Prompt, Courteous and Reliable…

You’ll find my mobile notary and signing services comfortable and professional with convenient and flexible evening, weekend and holiday scheduling.

  • Based in Fillmore, serving all of Ventura County
  • ​Same day service available
  • Low fees

My Mobile Notary Services are provided to individuals, businesses and attorneys in Ventura County at assisted living communities, banks, business offices, colleges, courts, homes, hospices, hospitals, hotels, nursing homes, physician’s offices, schools, real estate offices, retirement communities, residential care facilities, restaurants, senior living communities, title companies, universities, vehicle impound locations, women’s centers or any other mutually convenient location.

Why Would I Need a Mobile Notary Public Signing Service?

A notary’s signature is required on many legal documents, and can be a wise precaution even when notarization is not mandated. Sooner or later everyone will need a notary, whether to finalize a sales transaction like a loan, entering into an escrow agreement, or when completing a binding legal business agreement, and it can be stressful to find one on short notice. Many banks, for instance, have notaries on staff, but do not attempt to have an available signing agent at all times, and they certainly aren’t mobile. Furthermore, some have policies that restrict in-house notary publics against notarizing any documents other than their own.

What To Bring

  • Your document, completely filled out – BUT DO NOT SIGN
  • A valid (not expired) government issued photo ID. Details below.

Notary Services Cost

The State of CA allows a Notary Public to charge $15 per Notarized Signature plus Service Fees as applicable.

  • I charge the standard $15 per notarized signature 
  • $10 Travel Fee for Fillmore Residents (beginning 2022)
  • Additional Travel and service fees based on your situation may apply

Acceptable Identification Documents 

The notary public can establish the identity of the signer using identification documents as follows (Civil Code section 1185(b)(3) and (4)): 

1. There is reasonable reliance on any one of the following forms of identification, provided it is current or was issued within 5 years: 

a. An identification card or driver’s license issued by the California Department of Motor Vehicles; 

b. A United States passport; 

c. An inmate identification card issued by the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, if the inmate is in custody in California state prison; 

d. Any form of inmate identification issued by a sheriff’s department, if the inmate is in custody in a local detention facility; or 

2. There is reasonable reliance on any one of the following forms of identification, provided that it also contains a photograph, description of the person, signature of the person, and an identifying number: 

(a) A valid consular identification document issued by a consulate from the applicant’s country of citizenship, or a valid passport from the applicant’s country of citizenship; 

(b) A driver’s license issued by another state or by a Canadian or Mexican public agency authorized to issue driver’s licenses; 

(c) An identification card issued by another state; 

(d) A United States military identification card (caution: current military identification cards might not contain all the required information); 

(e) An employee identification card issued by an agency or office of the State of California, or an agency or office of a city, county, or city and county in California.

(f) An identification card issued by a federally recognized tribal government.