A specialized visit

Nursing-home signings deserve a calmer pace.

Residents in skilled nursing and long-term care often need extra time to read, ask questions, and feel comfortable. Some have hearing or vision challenges. Some are managing memory issues that vary day to day. Some have spouses or children who need to participate by phone.

Parascand Notary built our nursing-home practice around those realities. Every visit starts with introductions and a careful capacity check, moves at the resident's pace, and includes the family in the way they want — whether that's quietly observing, joining by speakerphone, or coordinating from another state.

Request a Facility Visit
Caregiver helping an elderly resident with paperwork in a nursing home setting
What We Notarize

Nursing-home document types

The documents most commonly signed in skilled-nursing and long-term care settings.

  • Healthcare Power of AttorneyNames a healthcare agent — often a son, daughter, or spouse — to make medical decisions if needed.
  • Advance Medical Directive (Living Will)Virginia's combined healthcare-decisions document. End-of-life and treatment preferences.
  • Durable Power of Attorney (financial)Authorizes a trusted person to handle finances during incapacity. Common in Medicaid planning.
  • HIPAA Release / AuthorizationAllows specific family members or attorneys to receive medical information.
  • Last Will & Testament (self-proving affidavit)Notarization of the witness affidavit speeds probate.
  • Revocable & irrevocable trustsTrust signings, amendments, and trust-funding documents.
  • Property deeds & transfer-on-death deedsCommon in late-stage Medicaid planning and family asset transfers.
  • Guardianship & conservatorship affidavitsCourt documents related to ongoing care decisions.

Have your attorney prepare paperwork — Parascand Notary does not draft documents or provide legal advice. We handle the notarization side professionally.

Adult child coordinating elder care for a parent in a nursing home
For families managing care

Coordinating from out of state? We've got you.

Many of our nursing-home appointments are arranged by adult children who live hundreds or thousands of miles away. The phone tag with facilities, the time-zone gymnastics, the "is mom okay to sign today?" uncertainty — we handle the on-the-ground side so you can focus on your parent.

  • We coordinate with facility staffOne phone call to the social worker or director of nursing to schedule a quiet time when your loved one is most lucid.
  • You join by phone or videoIf you want to observe or talk through the document, we'll set up speakerphone before we start.
  • Witnesses arrangedHealthcare and estate documents often need disinterested witnesses. We bring our own — facility staff aren't always available or appropriate.
  • Email confirmation afterYou'll receive scanned copies and a written confirmation of what was signed and when, the same day.
Schedule from Anywhere
For social workers & admissions

A reliable name to give families.

Social workers, admissions coordinators, and directors of nursing — if you're regularly asked "do you know a notary who comes out?" — Parascand Notary is built for that referral.

We respond same-day for most Virginia facilities. We respect visitor protocols, sign in at every front desk, mask up when policy calls for it, and don't ask staff to act as witnesses or proxy signers. We treat your residents with the dignity they deserve and follow up with families directly so your team isn't stuck in the middle.

Want to be added as a referral partner? Call us — we'll send a one-page info sheet for your front desk and confirm same-day response standards for your facility specifically.

Become a Referral Partner
Healthcare professional consulting with a colleague at a long-term care facility
How It Works

From phone call to signed document

Call us

Tell us the facility, the resident, the documents, and any timing constraints. We'll quote and schedule — usually same day or next.

We coordinate

We'll call the facility's social-services or admissions office to confirm a quiet visit time and any visitor requirements.

The visit

We arrive with witnesses (if arranged), notary kit, and a calm bedside manner. Capacity check, ID verification, signing — usually 20–40 minutes.

Confirmation

Same-day email to family with copies and a brief written summary. Originals returned to whoever you've designated.

Pricing

Honest, posted rates

Single document visit

From $75

One signer, one document, daytime visit. Includes travel within service area. Witnesses extra if needed.

After-hours / weekend

From $25 surcharge

Evening, weekend, and holiday visits add a $25 surcharge to the base rate. Same-day rush adds another $25.

Common Questions

Nursing-home notary FAQ

What if my loved one isn't oriented or can't sign clearly?
Notarization requires the signer to be aware, oriented to time and place, and signing of their own free will. We perform a careful capacity check at the start of every visit. If the resident is not lucid enough on that day, we cannot proceed — and we'll work with the family and facility to reschedule when possible. A signer who can't write their full name can still make a mark with two witnesses present.
Can the facility staff act as witnesses?
Sometimes — but it depends on facility policy and the document type. Many nursing homes prefer not to have staff witness healthcare or estate documents to avoid any appearance of conflict. We bring our own disinterested witnesses for that reason; it removes the awkwardness and keeps the staff out of any potential legal challenge.
Can I be on the phone or video while you notarize?
Yes. Many out-of-state family members join via speakerphone or FaceTime so they can hear the document being read and confirm their loved one's responses. We'll set this up at the start of the visit.
What if my parent is on a memory-care unit?
Memory-care residents can absolutely still sign documents — but capacity must be verified at the moment of signing, not assumed from a prior diagnosis. We've worked with memory-care residents who have lucid mornings and confused afternoons. Schedule for their best time of day, and we'll assess on arrival. If they aren't ready, we won't proceed and we'll work with the family on next steps.
Do you charge if the visit can't be completed?
A travel/visit fee applies even if notarization can't be completed. We'll always work with the family to reschedule and only charge what's fair. This protects against drive-out costs and is standard industry practice.
What's the cost compared to having my parent leave the facility?
A nursing-home visit typically runs $75–175. A medical-transport ambulance to a notary's office can cost $300–800 plus the notary fee — and often isn't covered by insurance for non-medical reasons. We're almost always the more affordable, and far less stressful, option.
Can you handle Medicaid-planning documents?
Yes — we frequently notarize transfer-on-death deeds, irrevocable trusts, durable powers of attorney, and other documents involved in Medicaid spend-down and asset-protection planning. The documents must be drafted by an elder-law attorney; we handle the notarization step.
When time matters

Ready to schedule a facility visit?

Call directly for fastest response. Same-day appointments available across Virginia.

📞 Call Now · (571) 332-3829