{"context":"https://schema.org","type":"CreativeWork","name":"Texas notary law and online notarization","url":"https://notary.cx/texas-notary-law.html","stateName":"Texas","slug":"texas","summary":"Texas Chapter 406 is the controlling source when the issue is a Texas traditional notary act, Texas online notary procedure, identity verification, tangible-document online notarization, or online oath and affirmation.","primarySourceName":"Texas Government Code Chapter 406","primarySourceUrl":"https://statutes.capitol.texas.gov/docs/GV/htm/GV.406.htm","commonStatePattern":["Most state notary-law questions start with the same buckets: commission authority, physical or remote presence, satisfactory evidence of identity, certificate wording, journal/record retention, seal/signature rules, conflicts, prohibited acts, fees, and what the notary may not certify.","RON states usually add a second layer: online-notary registration, approved or self-certified technology, audio-video communication, credential analysis, identity proofing, electronic journal, recording retention, tamper-evident electronic records, and provider responsibility.","The details vary by state, but the research method should not: identify the notary state, transaction date, notarial act, identity method, record-retention rule, platform rule, and recipient acceptance issue separately.","Training companies, platform articles, title instructions, and AI answers are source context. They are not controlling law unless they point back to the state authority that actually governs the notarial act."],"topics":[{"citation":"Tex. Gov't Code Chapter 406","label":"Base Texas notary statute","plainEnglish":"Chapter 406 governs Texas traditional notaries and Texas online notaries. Use it before relying on vendor summaries or private training material.","sourceUrl":"https://statutes.capitol.texas.gov/docs/GV/htm/GV.406.htm","appliesWhen":["A Texas notary duty, seal, certificate, record, or authority question comes up","A Texas online-notary workflow needs to be checked against the law"],"guardrails":["Vendor material is context, not authority","Texas notary rules are separate from destination-country routing"]},{"citation":"Tex. Gov't Code s. 406.110","label":"Texas online-notary identity verification","plainEnglish":"Texas online notarization identity verification is statutory and uses personal knowledge or remote presentation with credential analysis and identity proofing.","sourceUrl":"https://statutes.capitol.texas.gov/docs/GV/htm/GV.406.htm","appliesWhen":["A Texas online notary identity method is questioned","A platform workflow claims Texas compliance"],"guardrails":["Do not treat a video call alone as the whole legal requirement","Check current Texas SOS standards with the statute"]},{"citation":"Tex. Gov't Code s. 406.1103","label":"Tangible-document online notarization","plainEnglish":"Texas has a special procedure for online notarization of tangible paper documents signed with a physical signature.","sourceUrl":"https://statutes.capitol.texas.gov/docs/GV/htm/GV.406.htm","appliesWhen":["The principal signs paper during a Texas online session","A document is not being signed electronically"],"guardrails":["Tangible-document timing and declaration requirements matter","Do not collapse this into ordinary e-signing"]},{"citation":"Tex. Gov't Code s. 406.1107","label":"Online oath and affirmation","plainEnglish":"Texas online oath and affirmation procedures have their own statutory section and should be checked before assuming a session covers the oath issue.","sourceUrl":"https://statutes.capitol.texas.gov/docs/GV/htm/GV.406.htm","appliesWhen":["The document or process requires an oath or affirmation","A Texas online session is being used for sworn content"],"guardrails":["Oath procedure is not just a label on the certificate","The notary act must match what the document requires"]},{"citation":"Texas notary seal and electronic-tool source standard","label":"Texas one-current-seal and certificate rule","plainEnglish":"Texas online notary compliance is not just a shopping question. Texas requires the online notary to keep current digital certificate and electronic seal information on file with the Secretary of State, and Texas SOS training states that online notaries are not permitted to use multiple digital certificates or seals. If two RON platforms each require their own platform-issued seal or X.509 certificate, the Texas notary may not be able to use both at the same time without creating a state-registration conflict. If a notary bought an NNA/IdenTrust seal or certificate, then onboarded to a platform such as Proof/Notarize or PandaDoc that required different credentials, the notary needs to confirm that the current credential information was updated with Texas before performing online notarizations.","sourceUrl":"https://www.sos.state.tx.us/statdoc/digital.shtml","appliesWhen":["A Texas notary is buying an electronic seal, digital stamp, or certificate-related tool","A vendor or private association suggests its seal product is the default answer","A Texas online notary wants to use more than one RON platform","A platform requires the notary to use that platform's own seal, certificate, or credential package"],"guardrails":["This is a Texas registration and one-current-credential issue, not merely a convenience or vendor-preference issue","The preserved legacy NNA seal page is a source-quality breadcrumb, not a blanket claim that every NNA seal product is unlawful","Verify which seal and X.509 certificate are currently on file with Texas before performing an online notarization","Do not confuse a notary-side seal or certificate product with signer identity proofing"]}],"sourceRules":["Use Texas Chapter 406 and current Texas SOS material for Texas notary questions.","Do not treat the NNA, seal vendors, platforms, or training summaries as the rulemaker.","For Texas electronic-seal or digital-stamp decisions, check the current SOS registration, the single current digital seal/certificate issue, and the receiving platform's technical requirements before relying on a private association product.","Keep Texas notary-law questions separate from apostille and legalization routing."]}