Notary Service

As of 2024, all Georgia notarizations must be made in person whether in-office, public building or mobile

Step 1: Make Appt

All appointments require a deposit to secure the time slot that's applied to the service.

Step 2: Consultation

Within 24 hours of securing your appointment we will reach out to confirm the details.

Step 3: Office Service

Whether in our office or yours we will sit down and go through your documents in a safe and delicate manner.

Step 4: Follow Up

Within 72 hours of your service we will reach out to follow up with any additional questions or concerns.

OUR PRICING

Acknowledgments

The signer personally appears before the notary and acknowledges signing the document freely and for the purposes stated in it. The notary certifies that the signer is who they claim to be, and that they signed voluntarily.

Used when someone is making a sworn statement. The signer must personally appear, swear or affirm that the statements are true, and sign in front of the notary. The notary then completes the jurat.

In Georgia, a notary may certify a copy of a document (not a public record) as a true copy of the original.

Notarizing a Power of Attorney document is very common: verifying identity, witnessing the signature, etc.

Includes wills, codicils, living trusts, advance directives, health care proxies. Notaries can witness and notarize required signatures; in some cases witnesses must sign.

Many documents in real estate transactions, loan closings, refinances, deeds, etc., require notarization. Note: Not all documents in real estate may be notarized by just any notary—some require specialized signing agents.

Contracts, partnership agreements, articles of incorporation, business filings—these often need signatures witnessed and possibly notarized.

In cases where documents require independent witnesses besides the notary, the notary often also serves as a witness or ensures the presence of required witnesses.

The notary travels to clients’ locations (homes, hospitals, offices, nursing homes, etc.) to perform notarial acts, for convenience.

Used to manage your assets during life and after death without going through probate. Trust documents and certification of trust often need notarization.

While Georgia law allows a will to be valid without notarization, self-proving affidavits (which make the will easier to probate) must be notarized and signed with witnesses.

Grants access to medical records. Some institutions require notarization for added verification.

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