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Online Notary New Hampshire

Review New Hampshire's remote-notary process, commission standards, and recording requirements before you offer digital notarization services.

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How to become an online notary in New Hampshire?

New Hampshire's official form and notary manual confirm that the state supports eNotarization and remote notarization. The materials reviewed here also spell out the five-year commission term and key remote-recordkeeping expectations.

Official New Hampshire resources: New Hampshire eNotarization and/or Remote Form (PDF), New Hampshire Notary Public Manual (PDF), and New Hampshire Notary/JP Manual Extract (PDF).


Hold a current New Hampshire commission

New Hampshire's official manual states that notaries are appointed by the governor, with advice and consent of the executive council, and are commissioned for five years.

File the New Hampshire remote/eNotary paperwork

The official New Hampshire eNotarization and/or Remote filing form is the state's starting point for adding electronic and remote capabilities to the commission.

Use a provider that satisfies New Hampshire standards

The New Hampshire form states that providers must require the notary using the service to have a digital certificate. The form also references New Hampshire's required audio-visual recording and journal obligations for remote notarization.

Understand where the act is legally performed

The New Hampshire notary manual explains that a notary performing remote notarization may act for a remotely located individual elsewhere in New Hampshire, out of state, or outside the United States, but the New Hampshire notary may not perform notarial acts outside New Hampshire.

New Hampshire items confirmed from official sources

  • Commission term confirmed: five years.
  • New Hampshire has an official filing path for eNotarization and/or remote notarization.
  • Providers must require a digital certificate.
  • Remote notarization requires an audio-visual recording and a journal.
  • The New Hampshire notary must remain in New Hampshire during the act.
  • A remote signer may be located in New Hampshire, another state, or outside the United States when New Hampshire law allows it.

This page is informational only and is not legal advice. Confirm current New Hampshire requirements before applying, buying tools, or performing notarial acts. Reviewed March 14, 2026.

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FAQs
How long does a New Hampshire notary commission last?

New Hampshire's official manual states that the commission lasts five years.

Does New Hampshire have a remote-notary filing form?

Yes. New Hampshire publishes an eNotarization and/or Remote filing form through the Secretary of State.

What does New Hampshire require for remote-recordkeeping?

The official form states that New Hampshire law requires an audio-visual recording of a remote notarization and a journal.

Is this page legal advice?

No. This page is informational only. Use New Hampshire statutes, forms, and the Secretary of State manual for official requirements.

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