Prenuptial & Postnuptial Agreement Notary in Austin
Your attorney drafted the prenup or postnup and now both signatures need to be notarized before the wedding or the deadline? NotaryHub365 meets both parties at a private location, your home, or your attorney's office across Central Texas — discreet, neutral, and by appointment.
When your prenup needs notarized signatures, we make it easy
Your family-law attorney decides whether your agreement should be notarized or recorded. When it should, we bring a calm, private, neutral signing to both parties on your timeline. New to this? Our guide on notarizing a prenup in Texas walks through what's typically required.
A prenup signing should feel calm, private, and correct
Neutral and discreet
We come to a private setting — your home, a quiet office, or your attorney's conference room — not a busy retail counter. No audience, no rush.
Both parties, properly identified
Both signers appear together with valid photo ID and sign in front of the notary. A clean acknowledgment is one less thing for anyone to question later.
Witnesses on request
If your agreement or attorney calls for witnesses in addition to the notary, tell us when you book and we arrange them.
Already married? We notarize postnups and marital property agreements
Postnuptial agreements, partition or exchange agreements, and other marital property documents are notarized the same way — both spouses present, valid ID, signed in front of the notary, witnesses arranged if needed. Same discretion, same care.
NotaryHub365 does not draft, review, edit, or advise on your agreement or its enforceability, and does not decide whether you need a notary or witnesses — that is your family-law attorney's role. We make the notarization private, neutral, and correct.
Wedding or deadline coming up?
Text both signers' city and your date to (512) 812-8293 and we'll confirm a discreet appointment window.
Text Us the DateHave these ready
- The agreement fully drafted by your attorney and unsigned — the parties sign in front of the notary.
- Valid government-issued photo ID for both parties.
- Both parties available together, of their own free will, at the same appointment.
- Confirmation from your attorney on whether witnesses are required in addition to the notary.