Journal · Fri · Jun 19 1,593 notaries cataloged Mobile · United States
CH 12 · p.0090

S-Bell Notary Service

Hartford, CT · ZIP 06105 · +1 860-281-7535

Limited record · confirm by phone
Signed for the day: June 19, 2026 Mobile notary · United States
S-Bell Notary Service

This notary is on the directory but with thinner public evidence than a full profile. Call before relying on signing-type, after-hours, or hospital-bedside availability — what's listed here may not capture everything they actually do (or may overstate it).

CH 02

Notary's log

Practice overview

S-Bell Notary Service is a mobile-notary listing in Hartford, CT. Use this profile to review public signals such as Traveling notary, 1, and mobile notary Hartford, then confirm current scope, availability, and fit directly.

S-Bell Notary Service is listed in Hartford, CT as a mobile-notary listing in the mobile notary service directory.

This profile is written for people preparing documents, identification, travel details, and appointment timing who want a practical way to compare public facts before they call, book, visit, or request professional help.

The goal is not to rank the provider or promise an outcome; it is to organize the visible evidence into questions that reduce confusion.

The most useful public signals for this listing are Traveling notary, 1, mobile notary Hartford, mobile notary near me, mobile notary CT, and mobile notary services Hartford.

Treat those signals as a checklist rather than a guarantee.

A public category, review phrase, or website label can show what the provider appears to discuss, but it cannot prove current staffing, inventory, pricing, credentials, calendar availability, or the exact scope accepted today.

Start by confirming which documents are eligible, what ID must be present, where the appointment can happen, and what fees or timing need direct confirmation.

Those questions keep the conversation anchored in the reader's actual need instead of a broad directory category.

If the answer is vague, ask for a clearer explanation of what is included, what is excluded, and what information the provider needs before giving a reliable next step.

Location still matters.

Hartford, CT mobile notary service can affect travel time, appointment rules, service area, local regulations, parking, accessibility, seasonal demand, and nearby alternatives.

A listing that looks relevant on paper can still be a poor fit if the location, timing, or required preparation does not match the reader's situation.

The contact data in this record includes a listed phone number, an official website link, and a street-address reference.

Use those details to verify the current path before sharing sensitive information or making plans.

If a phone number, address, or website has changed, rely on the provider's current confirmation rather than on an older directory snapshot.

The public record does not expose a strong review base in this snapshot, so direct confirmation matters more than rating-based assumptions.

When comparing similar options on chelleonwheels.com, keep the comparison consistent: same location, same timing, same requested scope, and the same must-have details.

That makes answers easier to evaluate and prevents a polished but incomplete listing from looking stronger than a clearer, more relevant provider nearby.

Strong pages make uncertainty visible.

If public sources do not show a detail, the page should say so indirectly by asking the reader to verify it.

That is especially important for professional, healthcare, legal, automotive, venue, travel, and local-service categories where prices, credentials, policies, and availability can change after publication.

This page is not legal advice and does not guarantee document acceptance.

Use the profile as preparation, not as a final recommendation.

The right decision should come from current provider confirmation, source-backed facts, and the reader's own requirements rather than from copied marketing language or a generic template.

A careful reader should also note what is missing: exact prices, written policies, current openings, staff names, credentials, insurance language where relevant, warranty terms, and any rule that depends on the reader's specific case.

Missing information is not automatically a negative signal, but it is a reason to ask better questions before relying on the listing.

For repeated comparison, save the details that are confirmed directly and separate them from details that only appeared in public search results.

That habit makes follow-up easier, reduces misunderstandings, and helps the reader compare nearby alternatives without turning a directory profile into a promise.

The best use of this page is preparation.

Read the public facts, decide which details matter most, then confirm those details through the provider's current contact path.

That keeps the directory useful without pretending that public snippets can replace a current conversation, official policy, signed agreement, appointment confirmation, or professional judgment.

If two nearby listings look similar, compare the quality of the answers rather than the number of marketing phrases.

Clear limits, plain explanations, and consistent contact details usually matter more than broad claims.

A provider that explains what it can and cannot do is often easier to evaluate than one that leaves every important detail unstated.

Keep source timing in mind.

Search results, review snippets, category labels, and business pages can lag behind real operations.

This directory profile should therefore be treated as a structured note: useful for organizing questions, but still dependent on direct confirmation before money, travel, documents, property access, vehicle access, health decisions, or legal decisions are involved.

CH 03

Signing-need matrix

What this notary handles
TN
Traveling notary Listing context

Comes to the client's home, office, or any neutral location for the signing — no need to drive to a counter.

HS
Hospital signing Not verified

Bedside signings for healthcare directives, durable powers of attorney, and time-sensitive medical paperwork.

AH
After-hours service Not verified

Evening, late-night, weekend, and holiday appointments — useful when a refinance or hospital signing falls outside business hours.

LS
Loan signing Not verified

Refinance, purchase, HELOC, and reverse-mortgage document packages — bring photo ID and the unsigned package.

AP
Apostille Not verified

Filing for international document authentication under the Hague Convention — birth certificates, court documents, business filings.

