Is Remote Online Notarization Legal and Available in All States?

Remote online notarization (RON) is legal in 49 states and the District of Columbia as of 2026. California is the only outlier, with its permanent RON statute set to take effect on January 1, 2030. If your business is thinking about digitizing notarization workflows: yes, RON is an option.
Phil Motto
June 11, 2026
Is Remote Online Notarization Legal and Available in All States?

The short answer depends on who's asking, and what they are really asking.

For consumers and businesses, the answer is yes. Remotely notarized documents are accepted for use in all 50 states. You don't need to live in a particular state, or even be in a particular state, to use remote online notarization. That's true regardless of whether your home state has passed a RON law.

For notaries, the answer is more nuanced. Whether a notary can perform remote online notarizations depends on the laws of the state where they're commissioned. As of late 2025, 42 states have enacted effective laws allowing their commissioned notaries to perform RON. Three states plus DC have passed RON legislation that isn't yet in effect. Five states have no RON law.

Understanding the difference between those two questions is the key to understanding how RON actually works.

How RON is available in all 50 states

Notarial law works on an interstate recognition principle: every state recognizes the authority of notaries commissioned in other states and may accept as valid any notarization performed in accordance with the laws of the notary's commissioning state. This principle, applied daily across the country, is what makes RON accessible everywhere.

A notary commissioned in Virginia can notarize a document for a signer located in Mississippi, even though Mississippi has no RON law. The notary follows Virginia's rules. Mississippi can accept the result. The signer gets a valid, legally recognizable notarization without leaving home.

This is not a workaround or a gray area. It is the standard legal foundationthat governs notarization across state lines, and it applies to remote online notarization the same way it applies to any other notarization performed in one state for use in another.

The two separate questions

Most of the confusion about RON legality comes from confusing two distinct questions:

1. Can a notary in my state perform RON? 

This depends on whether the state where the notary is commissioned has enacted a RON law. As of November 2025, 42 states plus Washington, D.C. have effective RON laws. Three states have passed laws not yet in effect. Five states have no RON law. If a notary is commissioned in a state without an effective RON law, that notary cannot legally perform remote online notarizations.

2. Can I use RON for my documents? 

This is almost always yes. Because of interstate recognition, anyone in any state can access RON services through a notary commissioned in a state that permits it. The signer's location is not the relevant legal question. The notary's commissioning state is. Additionally, while some documents do have specifics requirements for execution, these laws do not specifically dicate how a notarial act must be performed.

The five states without RON laws

Alabama, Connecticut, Georgia, Mississippi, and South Carolina have not enacted RON legislation. For signers in those states, this doesn't prevent access to RON services. They can be served by notaries commissioned in states with effective RON laws, and the resulting notarization will be recognized.

There are real nuances worth knowing here, though:

  • Connecticut is the most significant exception. As an attorney-closing state, Connecticut not only lacks a RON law but actively prohibits remote online notarization for local real estate closings, including by out-of-state notaries. For Connecticut real estate transactions specifically, RON is not an option. For other document types, out-of-state RON is generally recognized.
  • Georgia and South Carolina are also attorney-closing states. For real estate closings in those states, attorney oversight requirements apply and effectively limit RON's use in that specific context.
  • Alabama and Mississippi have both attempted to pass RON legislation and recognize out-of-state notarizations. Signers in those states can use RON without restriction for most document types.

California, Massachusetts, and North Carolina have all passed RON legislation, but those laws are not yet effective. California's law, enacted in 2023, authorizes RON beginning January 2030 pending a technology implementation process. In the meantime, California explicitly recognizes out-of-state notarizations, so California signers can access RON today.

How this works in practice

When you use a platform like Proof, you're matched with a commissioned notary from a state with an effective RON law. Proof's on-demand notaries are commissioned in Pennsylvania, Florida, Nevada, Texas, and Virginia. 

All five states have robust RON laws, and notarizations performed by those notaries can be accepted for use anywhere in the US.

You do not need to live in, or even be located in, any of those states. You appear via live audio-video, verify your identity, sign your documents, and receive a notarization that carries the same legal weight as an in-person notarization, valid in every state.

What this means for businesses

For organizations building workflows that include notarization, the practical implication is straightforward: serving customers in states without RON laws doesn't require waiting for those states to pass legislation. Interstate recognition already covers it. The relevant questions are which notary commissioning states the platform uses and whether those states have the right laws and standards in place.

One important caveat: some accepting institutions, lenders, or counterparties may have their own internal policies about RON, independent of state law. It's always worth confirming that the institution receiving the notarized document will accept one performed via RON. Most do. 

The Mortgage Bankers Association and major government-sponsored enterprises including Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have both updated their guidelines to accept RON-executed documents.

The bottom line

RON is not a patchwork system where some states are "in" and others are "out" from a consumer perspective. The 42-state count of effective RON laws describes which notaries can perform RON, not where RON documents are accepted. Documents notarized remotely by a properly commissioned notary are valid and accepted across all 50 states.

Learn more about remote online notarization with Proof >

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