How to Find a Notary in Kansas (2026)
Where to get documents notarized in Kansas — fees, what to bring, and remote online notarization options.
Step-by-Step: Getting Documents Notarized in Kansas
Identify your notarial act type
Different documents require different notarial acts. An acknowledgment is the most common — you acknowledge you signed willingly. A jurat requires you to swear under oath that the document's contents are true. An oath or affirmation is used for affidavits. Understanding the type helps you prepare and ensures you bring the right document.
Find a notary near you
Kansas notaries can be found at many convenient locations:
• Banks and credit unions — often free for account holders
• UPS Store / FedEx Office — $10–$15 per signature, walk-in friendly
• Public libraries — sometimes free or low-cost
• Law offices — available for clients, often free with other services
• AAA offices — free for members
• Online notary search — use the Kansas Secretary of State's notary lookup at the link below
Prepare your document
Before your appointment: complete all parts of the document except your signature. Do not sign the document beforehand — you must sign in front of the notary. Make sure all text fields are filled in. If the document is multi-page, do not staple or bind it yet.
Bring valid photo ID
The notary must verify your identity. Bring a current, government-issued photo ID such as:
• Driver's license or state ID card
• U.S. passport or passport card
• Military ID
• Permanent Resident Card (Green Card)
The name on your ID must match the name on the document. Expired IDs are generally not accepted.
Sign in front of the notary
Sign your document in the notary's presence. The notary will watch you sign, verify your willingness, and then apply their official seal and signature. For a jurat, you'll also swear or affirm that the document's contents are true.
Know the fees
Kansas does not set a maximum notary fee — notaries charge what the market allows. Always ask about the fee before proceeding. Typical in-person fees range from $10–$25 per signature.
No state maximum. Notaries set reasonable fees with disclosure.
Consider Remote Online Notarization (RON)
Kansas does not currently permit Remote Online Notarization (RON), or RON rules are not yet fully defined. You will need to appear in person before a notary. Check the Kansas Secretary of State's website for any recent updates.
After notarization
Keep the notarized document in a safe place. Make photocopies for your records before submitting the original anywhere. If you need an apostille (to use the document internationally), contact the Kansas Secretary of State's office — there's usually a separate apostille fee.
Need Online Notarization?
Get documents notarized from home via video call — available 24/7, legally valid in most states.
Kansas Notary — Fee Summary
| Acknowledgment fee cap | No state cap |
| Jurat fee cap | No state cap |
| Oath/Affirmation fee cap | No state cap |
| RON (Remote Online Notarization) | No state cap |
| State fee cap law | No — market rate |
Source: Kansas Secretary of State ↗