CH 04

Where they sign

Home base & service radius
Home base
Mailing base
633 Prospect Ave, Hartford, CT 06105, United States
Booking phone
+1 860-281-7535
Self-reported service area
Hartford · New Haven · Stamford
Driving directions
Open in Google Maps →
CH 07

Where each capability comes from

Plain receipts
CapabilityStatusSourceConfidence
Traveling notary ✓ Listed Inferred from listing medium
Hospital signing ○ Not seen Not verified — ask unknown
After-hours service ○ Not seen Not verified — ask unknown
Loan signing ○ Not seen Not verified — ask unknown
Apostille ○ Not seen Not verified — ask unknown
CH 08

Three ways to book — pick your lane

Plan-ahead vs. emergency
Lane 01 Plan-ahead booking

For loan signings, apostille filings, real-estate closings, healthcare directives — anything you can schedule in advance.

  • Book at least 24–48 hours out for best availability.
  • Email or text the document type and signer count first.
  • Notary will confirm fee, ID requirements, and arrival window.
Lane 02 Same-day signing

For weekday signings that came up this morning — closing today, deadline at 5pm, package needs to be back in courier by EOD.

  • Call directly; texts sometimes wait until end of route.
  • Travel-fee surcharges are typical for same-day appointments.
  • Have ID, document, and address ready when you call.
Lane 03 After-hours / emergency

Hospital bedside signings, deathbed POAs, late-night closings, weekend signatures — anything outside 9–5 weekday windows.

  • Call only — don't email; mid-night emails get missed.
  • Expect a higher emergency fee; ask before you commit.
  • Confirm whether the notary can travel to a hospital tonight.
CH 09

What changes by region

Notary law & signing customs

Northeast — NY, NJ, PA, MA, CT, MD, RI, VT, NH, ME, DE, DC

Northeastern states each have their own notary fee caps — typically lower than the Pacific. NJ requires the notary to physically witness the signing. NY allows RON. Real-estate signings often require an attorney to be present in NY/NJ; a notary alone may not finish the document. Hospital and bedside signings are common in dense urban areas; check parking and visitor-policy timing before booking a hospital signing.

Midwest, Mountain, Plains

Most midwestern states have moderate notary fee caps and allow RON. Notary mobility varies by population density — rural notaries often cover larger service areas with higher travel fees. Severe-weather closures (winter storms) can affect availability for in-person signings; emergency signings during storms may need to be rescheduled or moved to RON.

CH 10

When you need a notary vs. when you don't

Plain spectrum
No notary needed

Most everyday contracts (apartment leases, employment offers, online clickwrap, simple bills of sale). Federal forms like W-9 and 1099 don\'t require notarization.

Free at your bank

Many credit unions and banks notarize for free if you\'re an account holder — fine for one-off signings during weekday business hours.

Mobile notary recommended

Hospital and bedside signings, multi-document signings (refinance packages, estate planning), after-hours and weekend needs, remote signers, multiple signers in different locations.

Notary required by law

Real-estate deeds, durable power of attorney, healthcare directives in some states, affidavits, sworn statements for court, and any document where the recipient (lender / court / state agency) explicitly requires notarization.

CH 11

Common booking questions

Tap to expand
What's the difference between a mobile notary and a notary at a bank?

A mobile notary travels to the signer (home, hospital, office, neutral location) and charges a notary fee plus a travel fee. A bank notary works only inside the branch during business hours and may be free for account holders. For after-hours, multi-document, or hospital signings, mobile is usually the only option.

How much does a mobile notary charge?

The per-signature notary fee is capped by state law (commonly $5–$15). The travel fee is separately negotiated and depends on distance, time of day, and urgency. Same-day, late-night, and hospital signings typically carry a surcharge. Always confirm the total before the notary leaves their base.

What ID does the notary need to see?

A current government-issued photo ID — most commonly a driver\'s license, state ID card, or passport. Some states accept additional forms; expired IDs are usually rejected. The signer\'s name on the ID must match the name on the document.

Can a notary sign for someone in a hospital bed?

Yes. The signer must be conscious, able to understand the document, and able to communicate consent. The notary will assess "competence to sign" — if the signer is too medicated or cognitively impaired, the notary will decline. Bring a witness (often required, varies by state).

What's the difference between a notary and a loan signing agent?

A loan signing agent (LSA) is a notary who has been specifically trained on real-estate document packages — they can guide the borrower through 100+ pages of loan paperwork, identify which signatures need to be notarized vs. just signed, and return the package to the lender or courier. Most LSAs are also NNA-certified with current background checks.

What's apostille service?

Apostille is the authentication step that lets a notarized U.S. document be accepted in another country that\'s party to the Hague Convention. After the notary signs, the document is sent to the Secretary of State (and sometimes the U.S. State Department) for the apostille certificate. Some mobile notaries handle the apostille filing for you; others stop at the notarization step.

Can I notarize a document over video call?

Some states allow remote online notarization (RON), where the signing is done over secure video with the notary. RON laws vary by state — Texas, Florida, and Virginia were among the first to allow it. Even when allowed, the recipient (a lender, court, or foreign government) may not accept RON; check before scheduling.

What can a notary refuse to sign?

A notary must refuse if the signer can\'t produce ID, can\'t communicate, appears coerced, or doesn\'t understand the document. Notaries also can\'t notarize documents where they\'re a party (you can\'t notarize your own contract). They can\'t give legal advice on what the document means — that\'s for an attorney.

CH 12

Other notaries in Hartford

Same neighborhood