Mobile Notary Intake Forms: What to Capture Before You Drive to the Client
The mobile notary business runs on time and logistics. You drive to the client, you perform the notarization, you drive to the next one. When an appointment goes sideways — the signer does not have acceptable ID, the document is missing the notarial certificate, there are three signers instead of one, or the nursing home requires visitor check-in that adds 30 minutes — you are not just losing the fee on that appointment. You are losing the next one.
A mobile notary intake form is how you prevent that. It captures everything you need to know about the appointment before you leave your house: where you are going, who you are meeting, what you are notarizing, what identification they will present, how many documents need signatures, and what the full fee is going to be. Done right, it also gives you the information you need for the state-required journal entry before you even arrive.
This is different from the intake a signing agent running a dedicated notary practice uses. That form — covered in the notary signing agent guide — deals with loan packages, title companies, signing services, and RON platforms. The mobile notary form is built around travel logistics, on-location access, and the variety of documents a mobile notary encounters in a single day: real estate closings, powers of attorney, affidavits, wills, medical directives, court filings, title transfers. Here is what that form should capture.
Appointment date, time, and scheduling logistics
The first thing the intake needs to nail down is the appointment window. Mobile notaries book jobs back to back, and the scheduling information determines whether the appointment is even feasible:
- Requested date and time — specific date, start time, and whether there is a hard deadline on completion (a real estate closing that must happen by 3 p.m., a court filing that must be notarized before 5 p.m.).
- Time flexibility — can the client accept a 30-minute window, or do they need you at a specific time? Hospital and nursing home signings often have visiting hours that create hard constraints from the other side.
- Appointment duration estimate — the intake cannot estimate this accurately until it knows the number of documents, number of signers, and location type. But the client should provide their own estimate so you can flag mismatches before arrival.
- Confirmation method — how and when you will confirm: 24 hours before by text, one hour before by call, or email confirmation upon booking. Get this in writing on the form. It reduces no-shows dramatically.
- Cancellation policy acknowledgment — mobile notaries absorb real costs when appointments cancel last-minute. The intake should state your cancellation policy and document that the client has seen it.
Location details and travel distance
The location information is not just the address. For a mobile notary, it is the operational core of every appointment. What you need to know:
- Full signing address — street address, unit or suite number, floor, building name. For residential appointments in large complexes, the building number or entrance matters. "123 Main Street, Apartment 4B" is not the same as "123 Main Street, Building C, Apartment 4B."
- Parking and access instructions — is there dedicated parking, a visitor lot, or street parking only? Is there a gate code, a lobby check-in, or a security desk that will need to clear you before you can enter? Arriving five minutes before an appointment only to spend fifteen in a parking garage or at a security desk kills your schedule.
- Travel distance from your base — round-trip mileage or point-to-point distance used to calculate your travel fee. Many mobile notaries set a base radius (10–15 miles) with a per-mile charge beyond that. This calculation needs to happen before you quote a price, not after you arrive.
- Estimated drive time — separate from distance. Highway miles and surface-road miles cover the same distance in very different amounts of time, especially in urban markets.
- Location type — residence, office, hospital, nursing home or assisted living facility, correctional facility, hotel, title company office, or another notary-office location. Each location type has different access requirements, different ambient conditions, and a different expected dynamic for the signing.
Special location requirements: hospitals, nursing homes, and correctional facilities
Three location types require additional intake fields because the access requirements are materially different from a standard home or office visit:
Hospitals. You need the patient's name, room number, ward or floor, and the name of the attending physician or nursing station contact if the patient's condition might have changed since the appointment was booked. Hospitals may require you to check in at a front desk and obtain a visitor pass. Some restrict visiting hours to specific windows. If the patient is in the ICU or a restricted unit, you may need pre-authorization from the nursing staff. The intake should capture all of this.
Nursing homes and assisted living facilities. These have the most complex access requirements of any location type. Most require advance notice of your visit, and some require that you be pre-registered with the facility before the appointment. You may need to check in with an administrator, not just the reception desk. If the signer is a memory care resident, the facility may require a staff witness to be present for the signing. Capacity concerns are heightened in this setting, and your intake should note whether the staff has confirmed the resident is currently lucid and willing to sign.
Correctional facilities. Jail and prison signings require advance scheduling through the facility's administration, clearance of your identification, approval of the documents you are bringing in, and compliance with the facility's dress code and rules on items permitted inside. You cannot simply show up. The intake must capture the facility name, the inmate's full name and ID number, the name of the facility contact who approved the appointment, and the documents that have been cleared for the visit. Plan for this appointment to take two to three times as long as a comparable signing at a home or office.
