Study for the North Carolina notary public examination with a complete, offline practice app built straight from the law: the North Carolina Notary Public Act and Electronic Notary Act (N.C. Gen. Stat. Chapter 10B). Every question is original, written from the enacted statute, and cites the passage it comes from.
WHAT YOU GET
• 435 original practice questions across the five real exam areas: getting and keeping your commission, performing notarial acts, certificates and your signature and seal, electronic and remote notarization, and ethics, misconduct and penalties.
• 612 flashcards for the deadlines, fees, definitions and penalties you need to know cold.
• Timed 30-question mock exams drawn fresh from the bank each time, weighted across the five areas.
• Weak-area review that resurfaces what you keep getting wrong.
• Per-topic readiness so you know when you are ready for test day.
BUILT FOR THE REAL EXAM
To be commissioned in North Carolina you must pass the exam with at least 80 percent (G.S. 10B-8(a)). North Carolina does not publish a fixed statewide exam length, so the in-app mock uses a clearly-labelled unofficial practice format of 30 questions in 30 minutes. The exam is taken at the end of the required notary education course.
WHY RIVERMAP
• Buy once. No subscription and no recurring fees.
• Works fully offline. No account, no sign-up, no tracking. Everything stays on your device.
• Honest, sourced content built from the public text of the law.
OFFICIAL SOURCE
North Carolina Secretary of State, Notary Public Division: https://www.sosnc.gov/divisions/notary
DISCLAIMER
This app is an independent study aid. It is not affiliated with or endorsed by the North Carolina Department of the Secretary of State or the State of North Carolina. Questions are original, written from the public text of the North Carolina Notary Public Act (N.C. Gen. Stat. Chapter 10B). The 80 percent pass mark is the statutory requirement (G.S. 10B-8(a)); the number of questions and time limit shown in the app are an unofficial practice format, because North Carolina does not publish an official exam length.