Library notary cost by state comes down to two facts in 2026: many public libraries notarize documents free, and where a fee applies, state law caps how much any notary can charge per signature. Those caps vary a lot — from $2 per signature in New York and Georgia to $5 in Ohio, $10 in North Carolina, and $15 in California and Washington. This guide gives you a per-state maximum-fee table, explains why the library is often the cheapest (free) option, covers remote online notarization (RON), and includes a calculator that shows your state's legal cap and an estimated paid cost versus $0 at the library.
Notarization is required for affidavits, powers of attorney, deeds, title transfers, parental-consent forms, and countless financial documents. Knowing your state's maximum notary fee protects you from overpaying — and knowing that the library frequently charges nothing can save you the per-signature fee entirely. Let's break down the numbers.
Worked example: 3 acts in California (cap $15) at a free library = $0, versus up to $45 at a paid notary. 4 acts in New York (cap $2) at a paid notary = up to $8.00.
Every state sets its own ceiling on what a notary can charge per signature or notarial act. The table below lists representative notary fee by state 2026 maximums for the states in the calculator. These are statutory caps — a notary may charge less (including $0), but not more. Always confirm the current figure with your Secretary of State, as legislatures adjust them.
| State | Max Fee Per Signature/Act (2026) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| New York | $2.00 | Among the lowest caps in the U.S. |
| Georgia | $2.00 | Low statutory ceiling |
| Ohio | $5.00 | Per notarial act (online RON higher) |
| North Dakota | $5.00 | Per notarial act |
| Illinois | $5.00 | Per act for many acknowledgments |
| Pennsylvania | $5.00 | Per notarial act |
| Texas | $6.00 | First acknowledgment; additional signatures less |
| North Carolina | $10.00 | Per principal signature |
| Florida | $10.00 | Per notarial act |
| California | $15.00 | Per signature; among the highest |
| Washington | $15.00 | Per notarial act |
The spread is striking: notarizing two signatures could cost up to $4 in New York but up to $30 in California — at a paid notary. At a free library, both cost $0.
The single most important point: a state cap is a ceiling, not a price. A free notary at library charges $0 regardless of whether your state's maximum is $2 or $15. Many public libraries offer no-charge notary service to cardholders or to the general public as a community service. That means even in a high-cap state like California or Washington, you may pay nothing by going to the library instead of a paid notary, bank, or shipping store.
The catch is availability: not every branch has a commissioned notary on staff, and hours can be limited. Call ahead, confirm a notary is on duty (or book an appointment), and ask whether there is any charge. Where the answer is "free," the library beats every paid alternative.
A common misunderstanding: notaries charge per signature or per notarial act, not per document. A single document that needs three signatures notarized can incur three separate fees, each up to the state cap. So in a $10-cap state, a three-signature document could cost up to $30 at a paid notary. This is exactly why the calculator multiplies your state's per-act cap by the number of acts — and why a free library notary, charging nothing per act, is such a good deal for multi-signature documents.
The maximum notary fee state rules exist to keep notarization affordable and prevent gouging. Key principles:
When you compare a paid notary to the library, the library wins on the per-act fee (often $0) and avoids travel fees entirely.
RON lets you get a document notarized over a live video session. It is convenient but adds a technology or platform fee, commonly $10–$30 per session, on top of (or in place of) the per-act fee. Libraries typically offer in-person notary service, so for RON you usually use an online notary platform that charges its own fee. The calculator lets you add a RON tech fee to compare against an in-person library visit — useful when you cannot get to a branch in time.
To find a library notary public near me:
If your local branch does not offer it, the library can often point you to a nearby free or low-cost notary, and you now know your state's cap so you will recognize a fair price.
A notary — at the library or anywhere — verifies your identity and witnesses your signature; they confirm who signed and that you signed willingly. They do not give legal advice, draft documents, or tell you what to write. Many notaries (including library notaries) decline to notarize wills due to strict state signing rules, and they cannot notarize incomplete documents or anything where they have a personal interest. For legal questions about a document's content, consult an attorney or a reputable legal-information resource.
| Where | Typical Cost | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|---|
| Public library | Often $0 | Free, trusted, no travel fee | Limited hours, not every branch |
| Bank / credit union | Free for customers | Free if you have an account | May decline non-customers |
| UPS Store / shipping center | Up to state cap per act | Long hours, walk-in | Charges the maximum allowed |
| Mobile notary | Cap + travel fee | Comes to you | Most expensive option |
| Online (RON) | ~$10–$30/session | From home, fast | Tech fee; not for every document |
A smooth notarization depends on arriving prepared. Bring the following to your library notary appointment:
If anything about the document is incomplete or the ID does not match, the notary may have to decline, so double-check before you go.
Unlike printing or Wi-Fi, notary service depends on a commissioned individual being on duty. Not every staff member is a notary, and commissioned notaries may work limited shifts or only at certain branches. That is why a wasted trip is the most common frustration people report. A two-minute phone call — "Do you have a notary available today or by appointment, and is there a fee?" — saves you from arriving with documents only to find no notary on site. For multi-signature documents or time-sensitive paperwork, booking an appointment also guarantees the notary can handle the number of acts you need within their per-visit limit. Combine that confirmation with knowing your state's fee cap, and you arrive ready to get notarized quickly and, very often, for free.
Each state sets a maximum notary fee per signature or notarial act. In 2026 these caps range from low limits like $2 per signature in New York and Georgia to $5 in Ohio and North Dakota, $10 in North Carolina and Florida, and $15 in California and Washington. A notary may charge up to the cap but can charge less, and many libraries notarize for free.
Often yes. Many public libraries offer free notary service to cardholders or to the public as a community service, charging $0 per signature regardless of the state cap. Others charge a small fee at or below the state maximum. Because not every branch has a commissioned notary on duty, call ahead to confirm availability and whether there is any charge.
The maximum is set by state statute and is charged per signature or per notarial act, not per document. For example, a document needing two signatures notarized could be charged up to twice the per-signature cap. Use the calculator on this page to see your state's cap and an estimate, and confirm the current statutory fee with your Secretary of State or a trusted notary association.
Notary fees are charged per signature or per notarial act, so a single document with multiple notarized signatures can incur multiple fees up to the state cap for each one. A library that notarizes for free charges nothing regardless of the number of signatures. The calculator multiplies your state's per-act cap by the number of acts for a paid estimate.
Remote online notarization adds a technology or platform fee on top of (or in place of) the per-act fee, commonly $10 to $30 per session depending on the provider and state. RON lets you get a document notarized over video. Libraries typically offer in-person notary service, so for RON you usually use an online notary platform that charges its own fee.
Yes. A state maximum fee is a ceiling, not a required charge. A notary may always charge less than the cap, including $0. Many libraries waive the fee entirely as a public service, so even in a $15-cap state like California or Washington you may pay nothing at the library. Confirm the policy with your specific branch.
Notary fees are regulated at the state level, and each legislature sets its own maximum based on local policy. Some states keep caps very low (such as $2 per signature) to keep notarization affordable, while others set higher ceilings (such as $15). The result is a wide range across the country, which is why a per-state table is the only accurate way to know your cost.
Bring the complete, unsigned document (do not sign until the notary directs you), a valid government-issued photo ID such as a driver's license or passport, and any required witnesses. The notary verifies your identity and watches you sign. They cannot give legal advice or tell you what to put in the document.