Overview
Montana's RON framework is administered by the Secretary of State and requires an active notary commission with a $10,000 surety bond, completion of approved RON training, and a separate RON authorization application to the SoS. Montana has an in-state signer restriction similar to Minnesota - remote notarizations in Montana must be conducted for signers physically located within Montana at the time of the session, which limits the national reach available in most other RON states.
On this page Show
Montana commissions are 4-year terms. Processing takes 2-3 weeks. The $10,000 bond is mid-range nationally. For notaries evaluating Montana RON, the in-state signer restriction is the most important operational consideration – unlike states such as Washington, Oregon, or Virginia that allow serving signers anywhere in the country, Montana RON notaries focus on Montana-based clients.
Montana RON Legal Framework
Montana’s RON requirements under Montana Code Annotated:
- Active Montana notary commission (4-year term) in good standing, issued by the Secretary of State
- $10,000 surety bond required for the traditional commission
- Montana residency or place of employment/business in the state
- Completion of approved RON training
- RON authorization application submitted to and approved by the Secretary of State
- Use of a Secretary of State-approved RON technology platform
- Two-way real-time audio-visual communication for every remote session
- Identity verification using approved methods
- Electronic journal entry required per notarial act
- Audio-visual recording retained per state requirements
- Signers must be physically located in Montana during the remote session
Montana’s In-State Signer Restriction
Montana requires that signers be physically located within Montana at the time of the remote notarial act. This is a meaningful restriction for notaries considering the RON opportunity:
- You cannot serve a Montana signer who is traveling out of state during the session
- You cannot serve signers in other states the way Washington, Oregon, or Virginia RON notaries can
- Your RON market is Montana-based clients – real estate, legal, financial, and business transactions within Montana
- Montana’s real estate market and legal services sector represent the primary RON demand volume
Verify the current signer location requirements with the Montana Secretary of State at sosmt.gov/notaries before registering, as the legislature may update the framework.
Montana’s $10,000 Bond Requirement
Montana requires a $10,000 surety bond as part of the traditional notary commission application. The bond is submitted before the RON authorization application. Annual premium for a $10,000 bond typically runs $50-$100 through NNA, Notary Rotary, or similar providers. The bond covers all notarial conduct including RON activities under the same commission. Verify current bond requirements at sosmt.gov/notaries before applying.
Montana RON Training Requirement
Montana requires completion of approved RON training before the authorization application. Training covers Montana RON law, remote session procedures, identity verification methods, and electronic journal requirements. Verify the current approved training at sosmt.gov/notaries before enrolling – keep the completion certificate to submit with the RON application.
Montana-Approved RON Platforms
Montana requires use of a Secretary of State-approved RON platform. Platforms that have been approved for Montana RON include:
- Notarize (Proof) – Montana-based client sessions
- NotaryLive – scheduling and session management
- DocVerify – enterprise and financial workflows
- SIGNiX – mortgage and title integrations
Verify the current Montana-approved list at sosmt.gov/notaries before the RON application.
What Montana RON Notaries Can Notarize
Montana RON covers acknowledgments, oaths and affirmations, jurats, and signature witnessing – for signers physically in Montana. Volume areas:
- Real estate and property documents – Montana’s residential market, ranch and agricultural land transactions
- Legal documents – powers of attorney, affidavits, estate documents
- Business documents – corporate and LLC documents, business agreements
- Natural resource documents – Montana’s oil, gas, and mineral rights transactions
Common Mistakes Montana RON Notaries Make
- Serving signers located outside Montana – prohibited under Montana’s RON signer restriction
- Not having the $10,000 bond in place before the commission application
- Using a platform not on Montana’s current approved list
- Performing remote sessions before receiving SoS authorization
Before You Start
Montana RON requires SoS authorization and compliance with the in-state signer restriction. Secure the $10,000 bond, complete the commission, complete approved training, submit the RON application, pay the fee, and wait for confirmation. Official reference: Montana Secretary of State – Notaries.
Prerequisites
- Active Montana notary commission (4-year term)
- $10,000 surety bond required for commission
- Montana residency or place of employment/business in state
- Completion of approved RON training (proof required)
- RON authorization confirmed by Secretary of State
- Use only SoS-approved RON platform
- Electronic journal required per act
- Audio-visual recording retention required
- Signers must be physically located in Montana during remote sessions
Steps
Obtain the $10,000 surety bond required for the Montana notary commission
Submit the traditional notary commission application to the Montana Secretary of State (4-year term)
Confirm your active commission before proceeding to RON authorization
Note the in-state signer restriction - signers must be physically in Montana during remote sessions
Complete approved RON training and obtain proof of completion
Review the current Montana-approved RON platform list at sosmt.gov/notaries
Select an approved RON technology platform
Submit the RON authorization application to the Montana SoS with training proof and platform information
Pay the required RON application fee
Wait for SoS authorization confirmation (2-3 weeks) before performing any remote sessions
Set up electronic seal, electronic journal, and audio-visual recording on your approved platform
Training & Exam
Training:
Approved RON training required before the authorization application. Covers Montana RON law, identity verification, electronic journal requirements, and platform compliance. Verify approved training at sosmt.gov/notaries before enrolling. Keep proof of completion for the application.
Exam:
No separate RON exam beyond the required training. Competency verification included in training. Submit proof of training completion with the SoS RON authorization application.
Bond & E&O
Bond:
$10,000 surety bond required for the Montana notary commission - submitted with the commission application before the RON application. Covers RON activities under the same commission. Annual premium typically $50-$100.
E&O Insurance:
E&O insurance recommended; $500,000 coverage typical for professional notaries. Not state-mandated but required by many platforms.
Costs Breakdown
- RON application fee: verify at sosmt.gov/notaries
- $10,000 surety bond: ~$50-$100/year
- RON training: $50-$125
- Montana notary commission fee: verify at sosmt.gov/notaries
- Approved RON platform: $20-$50/month
- Digital certificate/e-seal: $50-$100/year
- E&O insurance (recommended): $75-$150/year
Timeline
RON authorization: 2-3 weeks after complete application submission to the Montana Secretary of State
Apply & Official Links
FAQ
Does Montana have an in-state signer restriction for RON?
Yes. Montana requires that signers be physically located in Montana at the time of the remote notarial act. You cannot serve signers located outside Montana, unlike most RON states that allow national signer reach. Verify current requirements at sosmt.gov/notaries.
What is Montana''s bond requirement for notary commission?
$10,000 surety bond, submitted with the traditional commission application. Annual premium is typically $50-$100.
How long is a Montana notary commission?
4 years, issued by the Montana Secretary of State.
Does Montana require training for RON authorization?
Yes. Completion of approved RON training is required before the authorization application. Proof of completion is submitted with the application.
What makes Montana RON different from most other states?
Montana''s in-state signer restriction means RON notaries can only serve signers physically located in Montana during the session - unlike most RON states where notaries can serve signers anywhere in the country.
Get your first RON client in Montana within 30 days.
The complete playbook from Montana authorization to landing paid clients — 26 chapters, every platform, every script.
- ✓ 26 step-by-step chapters built for 2026
- ✓ 50-state appendix — including Montana
- ✓ Platform comparison, client intake scripts + 5 bonus templates
Next Step
Choose your platform before you apply
Once you complete certification in Montana, you'll need a platform to find clients. Compare fees, payouts, and onboarding requirements before you commit.
Compare Notary Platforms →