Signer information: who you are meeting
The signer details determine the scope of the appointment and surface potential problems before you arrive:
- Full legal name — first, middle, last, and suffix. This must match the name on the identification they will present and the name on the document being notarized. Name mismatches are one of the most common reasons signings cannot be completed, and they are almost always fixable if caught before the appointment.
- Date of birth — required for journal entries in most states and a secondary identity verification point.
- Phone and email — for scheduling confirmations, last-minute changes, and follow-up. A mobile notary without a direct phone number for the signer is one traffic delay away from a missed appointment and no way to communicate.
- Number of signers — if a married couple, business partners, or co-owners are both signing, you need to know before you arrive. Each signer means a separate ID check and separate journal entries. If there are more signers than you were told to expect, you have every right to charge accordingly — but only if your intake captured the original number.
- Company or entity name — if the signer is executing a document in a representative capacity (as a corporate officer, LLC member, trustee, executor, or agent under a power of attorney), the entity name and the signer's authority to act need to be documented. A corporate officer signing a deed on behalf of an LLC needs a resolution or authorization on file. You should know about this requirement before the appointment, not during it.
- ADA accommodations — does the signer have a disability that requires accommodation? A signer who cannot physically hold a pen needs an alternative signing method that complies with state notary law. A signer who is blind must be read the document aloud before signing. Know this in advance.
- Foreign language requirements — can the signer read and understand the document in the language it is written in? If not, how is communication being handled? Some states prohibit a notary from performing a notarization if they cannot communicate directly with the signer. Others permit an interpreter, but the notary should document that interpretation was used and who the interpreter was.
Identification: the check that cannot fail in the field
ID verification is your most important legal obligation, and the mobile notary setting makes it harder than the office setting. You cannot send the signer back to get a better ID. You cannot call the title company to hold while you wait for them to dig it out of their car. The intake is your pre-screening:
- ID type — driver's license, state ID card, U.S. passport, passport card, or military ID. Ask the client what they will be presenting and confirm it is acceptable in your state. List the acceptable options on the form itself so there is no ambiguity.
- ID expiration date — expired identification is not valid for notarization in most states. Ask for the expiration date at intake. If the ID is expired, the appointment cannot proceed and the client needs to know that before you drive to them.
- Name match confirmation — ask the client to confirm that the name on their ID exactly matches the name on the document. Nicknames, middle-name variations, and hyphenated names cause failures. A "John T. Smith" on the deed with a "John Thomas Smith" on the driver's license may or may not be acceptable depending on your state's notary rules and the title company's requirements.
- Credible witness option — for signers who lack acceptable government-issued ID, some states permit the use of one or two credible witnesses who personally know the signer and can present their own valid ID. If a credible witness will be used, the intake should capture the witness's name, relationship to the signer, and what identification they will bring.
Document type and scope
A mobile notary encounters more document variety in a single week than a signing agent who handles nothing but loan packages. Your intake needs to capture what is being notarized — specifically — so you arrive prepared:
- Document type — real estate closing documents (deed, title transfer, settlement statement), loan signing package, power of attorney (financial or medical), advance directive or living will, will or trust, affidavit or sworn statement, court document, contract or agreement, bill of sale, or another document type. Each category has different notarial certificate requirements and different procedural steps.
- Number of documents — a client who says "I just need something notarized" sometimes means one page and sometimes means a 60-page trust. Ask specifically how many documents they have.
- Number of notarizations required — a single document may require multiple notarial acts if there are multiple signers or multiple signature blocks requiring separate certificates. A deed signed by two co-owners requires two notarizations. A trust with a notarial block on the settlor signature and the trustee signature requires two notarizations on the same document.
- Whether the notarial certificate is already attached — professionally prepared documents from attorneys or title companies typically include the appropriate notarial certificate. Documents prepared by the signer frequently do not. If the certificate is missing, you need to bring a loose certificate and know which type (acknowledgment, jurat) is required for the document being signed.
- Printing requirement — is the client providing the document, or do you need to print it? For loan signings and some real estate closings, the notary prints the package. If you are printing, the page count drives your printing fee, and you need the document sent to you in advance.
