For Notaries & Legal Clerks

Documents with public faith
deserve private storage.

Wills, powers of attorney, property deeds, partnership agreements — notarial documents carry public faith. Your working notes and draft versions should be protected with the same gravity as the final signed documents.

Download — it's free
Professional risks

Your working notes deserve the same protection as signed documents.

Draft documents on cloud

Working drafts of wills and powers of attorney on cloud platforms create unnecessary exposure for your clients' estate plans and personal decisions.

Third-party access

Cloud providers are third parties your client never consented to. Draft estate documents on their servers represent an ethical and professional risk.

Metadata exposure

Document titles, timestamps, and access patterns on cloud services can reveal sensitive information about your clients' legal arrangements.

How Writtt protects notarial work

Professional discretion enforced by encryption.

AES-256 document encryption

Encrypt working drafts, client notes, and preparatory documents individually with military-grade encryption on your device.

Local-only storage

All documents stay on your machine. No cloud sync, no third-party exposure, no server logs of your clients' legal activities.

Office or field work

Home visits for elderly clients, remote notarizations — Writtt works without internet connectivity.

No client tracking

Zero telemetry means no record of which clients' documents you access. Your practice patterns stay invisible.

A notary authenticates trust. The tools that support that trust should be held to the same standard of discretion.

Frequently asked questions

Yes. Writtt is ideal for working drafts, client notes, and document preparation. Final notarial documents should follow your jurisdiction's format requirements.

Absolutely. Estate plans involve the most personal financial and family decisions. Writtt's encrypted local storage ensures these notes never reach cloud servers.

Encrypted files require your personal password. Even on shared office computers, vault files are cryptographically unreadable without authentication.

Authenticate trust. Protect discretion.

AES-256 encryption for notarial working notes. Free, local, open source.

Download — it's free