# Online vs. Walk-In Notary in the Philippines Both online (electronic) and walk-in (traditional) notarization produce legally valid notarized documents in the Philippines. The right choice depends less on legality and more on where the parties are, how fast the document is needed, and how much downstream verification matters. This guide breaks the choice down without the marketing fluff. ## At a Glance | Dimension | Walk-In Notary | Online (E-)Notary | |-----------|---------------|------------------| | Governing rules | 2004 Rules on Notarial Practice (A.M. No. 02-8-13-SC) | [A.M. No. 24-10-14-SC](/glossary/am-no-24-10-14-sc/) | | Where parties must be | Physically at the notary's office | Anywhere with internet (for [REN](/glossary/remote-electronic-notarization/)) | | Document format | Paper original | PDF / PDF-A | | Identity check | Visual ID inspection | Multi-factor (ID + facial + OTP) | | Notarial seal | Physical rubber stamp | [Electronic notarial seal](/glossary/electronic-notarial-seal/) | | Recordkeeping | Paper [notarial book](/glossary/notarial-book/) | Electronic notarial book + SC database | | Verification by third parties | Inspect physical seal, ask the notary | SC database lookup, cryptographic check | | Typical time | Half-day to several days | ~15 minutes upload to certified PDF | | Geographic limit | Notary's city/province of commission | Broader, REN extraterritorial | ## Access: Where Are the Parties? ### Walk-In - Parties must travel to the notary's office during business hours - Practical only if everyone is in the same city or willing to travel - Difficult for OFWs, mobility-impaired, parties in different provinces, or after-hours signing - Limited to notaries commissioned in your city/province ### Online - Parties join from anywhere via videoconference for [REN](/glossary/remote-electronic-notarization/), or come into a single location for [IEN](/glossary/in-person-electronic-notarization/) - Works for OFWs, multi-province corporate signings, after-hours emergencies, and clients who cannot easily travel - Notary's reach is broader -- not limited to a single RTC jurisdiction **If parties are split across cities or one is abroad, online notarization removes the coordination problem entirely.** ## Time: How Fast Can You Get a Certified Document? ### Walk-In - Print + collate the document: 15-30 minutes - Coordinate physical meeting with notary and signers: hours to days - Travel to notary's office: 30 minutes to 2+ hours - Notarization itself: 15-30 minutes - Delivery to recipient: hours (physical) or scan-and-email - **Total: half-day to several days** ### Online - Upload PDF/PDF-A: 1-2 minutes - Identity verification: 2-3 minutes - Notarial session ([IEN](/glossary/in-person-electronic-notarization/) or [REN](/glossary/remote-electronic-notarization/)): 5-10 minutes - Receive certified PDF, sealed with [electronic notarial seal](/glossary/electronic-notarial-seal/): immediate - **Total: roughly 15 minutes upload to certified PDF on NotarialOS** ## Cost: Per-Document Total Cost of Ownership | Cost item | Walk-In | Online | |-----------|---------|--------| | Printing and copies | ₱50-200+ | ₱0 | | Messenger / courier (round trip) | ₱200-500+ | ₱0 | | Notarial fee | varies by document | ₱488 per document (VAT-inclusive) on NotarialOS | | Transportation (self) | ₱100-500+ | ₱0 | | Storage / filing | ongoing | minimal (cloud) | | Retrieval later | staff time, page-by-page | instant search | For occasional one-off documents the difference may be marginal. For organizations notarizing 50+ documents a month, online cost-per-document is materially lower once printing, messenger, and storage are eliminated. ## Security: Identity Verification and Tamper Detection ### Identity - Walk-in: visual inspection of one government ID, possibly two. Reliant on the notary's eye. - Online: government ID capture, facial recognition / liveness, OTP, recorded session ([REN](/glossary/remote-electronic-notarization/)). Multi-factor by design. See [competent evidence of identity](/glossary/competent-evidence-of-identity/). ### Tamper Detection - Walk-in: a paper document can be altered after notarization, and detection depends on visual comparison - Online: each notarized PDF is sealed with an [electronic notarial seal](/glossary/electronic-notarial-seal/) backed by [PKI](/glossary/public-key-infrastructure/); any post-notarization change is cryptographically detectable ### Verification by a Bank, Registry, or Counterparty - Walk-in: third party inspects the physical seal and may call the notary's office; depends on records being intact - Online: third party can verify the document against the SC's centralized [notarial book](/glossary/notarial-book/) database For background on why this matters in practice, see [SC rulings on fraudulent notarial seals](/sc-rulings-on-fraudulent-notarial-seals-and-signatures-shows-why-e-notarization-is-the-future/) and [avoiding notary scams](/avoiding-notary-scams-guide-to-safe-document-signing-philippines/). ## When Walk-In Still Makes Sense - The receiving party (a specific local LGU or registry) has not yet operationalized acceptance of e-notarized documents and insists on wet ink - Parties are already meeting in person for the same transaction - The document is paper-only by design (e.g., very old templates not yet digitized) - One of the signers genuinely cannot use a device with camera, microphone, and internet ## When Online Is Clearly Better - Any party is in a different city or abroad - Speed matters (insurance claim, real estate closing, board action) - Volume matters ([banks](/solutions/banks-and-lenders/), [BPOs/HR](/solutions/bpos-and-hr-teams/), [insurers](/solutions/insurance-companies/), [accounting/tax practices](/solutions/tax-practitioners-and-accountants/), [real estate teams](/solutions/real-estate-brokers-and-developers/)) - A defensible audit trail is important - The principal is an [OFW](/solutions/ofws-and-overseas-filipinos/) ## Decision Shortcut If everyone is in the same room and you only need one document, walk-in is fine. If anyone is in a different location, or you need it today, or you do this regularly, online wins on every dimension. ## Related Pages - [E-Notarization vs. Physical Notarization](/compare/e-notarization-vs-physical-notarization/) - [In-Person vs. Remote Electronic Notarization](/compare/in-person-vs-remote-electronic-notarization/) - [Glossary: E-Notarization](/glossary/e-notarization/) - [Glossary: Notary Public](/glossary/notary-public/) - [Glossary: A.M. No. 24-10-14-SC](/glossary/am-no-24-10-14-sc/) --- [NotarialOS](https://notarialos.com) is a leading SC-accredited Electronic Notarization Facility -- ~15 minutes upload to certified PDF, ₱488 per document (VAT-inclusive).