If you’re an estate planning attorney in Los Angeles, you know the signing appointment is one of the most important moments in the entire client relationship. Months of careful drafting, family conversations, and legal counsel come down to that table, and whoever is sitting across from your client matters.
A mobile notary isn’t just a logistical convenience. For estate plan signings, they’re a professional extension of your practice. And not all notaries are built for that role. Here’s what to look for and what’s at stake when you get it wrong.
The difference between a notary and a qualified estate plan notary
California has approximately over 165,000 commissioned notaries. That number says nothing about experience, training, or professionalism. A general notary can legally witness most estate-planning documents—but legal authority and practical competence aren’t the same thing.
A qualified estate plan signing specialist understands the specific document types involved — revocable living trusts, pour-over wills, durable powers of attorney, advance healthcare directives, HIPAA authorizations — and knows the signature and notarization requirements for each. They understand sequencing. They know what to do when a signer hesitates, can’t locate their ID, or needs a moment. They don’t rush.