Fee structure: quote it in writing before you go
Mobile notaries operate in a market where clients often do not understand how the fee structure works. They know their state's per-signature statutory fee — "$2 per notarization" in New York, "$10 per acknowledgment" in Florida — and they expect that to be the total. When the invoice comes in at $95, they are angry. All of this is preventable by putting the full fee breakdown on the intake form and getting the client to acknowledge it before the appointment:
- Per-notarization fee — the state-regulated fee per notarial act. List your state's maximum and the number of notarizations expected, so the client can calculate the notarial component themselves.
- Travel fee — your flat fee, mileage rate, or tiered structure based on distance. Make clear that this fee is charged regardless of whether the notarization is completed (if the signer fails to have acceptable ID, you still drove there).
- After-hours and weekend surcharge — evening, weekend, and holiday appointments typically carry a premium. Define your standard hours on the form and state the surcharge for appointments outside that window. If the client books a Sunday evening appointment, they should not be surprised by a surcharge on the invoice.
- Printing and supplies fee — for signings where you are printing the document package, the per-page printing cost and any supplies charges (shipping envelope, overnight return label for loan packages).
- Wait time fee — if the client is not ready when you arrive, or if the signing is delayed by a third party, do you charge for wait time? Many mobile notaries charge a per-15-minute or per-half-hour wait fee after the first 15 minutes. This should be disclosed at intake.
- Total estimated fee — the intake should calculate and present the total based on the information provided. Not an exact quote (the final count of notarizations might change), but a realistic estimate that the client has acknowledged before the appointment.
Notary journal fields: build the entry before you arrive
Most states that require a notary journal specify what fields each entry must contain. Filling in the intake form at booking and using it to pre-populate the journal entry saves significant time at the appointment and reduces the risk of journal errors. Your intake should capture every field your state's journal requires:
- Date and time of notarial act — the actual date and time of signing, not the date the intake was completed.
- Type of notarial act — acknowledgment, jurat, copy certification, oath or affirmation.
- Type of document — deed, affidavit, power of attorney, contract, and so on. Some states require the document date to be recorded in the journal as well.
- Signer's name and address — as it appears on the identification presented.
- Identification method — ID type, issuing state or country, and ID number or expiration date, depending on your state's requirements. Or "credible witness" with the witness's name and ID information.
- Fee charged — the total fee collected for the notarial act (the per-signature fee, not the travel fee, in states that regulate only the notarial component).
- Thumbprint — California requires a thumbprint in the journal for deeds, powers of attorney, and certain other documents affecting real property. Check your state's requirements and flag on the intake whether a thumbprint will be needed.
E&O insurance and professional credentials
A mobile notary operating as a business — not just a notary public on the side — needs to document their own professional credentials and coverage as part of the appointment record. This protects both parties:
Commission information. Your commission state, commission number, and commission expiration date. If you perform notarizations in multiple states, this is especially important to document per-appointment, since the applicable rules (fees, journal requirements, certificate language) vary by the state where the notarial act takes place.
Errors and omissions insurance. E&O coverage is not required in most states, but it is the standard for any notary operating as a professional. The intake record should note your E&O carrier, policy number, and coverage amount. This becomes relevant if a title company or lender requests confirmation of your coverage before assigning a loan signing.
Surety bond. Most states require a surety bond as a condition of the notary commission. Document the bond amount and bonding company. The bond protects the public from notary misconduct; the E&O protects you from unintentional errors.
NSA certification. If you are also a certified Notary Signing Agent through the NNA or another certifying body, document your certification number and expiration. Many signing services and title companies require current NSA certification before assigning loan signing jobs.
The difference between mobile notary and signing agent intake
There is overlap between the mobile notary and signing agent fields — both involve traveling to signers, verifying identity, and maintaining a journal. But the scope of work is different enough that they need distinct forms.
A signing agent handles loan packages: structured document sets, specific return requirements, fax-back pages, and coordination with title companies and lenders. That workflow is documented in the notary signing agent intake guide.
A mobile notary handles everything else: the power of attorney for an elderly parent who cannot travel, the affidavit that needs to be notarized before a court deadline, the deed that has to be signed at a hospital bedside, the business contract that needs two corporate signers. The variety is the point, and the intake form needs to be flexible enough to handle that variety without being so long that clients abandon it before they get to the scheduling fields.
If your mobile notary practice also handles real estate signings, the real estate intake form guide covers the additional fields that closing documents require — purchase versus sale versus refinance, lender and title company coordination, and escrow instructions.
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