New Hampshire Notary Guide

Notary Business Taxes and Accounting

As a self-employed notary, understanding tax obligations keeps you compliant and maximizes deductions to minimize your tax burden. This guide is specific to New Hampshire and reflects current state laws and best practices.

Self-Employment Taxes

As a notary: you're self-employed and responsible for self-employment tax (Social Security and Medicare, ~15.3%). File Schedule SE with your 1040. Pay quarterly estimated taxes if you expect to owe $1,000+ annually (Form 1040-ES). Underestimating quarterly taxes results in penalties and interest.

Deductible Business Expenses

Write off: E&O insurance premiums, RON platform fees, business telephone/internet, office supplies and notary supplies, vehicle mileage (mobile notaries), home office space (if you have a dedicated office), professional development and courses, business website hosting, and marketing expenses. Keep receipts—this is how you reduce taxable income.

Record-Keeping

Maintain: separate business bank account (separates personal and business income), receipt folder (physical or digital), monthly income tracking spreadsheet, expense tracking by category, mileage log (for vehicle deductions), and all business documents. Good records make tax time easier and prepare you for audits.

Working with a Tax Professional

Consider hiring: a CPA or tax professional who understands self-employed notaries (they often save you more than they cost through deduction optimization). They can handle quarterly estimated taxes, ensure compliance, and represent you if the IRS audits your returns.

Business Structure Options

Sole proprietor (simplest but no liability protection), LLC (adds liability protection and may offer tax benefits), or S-Corp (for higher-income notaries, can reduce self-employment taxes). Discuss structure options with a CPA—the right structure saves money over time.

How This Applies in New Hampshire

New Hampshire Status

✅ RON Authorized

Key Information

Commission fee: $25

Note: Notary laws change frequently. For the most current New Hampshire notary regulations, always check the New Hampshire Secretary of State.

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