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Ohio · ORC Chapter 147 · April 2025 Law Updates · RON Journal Mandatory

Ohio Notary Journal
Requirements

Ohio does not require a journal for traditional notarizations — but strongly recommends one. For remote online notarizations, a tamper-evident electronic journal is mandatory under ORC § 147.65. A significant 2025 law update raised the RON fee to $30 and clarified identity verification standards. NotaryAct is state-configured for Ohio — RON fields fully enabled, best-practice journal available for traditional acts.

OPTIONALTraditional Journal
REQUIREDRON Electronic Journal
$30New RON Max Fee (2025)
Apr 2025Law Updated

📋 April 4, 2025 law update: Ohio enacted significant notary law changes effective April 4, 2025, including: RON maximum fee raised to $30 (plus optional $10 technology fee) · identity verification standards clarified in ORC § 147.49 · in-person oath of office now required · expanded electronic notarization acceptance. This page reflects all current rules.

⚖️ Ohio Notary Journal Law — Quick Reference (Updated April 2025)
Governing LawOhio Revised Code Chapter 147 · § 147.65 (RON journal)
Traditional JournalNot required · Strongly recommended as best practice
RON Electronic JournalMandatory — every RON session · Must be tamper-evident ✓
RON Audio-Video RecordingRequired — every RON session — retained per SOS rules ✓
SSN in RON Journal⛔ Expressly prohibited under ORC § 147.65(C)
Thumbprint / FingerprintNot required · Not prohibited · Optional in Ohio configuration
RON Journal OwnershipExclusive property of notary — cannot surrender to employer ✓
RON Authorized Since2019 · ORC § 147.60 et seq.
RON Max Fee (updated 2025)$30 per act + optional $10 technology fee = $40 max ✓
Traditional Max Fee$5 per notarial act
Commission Term (non-attorneys)5 years
RON AuthorizationSeparate RON authorization required from Ohio SOS · $20 fee · 2-hour course + exam

Ohio’s Two-Track Journal System

Like Florida, Ohio takes a split approach to journal requirements. Traditional in-person notarizations have no statutory journal requirement — keeping a record is best practice but not legally mandated. Remote online notarizations are an entirely different matter: an electronic journal is mandatory for every RON session under ORC § 147.65, and the journal must be kept in a tamper-evident electronic format under the notary’s exclusive control.

Ohio notaries who perform only traditional notarizations should still keep a journal. Without a contemporaneous record, a notary has no defense if a notarization is later disputed, and the Ohio Secretary of State recommends journal use even when not required.

✔ NotaryAct is state-configured for Ohio: NotaryAct’s Ohio configuration fully enables all required RON journal fields under ORC § 147.65, including the platform description field and the signer’s jurisdiction field. For traditional notarizations, NotaryAct provides a best-practice journal structure aligned with Ohio SOS guidance. SSN capture is not included in any Ohio configuration. Fingerprint capture is available as an optional feature.

Required Fields for Every Ohio RON Journal Entry

Under ORC § 147.65(B), every online notarization must be recorded in the electronic journal with the following information:

1 Date and TimeAuto-timestamped by NotaryAct at submission.
2 Type of Notarial ActAcknowledgment, jurat, or other. Structured dropdown in NotaryAct.
3 Title or Description of DocumentDocument description field in NotaryAct.
4 Signer’s Printed Name and AddressCaptured from credential analysis during the RON session.
5 Identity Verification Method and ResultMethod used (personal knowledge or satisfactory evidence) plus whether identity proofing was passed.
6 Signer’s Jurisdiction at Time of NotarizationThe state or country where the signer was physically located.
7 Notarization Location (if not notary’s business address)Where the notary was physically located if different from their registered business address.
8 Description of Online Notarization SystemThe RON platform used. NotaryAct includes a dedicated platform field.
Social Security Number — PROHIBITEDORC § 147.65(C) expressly prohibits recording SSNs in the Ohio RON electronic journal. NotaryAct does not capture SSNs in any configuration.

What Changed in Ohio — April 4, 2025

RON fee raised to $30. The maximum fee for remote online notarizations increased from $25 to $30 per notarial act. Notaries may also charge an optional technology fee of up to $10 per online notarization session — bringing the total possible charge to $40. This technology fee may be charged even if the notarization is not ultimately completed.

Identity verification standards clarified. The April 2025 law defined key terms in ORC § 147.49: “Personal knowledge” means the notary personally knows the signer through sufficient dealings to provide reasonable certainty of identity. “Satisfactory evidence” means a passport, driver’s license, or government-issued ID with a photo or signature — or the oath of a credible witness personally known to the notary or identified with acceptable ID. IDs must be current or expired no more than 3 years.

In-person oath of office now required. Ohio notaries must now take and subscribe to the oath of office in person before another notary or other authorized official. Prior law did not require in-person administration.

Electronic notarization acceptance expanded. Clerks of courts and deputy registrars are now required to accept electronically notarized documents.

Journal ownership reaffirmed. ORC § 147.65(E) explicitly states that an employer may not retain the electronic journal of an employee who is an online notary public when employment ceases. The journal belongs to the notary.


How NotaryAct Satisfies Every Ohio Requirement

Ohio Requirement How NotaryAct Covers It Met?
Traditional journal (best practice)Best-practice journal available aligned with Ohio SOS guidance
RON electronic journal — tamper-evidentEntries locked at submission; encrypted cloud; audit trail
All required RON journal fields including jurisdiction and platformAll ORC § 147.65(B) fields enabled in Ohio RON configuration
SSN prohibited in RON journalSSN field not included in any Ohio configuration
Journal under notary’s exclusive controlPassword/biometric access; notary-only login; cannot be surrendered to employer
Secure backup requiredAutomatic continuous backup to redundant encrypted cloud
Fingerprint — optionalAvailable as optional field in Ohio traditional journal config; not presented as required

Other state guides: Florida · Texas · Illinois · California · New York · All 50 States →


Ohio RON Journal Requirements — Fully Covered.

NotaryAct is state-configured for Ohio — all required RON journal fields enabled including jurisdiction and platform, SSNs not captured, tamper-evident cloud records, and best-practice journal support for traditional notarizations. Whether you notarize in person or online, your records are built to survive any challenge.

This page is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Information reflects Ohio Revised Code Chapter 147 and Ohio Administrative Code Chapter 111:6-1, including amendments effective April 4, 2025. Consult the Ohio Secretary of State’s Notary Division or qualified legal counsel for guidance specific to your situation.

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