Passing the exam feels like the finish line, but it is the halfway point. There are four more things you need to do before you can perform a single notarization, and two of them have hard deadlines.
Step 1: Complete Live Scan fingerprinting
The Secretary of State requires a criminal background check through the California DOJ and FBI before they will process your application.
What you need
- The notary-specific Live Scan form (download from the SOS website)
- A valid photo ID
- Payment of $40 to $65 (varies by location)
Find a location at oag.ca.gov/fingerprints/locations. Processing takes a few weeks — the results go directly to the Secretary of State.
Step 2: Purchase your $15,000 surety bond
You need this before you can file your oath.
- The bond protects the public, not you
- If the surety pays a claim, they can demand reimbursement from you personally
- Cost: $40 to $100 for the full four-year term
- Buy from any licensed surety company
Step 3: Wait for your commission certificate
After the SOS receives your exam results, application, and background check, they process your appointment. Processing times vary — check the Secretary of State’s website for the current timeline.
Your commission certificate shows:
- Your name
- Commission number
- Expiration date (four years from issuance)
Step 4: File your oath of office
Bring to the county clerk’s office:
- Your commission certificate
- Your surety bond
- Oath of office form (the county clerk may provide this)
- Filing fee (typically around $36)
Once filed, you are officially a commissioned California notary public.
Step 5: Order your seal and journal
You still cannot notarize until you have your tools.
Notary seal (stamp)
- Order from an authorized seal manufacturer
- Must include your name, commission number, expiration date, “Notary Public — California,” and the State Seal
- Must produce a photographically reproducible impression
- Do not order until you have your commission certificate — you need the exact number and date
Sequential journal
- Required for every notarial act — no exceptions
- Each entry must include: date, time, type of act, type of document, signer’s name, ID method, signer’s signature, fee charged
- Thumbprints required for deeds and powers of attorney
For full details, see California notary journal requirements explained.
Full timeline
| Step | Timeline |
|---|---|
| Exam results | 15-20 business days after exam |
| Live Scan processing | 2-4 weeks |
| SOS application processing | Varies |
| Commission certificate | Arrives by mail |
| Oath filing deadline | Within 30 days of certificate |
| Seal delivery | A few business days after ordering |
Total from exam day to first notarization: typically 6 to 12 weeks.
Haven’t taken the exam yet? Start with our SOS-approved 6-hour course — study online at your own pace and get your certificate instantly.
Quick answers
Looking for a short answer? Our FAQ covers the most common questions about California notary education.
View FAQ →
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