How to Get a Document Notarized for an Inmate in California
A plain-English guide for families: what a jail notary visit costs, how it works, and how documents get signed inside the facility — often within hours.
Need a document notarized for someone in a California jail? Call or text On Call Notary at (909) 751-8439, 24/7. Give us the inmate's name, the facility, and the document — we coordinate directly with the jail, often completing the visit within hours. $15 per signature plus a travel fee quoted up front.
An arrest touches everything at once. If your family needs legal help beyond the notarization, tell us what's going on and we'll point you toward trusted local legal resources.

Three Steps to a Notarized Document
Having a loved one in custody is stressful enough. You don't need to figure out jail procedures — the process starts with one phone call.
Call or Text Us
Reach us at (909) 751-8439 with the inmate's full name, the facility, and what document needs to be notarized. That's all it takes to start.
We Prepare & Quote
We prepare or review the documents — or use yours — and quote the full cost up front: $15 per signature (the California maximum) plus a travel fee, with jail visits priced as a package. No surprises.
We Visit & Notarize
We schedule directly with the facility, handle its protocols, and complete the signing — often within hours of your first call. You receive documents ready to file or record.
Documents Families Most Commonly Need
Life doesn't pause during incarceration. These are the documents we're asked to notarize most often:
- Power of attorney. So a trusted person can handle finances, bills, and childcare decisions during incarceration.
- Real estate deeds. Grant deeds, quitclaim deeds, and escrow or refinance paperwork that can't wait.
- Custody and guardianship forms. Consent and guardianship documents so children are cared for without interruption.
- Marriage license paperwork. Our inmate marriage service handles the license application, facility coordination, and witnesses.
- Vehicle transfers. Title transfers and DMV paperwork so a vehicle can be sold or re-registered.
- Affidavits and sworn statements. Court declarations and any statement that requires a sworn, notarized signature.
What to Have Ready When You Call
Two details are enough for us to start — we'll walk you through the rest.
Inmate's Full Name & Facility
The full legal name your loved one was booked under and the jail where they're held — all we truly need to begin.
Booking Number, If You Have It
Not required, but it helps the facility locate the inmate faster — especially at large jails.
The Document — or Just the Goal
Have the paperwork if it's already drafted. If not, tell us the goal and we'll prepare or review the documents with you.
Why Choose a Jail-Experienced Notary
Every facility runs differently — professional-visit rules, scheduling windows, and document handling all vary. Visits fail when a notary doesn't know them, costing days of delay on an urgent document.
We're inside Southern California jails every week. We coordinate with staff before arriving and complete the notarization properly the first time, recording each signing in our official journal as California law requires. Licensed, bonded, and insured — and discreet and respectful with every family.
Counties and Jails We Cover
We serve county jails across four Southern California counties — in San Bernardino County, our home base, we're often on site within 1–2 hours. Start with our jail notary overview, or go straight to your facility's page:
San Bernardino County
- West Valley Detention Center — Rancho Cucamonga
- Central Detention Center — San Bernardino
- High Desert Detention Center — Adelanto
- Glen Helen Rehabilitation Center — Devore
Riverside County
- Robert Presley Detention Center — Riverside
- Cois M. Byrd Detention Center — Murrieta
- John J. Benoit Detention Center — Indio
- Larry D. Smith Correctional Facility — Banning
Jail Notary Questions, Answered
Can an inmate get a power of attorney notarized?
Yes — a power of attorney is the most common document we notarize in California jails. The inmate signs in front of our notary and we complete the certificate on the spot.
How fast can you get to the jail?
Often within hours of your call. We work 24/7, including nights, weekends, and holidays. Call or text (909) 751-8439 to check same-day availability.
What does a jail notarization cost?
$15 per signature — the California maximum — plus a travel fee. Jail visits are priced as a package and after-hours service costs more, so call or text (909) 751-8439 for a free, exact quote up front.
Do I need to be present at the jail?
No. We coordinate directly with the facility and complete the signing with the inmate. You're welcome to meet us there, but most families simply receive the finished documents afterward.
What ID does the inmate need?
You don't need to arrange anything. Facilities have ID on file for people in their custody, and we confirm the signer's identity as California notary law requires, recording it in our official journal.
Can you notarize at any jail in Southern California?
Yes — we cover county jails throughout San Bernardino, Riverside, Los Angeles, and Orange counties. Don't see your facility? Call (909) 751-8439 and we'll confirm.