NOTARY PUBLIC EXAM
PREP:ELITE TEST BANK
PART 0: TABLE OF CONTENTS
Section Cognitive Tier Subject Focus
PART I The Preview Critical Axioms & Executive
Directives
PART II Tier 1: Foundational Syntax Hard Deck Definitions, Fees, &
(Q1–15) Term Limits
PART II Tier 2: Complex Application RON Mechanics,
(Q16–35) Recordkeeping, & Conflicts
PART II Tier 3: Grandmaster Synthesis High-Stakes Legal Traps,
(Q36–60) Fraud, & Synthesis
PART I: THE PREVIEW
Mastering this test bank translates directly to elite legal compliance and operational precision,
isolating the exact mechanisms required to pass the New York State exam and execute the
office flawlessly. Rote memorization fails in real-world application; therefore, this gauntlet forces
you to apply statutory frameworks dynamically, exactly as they operate under the current
2026/2027 mandates.
The "Critical Axioms" Cheat Sheet
● The Law of Presence: Under Executive Law § 135-c, physical presence is absolute. For
traditional acts, you must share the same physical space. For electronic acts (RON), the
notary MUST be physically located within New York State, even if the signer is located
globally, and interact via real-time, secure audio-video technology.
● The 10-Year Mandate: Under 19 NYCRR Part 182, ALL notarial acts (wet-ink or
electronic) require a contemporaneous journal entry. Electronic notarial acts additionally
require secure retention of the audio-video recording. Both must be retained for exactly 10
years.
● The Disqualification Imperative: A notary is strictly prohibited from performing any
notarial act if they are a direct party to the instrument or possess a direct financial
(pecuniary) interest in the transaction.
Structured Statutory Fee & Recordkeeping Schedule
,Notarial Act / Requirement Statutory Metric (2026/2027) Governing Statute
Traditional Acknowledgment / $2.00 maximum per original Executive Law § 136
Jurat signature
Electronic Notarial Act (RON) $25.00 maximum per electronic Executive Law § 135-c
act
Certificate of Authenticity $2.00 maximum Executive Law § 135-c
(Papering Out)
Protest of Negotiable $0.75 (plus $0.10 per notice, Executive Law § 135-a
Instrument max 5)
Journal & AV Recording 10 Years from the date of the 19 NYCRR § 182.9
Retention act
PART II: THE ELITE TEST BANK
TIER 1: FOUNDATIONAL SYNTAX & APPLICATION
Q1: An applicant is appointed and commissioned as a Notary Public in New York State. Under
Executive Law § 130, what is the exact duration of the commission term before renewal is
required? A) Two years from the exact date of qualification. B) Four years from the date the oath
is filed with the county clerk. C) Four years from the date of appointment by the Secretary of
State. D) Five years, provided the notary completes the mandatory continuing education.
● The Answer: C (Four years from the date of appointment by the Secretary of State.)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: The commission term was historically two years prior to 2001 but is
currently four years.
○ B is incorrect: The term is calculated from the appointment by the Secretary of
State, not the date the oath is processed by the local clerk.
○ D is incorrect: New York notary commissions operate on a strictly four-year cycle,
and there is no five-year extension provision.
The Mentor's Analysis: Commission timelines dictate legal authority. If a notary operates
outside their four-year window, they risk rendering documents defective, barring specific grace
provisions under Executive Law § 142-a. By utilizing the date of appointment, the state
maintains centralized, uniform control over licensing. Professional/Academic Intuition:
Always anchor the commission term to the Secretary of State's issuance, not local
county filing dates.
Q2: A commissioned New York Notary Public performs a traditional, wet-ink acknowledgment
for a single signer on a single deed. According to Executive Law § 136, what is the MAXIMUM
statutory fee the notary may charge for this specific act? A) $2.00 B) $5.00 C) $15.00 D) $25.00
● The Answer: A ($2.00)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ B is incorrect: $5.00 is a common fee cap in other jurisdictions, but invalid in New
York.
○ C is incorrect: The $15.00 fee relates to the written examination fee paid to the
state, not the transactional charge to a client.
○ D is incorrect: $25.00 is the cap strictly reserved for electronic notarial acts, not
traditional wet-ink notarizations.
The Mentor's Analysis: Fee regulations are inflexible to protect the public from price-gouging.
When facing basic, in-person notarial acts, the immediate priority is adhering to the baseline
, cap. By utilizing the $2.00 limit, you bypass the common trap of conflating physical and
electronic service fees. Professional/Academic Intuition: Traditional equals $2; Electronic
equals $25.
Q3: An applicant wishes to become a Notary Public in New York. According to standard
licensing requirements, which of the following individuals is entirely EXEMPT from taking the
$15 written examination? A) A licensed real estate broker operating in New York for over 10
years. B) A paralegal who holds a specialized certification in New York corporate law. C) An
attorney and counselor at law duly admitted to practice in New York State. D) A notary public
transferring a valid commission from the State of New Jersey.
● The Answer: C (An attorney and counselor at law duly admitted to practice in New York
State.)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: Tenure in real estate provides no statutory exemption for the notary
exam.
○ B is incorrect: Paralegals, regardless of certification, do not possess independent
statutory authority to bypass the exam.
○ D is incorrect: New York does not offer direct reciprocity that waives the
examination for out-of-state notaries moving their commission.
The Mentor's Analysis: The state recognizes that officers of the court already possess the
requisite legal literacy. When assessing eligibility, the core strategy is identifying
state-sanctioned legal professionals. By utilizing the attorney exemption, the state streamlines
commissioning for those already bound by the Rules of Professional Conduct.
Professional/Academic Intuition: Admitted attorneys and appointed court clerks of the
Unified Court System bypass the exam, but NEVER the application fee.
Q4: Under 19 NYCRR Part 182, a notary performs a traditional notarization. How long must the
notary retain the mandatory journal entry detailing this specific notarial act? A) 5 years B) 7
years C) 10 years D) Until the notary's commission expires
● The Answer: C (10 years)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: A 5-year retention period applies in certain other states, but New York
requires double this duration.
○ B is incorrect: 7 years is a standard tax document retention rule, which is a common
novice misconception applied to notarial law.
○ D is incorrect: Record retention survives the expiration, resignation, or revocation of
the commission itself.
The Mentor's Analysis: Recordkeeping is the ultimate defense against fraud and litigation.
When performing any act, the immediate priority is contemporaneous logging. By utilizing the
10-year retention rule, you bypass the trap of destroying evidence before the statute of
limitations for real property or civil claims expires. Professional/Academic Intuition: All
records—paper journals, digital logs, and AV recordings—are chained to a strict 10-year
lifespan.
Q5: An electronic notary public (RON) completes an electronic notarial act. The client requires a
tangible, paper copy of this electronic record to record with a county clerk who does not accept
e-filings. What is the MOST ACCURATE term for the document the notary must execute to
facilitate this? A) A Certificate of Apostille B) A Certificate of Official Character C) A Certificate of
Authenticity D) A Certificate of Conformity
● The Answer: C (A Certificate of Authenticity)
● Distractor Analysis: