We are officially appointed, by the Secretary of State of California, to serve the public in performing and certifying true copies of a Power Of Attorney. For copies, we screen the original Power Of Attorney and execute an exact copy that will be considered to hold the same authority as the original and may be used to the same effect.
Please make sure the original Power Of Attorney is presented for copying. We do not certify copies of a copy.
We also can create an original Power Of Attorney for you. There are varying types of Power Of Attorney in California:
Advance health care directive:
This document is a combination of a classic medical PoA, which allows your agent to make health care decisions on your behalf if you become unable to do so yourself, and a living will, which details your wishes and preferences regarding your medical treatment. You can’t use your agent, health care provider, health care provider’s employee, or anyone employed by a residential or community care facility as your witness.
Financial PoA:
This type of PoA gives your agent the power to take care of your business or financial affairs.
Durable PoA:
If your power of attorney is durable, this means it remains effective even if you (the principal) become incapacitated and unable to make your own decisions. For a PoA to be durable in California it needs to contain the words, “This power of attorney shall not be affected by subsequent incapacity of the principal,” or a similar statement.
General PoA:
This type of financial power of attorney gives your agent broad authority to manage your financial and business affairs (but not your medical affairs). Unless it is made durable, it terminates if you become incapacitated.
Limited PoA:
This type of financial power of attorney gives your agent authority only over specific areas and/or only for a limited time period. For example, you might grant your agent the power to pay your bills while you’re traveling abroad, sell or buy a piece of real estate, or file your tax return for you.
Vehicle PoA:
This type of limited financial PoA allows your agent to represent you in all transactions involving the Department of Motor Vehicles.
Springing PoA:
A springing power of attorney only becomes effective if and when specified conditions are met, such as the principal becoming incapacitated or a beneficiary coming of age. A medical PoA is “springing” because it only activates if you can no longer make medical decisions for yourself.
A power of attorney, in California, is a legal document that allows you (the “principal”) to appoint another person (called an “agent” or “attorney-in-fact”) to make medical or financial decisions on your behalf. A power of attorney in California must meet several requirements to be valid.
In order to create a power of attorney that’s valid in California, it must meet these basic requirements:
• You (the principal) must be at least 18 years old.
• You (the principal) must have mental capacity, which means you can fully understand your PoA and its consequences.
• Your agent(s) must also be at least 18 years old and have mental capacity.
• Your PoA needs to be signed in the presence of us, your notary public.
• If your PoA gives your agent authority to take care of real estate transactions for you, you also have to have the PoA notarized.
• If you live in a nursing home and create a medical PoA, it needs to be witnessed by an ombudsman or patient advocate. (this is in addition to us, your notary)
Here’s what you need to do to create a valid power of attorney in California with us:
• Decide which type of power of attorney you need for your situation.
• Decide exactly which types of authority you’d like to grant your agent.
• Choose an agent (or agents) that you trust.
• We will obtain the proper PoA form for you.
• Fill out the form carefully and sign it in the presence of us, your notary public.
• Give a copy of the form to your agent.
• If your PoA involves real estate transactions, file a copy with the Office of the County Clerk-Recorder.
• Consider giving a copy to your financial institutions or medical providers.
• Store your original PoA in a safe place and update it as needed.
NOTARIZE PAPERWORK
For All Documents
Acknowledgements
Jurats
POWERS OF ATTORNEY
All 7 Types
Duplication Of Original
PoA Creation Available
DEPOSITIONS
Legal Testimonies
Certified Certificate Available
Audiotaped/Videotaped Available
APOSTILLE SERVICE
International Use
Includes CA State Filing Fee
Includes CA State Counter Fee
Frequently Asked Questions
This question clearly takes the top spot.
