Delaware · RON law
Is remote online notarization legal in Delaware?
Yes — RON is legal in Delaware.
Delaware is one of the 49 states (plus Washington, D.C.) that permanently authorize remote online notarization. You can notarize a document online in minutes.
What the law says in Delaware
Remote online notarization is permanently authorized in Delaware. A commissioned online notary verifies your identity through credential analysis and knowledge-based authentication, meets you over live audio-video, and notarizes your document remotely — no in-person appointment or courthouse trip required. The signed electronic record and audit trail are retained as your state requires.
How online notarization works
Remote online notarization lets you appear before a commissioned notary over live audio-video instead of in person. You upload your document, verify your identity through credential analysis and knowledge-based authentication (questions drawn from public records), meet the notary on video, and sign electronically. The notary applies an electronic seal and keeps a recording and audit trail as required. An acknowledgment or a jurat performed this way carries the same legal weight as one done across a desk.
When you might still want someone in person
Online notarization is ideal when every signer is comfortable on a webcam. When a signer won’t — an older seller, someone without a smartphone, or a deal where you need a wet signature — Jurably can send a mobile notary or an in-person signing concierge to the signer instead. Either way, if the document has to be recorded at the county to matter, we can file and record it and return the instrument number.
Common questions
Is remote online notarization legal in Delaware?
Yes. Remote online notarization is permanently authorized in Delaware. A commissioned online notary can verify your identity and notarize your document over live video — no in-person appointment needed.
What do I need for an online notarization in Delaware?
A government-issued photo ID, the document you need notarized, a device with a camera and microphone, and a stable internet connection. Identity is confirmed through credential analysis and knowledge-based authentication before the notary meets you on video.
Will my Delaware county or lender accept an online notarization?
Most do, and recorders increasingly accept electronically notarized documents. Acceptance can still vary by recipient, so confirm with the specific county recorder, lender, or agency that will receive your document before you rely on it.
This page is general information, not legal advice, and notarization laws change. Jurably is a self-help filing and notary service, not a law firm. Confirm current requirements with the Delaware Secretary of State or your commissioning authority, and confirm acceptance with whoever will receive your document.