How to Set Competitive Pricing for Remote Notary Services

Updated May 3, 2026 3 min read

Need something more specific? Jump to the state how-to hub, confirm requirements in the legal hub, or compare remote notary platforms before choosing your setup.

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RON pricing has a hard constraint, a separate component, and a market variable: your state’s per-act fee cap sets the ceiling on the notarial fee, the platform technology fee is a disclosed separate line item, and your overall pricing position determines whether you win the clients with real volume.

This guide covers how to approach RON pricing for both direct client work and platform-based work. For state-specific fee caps, check the RON legal status hub.

Know Your State’s Fee Cap First

Most RON-authorized states set a maximum per-act fee for notarial services. These caps vary significantly — some states cap at $5 per act, others at $25, and a few have no specific cap. The cap applies to the notarial fee component only. Before building any pricing model, confirm your state’s current cap through the legal status hub. Charging above the cap — even if a client agrees to pay more — creates compliance exposure and potential liability.

The Two-Component Fee Structure

RON pricing in most states consists of two disclosed components: the notarial fee (subject to the state cap) and the technology or platform fee (not capped by state law but required to be disclosed in advance). When communicating pricing to clients, presenting both components clearly before the session is both a legal obligation in most states and a professional practice that prevents disputes.

Pricing for Direct Client Work vs. Platform Sessions

For platform-based work, the platform sets or heavily influences the fee structure and your pricing control is limited. For direct client work — billing title companies, law firms, and businesses independently — you have full pricing control within the state cap. Direct client pricing should reflect the full cost of service delivery: your time, platform subscription, insurance, digital certificate expenses, and the business development investment in winning and maintaining the relationship.

Market Rate Research

Understanding what other RON notaries in your state charge helps position your pricing correctly. Sources include notary directories that list service fees, signing service dispatch rates (which give a sense of what the market bears), and professional association communities. Pricing significantly below market may attract short-term volume but signals low quality and makes pricing adjustments harder later.

Value-Based Pricing for Complex Session Types

Not all sessions are equal. A multi-document real estate closing involves significantly more notarial acts than a single acknowledgment — and your per-session fee can reflect this within the per-act cap structure. Charging the maximum allowable per-act fee for high-complexity sessions and structuring client agreements to capture the full authorized notarial fee across all acts in a session is not aggressive billing — it is correct billing for the work performed.

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This page is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Always verify current rules with the Secretary of State.

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