One of the key reasons it comes up so often is that us Notaries are confronted with a growing array of identity cards. Consider that every state and U.S. territory issues driver’s licenses and ID cards. On top of that, there are inmate IDs, tribal IDs and identity cards issued by federal government agencies. Then there are the identity cards and passports issued by every country in the world. Given the mobile nature of our business and the fact that there are 43 million foreign-born residents living in the U.S., there’s a good chance will encounter an unfamiliar ID.
The valid Photo Identification Cards that we accept are:
California driver’s license or nondriver’s ID. (valid & unexpired)
U.S. passport or passport card. (valid & unexpired)
An inmate identification card issued by the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.
Driver’s license or official nondriver’s ID issued by a U.S. state.
Canadian or Mexican driver’s license issued by an appropriate public agency.
U.S. military ID.
Valid foreign passport.
Employee ID issued by an agency or office of the state of California.
Employee ID issued by a California city, county, or city and county.
ID card issued by a federally-recognized tribal government.
Valid consular identification document issued by a consulate.
Two Credible Witnesses with a valid ID that can confirm they personally know you.
Yes. We are.
If the times available on our appointment calendar system do not work for you and you require urgent notary service, please call or text (323) 999-1016.
If we are available, we charge a $50.00 urgency fee on top of any other charges you may incur.
Yes, we are available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year.
• For all appointments made on Saturday or Sunday, we charge a $25.00 weekend convenience fee.
• Additionally, if your appointment is made after 5pm or before 10am on any day, we also charge a $25.00 after-hours convenience fee.
It's simple...
It is FREE if you first set an appointment and meet us AT our office during normal weekday business hours. You must pay for street parking or a paid parking lot.
It is $5.00 if you first set an appointment and meet us NEAR our office less than a ½ mile away during normal weekday business hours. Free Parking for many places.
It is $40.00 if you first set an appointment and would like us to COME TO YOU at your address that you entered when making your appointment. Your address must be within a 10-mile radius of our office. If you later need to change locations, be sure to message us and include your order number.
It is $40.00 +$5.00/per mile if you first set an appointment and would like us to COME TO YOU when your meeting address is beyond a 10 mile radius from our office, up to 50 miles maximum. If you later need to change locations, be sure to message us and include your order number.
WAIT TIMES
All appointments get a 5 minute grace period. We charge $1.00 / per minute for every minute you are late past the scheduled appointment time.
Many clients come to us and simply say, “I need this notarized.”
They have no idea that there are different notarial acts. Before we ask you "what type of notarization you want?", we will quickly peruse the document to see if it includes notarial wording, which is generally found after the signature line.
If it does, we will look it over to see what it is asking us to do.
For an acknowledgment, it will generally have some variation of “acknowledged before me.”
Jurat wording typically will include a version of “subscribed and sworn” language.
If we recognize the wording and it meets the requirements for the state of California, we will proceed. If the wording is not clear, or the document doesn’t contain a notarial certificate, we will have to ask you what type of notarization document is needed.
Customers will often then ask us what to do. We will describe to you what an acknowledgment is and what a jurat is, but we will never recommend or suggest which one should be used. That would be an unauthorized practice of law.
We notarize signatures on documents, not pages on documents.
A particular page or pages might have notary certificates within a document. Or, a certificate could be stapled to the back of a document. Ideally that certificate should identify the corresponding document.
We charge PER SIGNATURE. So if your document requires us to notarize your signature on multiple pages, you will be billed for each of those notarization acts.
If a document has a white-out on it, then we will refuse to notarize it because we do not understand the complete contents.
If the signer is not present or the document is incomplete.
If the signer cannot understand the document’s contents, then we cannot notarize the document.
If the signer cannot provide an adequate identification clause.
If the signer is a minor, or we believe a person has been coerced into signing.
Wills and birth/death certificates are not notarized.
Will everyone who needs their signature notarized be present?
Do you have in your possession all necessary documents ready for the notarization?
Do all signers have acceptable ID? What type does each person have?
Do you agree to all our payment terms for extras? (including travel fees and /or any additional fees)