory readiness. The result: California notaries who offer RON under their California commission before official activation are non-compliant with current law, which still requires personal appearance for acknowledgments, jurats, and other notarial acts.

What SB 696 Actually Did (and Did Not Do)

SB 696, signed September 29, 2022, authorized the California Secretary of State to establish a RON program. It did NOT immediately allow California notaries to start performing remote sessions. The law set a framework – it requires the SoS to:

  • Create a registration process for notaries seeking RON authorization
  • Approve technology vendors that meet California’s identity verification and security standards
  • Publish training requirements and a course that California notaries must complete before authorization
  • Establish electronic journal and audio-visual recording standards

Until the SoS officially opens registration and publishes the vendor list, California notaries cannot perform remote online notarizations under their California commission.

Why California RON Is Taking Longer Than Expected

California has a reputation for thorough regulatory development. The SoS approached RON implementation more carefully than states like Michigan or Texas, which moved faster. California also has a uniquely large and diverse notary population – over 300,000 active commissions – which means any vendor approval or registration system needs to scale significantly. The technology infrastructure and consumer protection standards California is building are more rigorous than most state frameworks.

That careful approach benefits long-term compliance but creates a longer wait. Several other states (Massachusetts, Georgia) are in similar positions.

What California Notaries Can Do Right Now

Having a California commission does not lock you out of RON income – it means you cannot use that commission for remote sessions. Practical options while waiting for CA activation:

  • Keep your California commission active and renew on schedule – when CA activates, notaries with an active commission will be first in line for RON registration
  • Build RON skills through training now – NNA and NCAN offer RON-specific courses that count toward your knowledge base regardless of state
  • Set up platform profiles proactively – Notarize (Proof) and NotaryLive allow you to complete account setup and background checks so you are ready to take sessions the day California activates
  • Consider commissioning in a RON-active state if you qualify – Nevada, Arizona, and other border states have active RON frameworks and California-adjacent markets
  • Focus on high-volume traditional signings – California has one of the largest real estate and mortgage markets in the country; in-person loan signings are consistent, high-paying work

California Traditional Notary Commission: What You Need

California notary commissions are 4-year terms, issued by the Secretary of State, with one of the most structured application processes in the country:

  • Pass the California notary public exam (administered by a SoS-approved vendor)
  • Complete a background check through the Department of Justice and FBI
  • Post a $15,000 surety bond
  • File your oath of office and bond with the county clerk within 30 days of approval
  • Purchase a California-compliant notary seal

California’s strict commission process means its notary population is well-screened – which is part of why RON activation is taking longer (the SoS wants that same rigor applied to remote sessions).

How to Recognize When California RON Goes Live

Watch for these specific signals that California has activated RON:

  • California Secretary of State publishing an official approved RON vendor list
  • A registration or application portal opening specifically for RON authorization
  • Official training course announcements – CA will likely require a specific SoS-approved course
  • NNA, NCAN, or California Notary Association sending state-specific activation alerts
  • SB 696 implementation notices on the SoS website at sos.ca.gov/notary

Common Mistakes California Notaries Make

  • Advertising RON services under a California commission before official activation
  • Assuming that because RON is popular nationally it is already legal in California
  • Letting their commission lapse while waiting, losing their position when CA activates
  • Not filing the bond and oath with the county clerk within the 30-day window after commission approval
  • Confusing California’s “digital notarization” tools (DocuSign + in-person) with actual RON

Before You Start

California RON requires official SoS activation before any remote session is legal under a California commission. Confirm your commission is active and current, and monitor the official channel for implementation updates. Official reference: California Secretary of State – Notary Public.

Prerequisites

  • Active California notary commission (4-year term, SoS-issued)
  • Pass California notary exam
  • $15,000 surety bond filed with county clerk
  • Background check (DOJ + FBI)
  • RON NOT yet operational - traditional personal appearance still required
  • Monitor SoS for activation

Steps

1

Confirm your active California notary commission (4-year term) through the Secretary of State

2

File bond and oath with your county clerk if not already done

3

Monitor California SoS at sos.ca.gov/notary for RON activation announcements

4

Complete RON training proactively through NNA or NCAN

5

Set up a profile on Notarize (Proof) or NotaryLive to be ready at activation

6

Do NOT advertise or perform RON sessions under a California commission until SoS officially activates the program

7

When CA activates: complete required SoS-approved training, register through SoS portal, select an approved vendor

Training & Exam

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Training:

Traditional commission: 6-hour pre-appointment notary education course required. RON-specific training requirements: not yet published - California SoS will announce required training when the RON framework activates. Proactive preparation recommended through NNA or NCAN.

Exam:

Standard California notary exam required for initial commission (proctored exam through SoS-approved vendor). No RON exam yet - California has not published RON examination or training requirements.

Bond & E&O

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Bond:

$15,000 surety bond required for California notary commission

E&O Insurance:

E&O insurance strongly recommended; $500,000 coverage typical for professional California notaries. Future RON-specific requirements to be published by SoS.

Costs Breakdown

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  • Notary exam: $40 (SoS-approved vendor)
  • Notary application: $40
  • $15,000 surety bond: $30-$80/year
  • Notary seal and supplies: $50-$100
  • E&O insurance (recommended): $75-$150/year
  • Future RON registration, training, platform fees: to be announced by SoS

Timeline

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Traditional commission: 6-8 weeks (exam + background check + filing). RON activation timeline: unknown - monitor California Secretary of State at sos.ca.gov/notary

FAQ

Can California notaries perform RON right now?

No. California SB 696 approved a RON framework but it is not yet operational. The Secretary of State must open registration, approve vendors, and publish training requirements before California notaries can legally perform remote sessions under a California commission.

What is SB 696?

SB 696, signed September 29, 2022, authorized the California Secretary of State to establish a RON program. It set the legal framework but did not immediately activate RON. Implementation depends on the SoS completing registration infrastructure, vendor approval, and training requirements.

What is the California notary bond requirement?

$15,000 surety bond, filed with the county clerk within 30 days of commission approval. This is required for the traditional commission and will likely apply to RON authorization as well.

How can I prepare for California RON while waiting?

Complete RON training through NNA or NCAN, set up platform profiles on Notarize or NotaryLive, and keep your commission active so you are ready to register immediately when CA activates. Consider commissioning in a neighboring RON-active state if you qualify by residence.

How long is a California notary commission?

4 years. Renewal requires retaking the exam, completing background check, and refiling the bond and oath. Keep your commission current - you will need an active commission when CA RON activates.

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This page is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice.

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