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No outstanding liens affidavit

Affidavit of No Outstanding Liens Online Notary

Need an affidavit of no outstanding liens notarized online? iRemoteNotary helps contractors, property owners, title companies, lenders, and construction professionals complete secure remote online notarization sessions for eligible no-lien affidavits.

Secure Remote Online Notarization
Helpful for Construction Payment Documents
Available Nationwide
Upload Your Document Before the Session

Remote online notarization is available nationwide for eligible documents and signers. For urgent help call +1 (305) 608-4003.

Quick Answer

Can an affidavit of no outstanding liens be notarized online with iRemoteNotary?

An affidavit of no outstanding liens may be eligible for remote online notarization when accepted by the receiving property owner, contractor, lender, title company, attorney, recorder, project manager, or project stakeholder. iRemoteNotary helps contractors, property owners, title companies, lenders, and construction professionals notarize eligible no-lien affidavits through a secure online session.

Submit your request below. In the notes section, please mention that your document is an affidavit of no outstanding liens and include any special instructions from your contractor, owner, title company, lender, attorney, project manager, recorder, or project contact.

Submit Your No Outstanding Liens Affidavit Notary Request

Use the secure request form below for eligible affidavit of no outstanding liens documents. Mention in the notes that your document is an affidavit of no outstanding liens and include instructions from your contractor, owner, title company, lender, attorney, project manager, recorder, or project contact when helpful.

Client information

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Affidavit of no outstanding liens · nationwide · iRemoteNotary

What is an affidavit of no outstanding liens?

An affidavit of no outstanding liens is a sworn construction-related statement often used to confirm whether unpaid lien claims, subcontractor claims, supplier claims, or other lien-related issues are known or outstanding. It may be requested during final payment, closeout, title review, lender review, sale, refinance, or other project documentation workflows.

iRemoteNotary does not provide legal advice. Confirm the correct form and any notarization instructions with the project owner, contractor, title company, lender, attorney, recorder, or other receiving party.

When an affidavit of no outstanding liens may need notarization

Notarization requirements can vary by state, county, project, contract, lender, title company, owner, or receiving party.

  • Before final payment is released
  • During project closeout
  • During title or lender review
  • During sale or refinance review
  • When requested by a property owner
  • When required by a title company, lender, or attorney
  • When paired with lien waivers, releases of lien, or payment affidavits
  • When required by project or contract instructions

Affidavit of no outstanding liens vs. release of lien

An affidavit of no outstanding liens is often used as a sworn statement about known lien-related issues. A release of lien is often used to release, resolve, or satisfy a specific lien. Because both documents can affect title, payment, and lien-related rights, confirm which document is required before signing.

For release of lien help, see our release of lien online notary page.

How online notarization works

Remote online notarization allows eligible affidavits of no outstanding liens to be signed and notarized during a secure audio-video session when accepted by the receiving party.

  1. Step 1

    Upload your unsigned document

    Provide the document you need notarized before the live session.

  2. Step 2

    Verify your identity

    Complete identity proofing as required for your session.

  3. Step 3

    Meet the notary by secure audio-video session

    Appear before a commissioned remote online notary online.

  4. Step 4

    Download your notarized document

    Receive your digitally notarized document after completion.

Who this helps

Eligible affidavit of no outstanding liens documents may be notarized remotely when the document and receiving party allow it.

  • General contractors
  • Subcontractors
  • Property owners
  • Developers
  • Title companies
  • Lenders
  • Project managers
  • Attorneys or document preparers

What you need before the session

  • Your unsigned affidavit of no outstanding liens
  • A valid government-issued photo ID
  • A device with camera and microphone
  • Stable internet connection
  • Closeout, title, or lender instructions from the receiving party
  • Any contractor, attorney, owner, recorder, or project instructions
  • Any required witnesses, if applicable

Important legal and compliance note

iRemoteNotary is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. Construction payment affidavits, lien waivers, lien releases, payment releases, contractor affidavits, and closeout documents can affect legal rights and may involve strict project, payment, recording, service, and deadline requirements. Please confirm your document requirements with your attorney, title company, lender, contractor, property owner, recorder, clerk, county, project manager, or other appropriate professional before signing.

Acceptance of remote online notarization depends on the receiving party—we do not guarantee lender, title, owner, contractor, recorder, or agency acceptance.

Frequently asked questions

Can an affidavit of no outstanding liens be notarized online?

An affidavit of no outstanding liens may be eligible for remote online notarization if the receiving owner, contractor, lender, title company, attorney, or agency accepts electronically notarized documents. Before signing, confirm the notarization and acceptance requirements with the receiving party.

Does every affidavit of no outstanding liens need to be notarized?

No. Not every affidavit of no outstanding liens requires notarization in every situation. Requirements can vary by state, county, project, contract, lender, title company, owner, or receiving party. If notarization is requested, iRemoteNotary can help notarize eligible documents online.

Who usually signs an affidavit of no outstanding liens?

The required signer can depend on the document, company structure, contract, and receiving party instructions. Common signers may include a contractor representative, property owner representative, company officer, or other party identified in the document. Confirm the correct signer before the session.

Can iRemoteNotary prepare my affidavit of no outstanding liens?

No. iRemoteNotary does not prepare legal documents or provide legal advice. Please obtain the correct form and instructions from your attorney, contractor, owner, title company, lender, or project contact before the session.

Can iRemoteNotary record, file, or submit my affidavit of no outstanding liens?

No. iRemoteNotary notarizes eligible documents but does not record, file, or submit documents on your behalf unless a separate service is specifically offered. Please confirm recording or filing steps with the receiving party.

How is an affidavit of no outstanding liens different from a release of lien?

An affidavit of no outstanding liens is often used as a sworn statement about known lien-related issues. A release of lien is often used to release, resolve, or satisfy a specific lien. Because both documents can affect title, payment, and lien-related rights, confirm which document is required before signing.

What do I need for the online notarization session?

You generally need your unsigned affidavit of no outstanding liens, a valid government-issued photo ID, a device with camera and microphone, stable internet connection, and any instructions from the receiving party. If witnesses are required, confirm those requirements before the session.

Is a remotely notarized affidavit of no outstanding liens accepted everywhere?

Acceptance can depend on the receiving party, state, county, recorder or clerk, project contract, lender, title company, owner, or agency requirements. Always confirm acceptance of remote online notarization before completing your session.

Ready to submit your no outstanding liens affidavit notary request?

Complete the secure request form for eligible documents, or book a session using the site-wide option—available nationwide when remote online notarization is accepted.