A notary, right here in the neighborhood

Documents witnessed and stamped while you wait — no appointment, no trip into Manhattan, no hunting for a bank that will see you

What a notary actually does

A notary public doesn't vouch for what your document says — a notary confirms who signed it. We check your identification, watch you sign, and then stamp and sign the document ourselves to certify that it happened in front of us. That last part is the whole point, and it's why the single most common mistake is signing at home before you get here. If the signature is already on the page, we can't notarize it, and you'll have to start over with a fresh copy. Bring the document unsigned, bring your ID, and we'll handle it at the counter.

Stamped While You Wait

Most documents take only a few minutes. You'll walk out with the finished, stamped original in your hand.

No Appointment Needed

You don't have to book anything or be anyone's customer. Come in and ask for the notary.

Bring Unexpired Photo ID

A current government-issued photo ID — a driver's license, a passport, a state ID. Expired ID cannot be accepted.

Don't Sign in Advance

The notary has to witness the signature. Bring the document unsigned — a page you already signed at home can't be notarized.

Every Signer, in Person

If a document needs two signatures, both people have to be here, each with their own valid photo ID.

Complete Documents Only

We can't notarize a document with blank spaces left in it. Fill everything in first — every blank, every date.

Before you come in

  • Bring a current, unexpired government-issued photo ID — expired identification cannot be used
  • Do not sign the document beforehand; the notary must witness your signature
  • Every person who has to sign must be present, each with their own photo ID
  • Fill the document in completely — we cannot notarize one that still has blanks
  • Bring the original document, not a photocopy, and no appointment is needed

Need something notarized?

Call ahead if you're not sure what to bring — we'd rather tell you now than send you home for a second copy.

Call the pharmacy