How to redact your ID card for getting a document notarized
Sending an ID card to a notary? Here's exactly what to black out, what to keep, and how to redact it in under a minute — fully offline on your iPhone.
Black out the iD / document number and date of birth on your ID card, and keep your photo visible so a notary can still verify you. Stamp the copy "For this notarization only", then export a flattened PDF — all on your iPhone, nothing uploaded.
Why a notary asks for your ID card
A notary verifies your identity before witnessing your signature. A national or state ID card shows your photo, full name, date of birth, home address, and a unique ID/document number.
A notary needs your identity confirmed in the moment — a notary records that they checked your ID, not a stored full copy. The catch: with your ID number, name, and date of birth, a thief can open accounts and pass identity checks as you. That's why you should hand over a redacted copy — see the full ID card redaction guide or what to redact for getting a document notarized.
What to redact on your ID card
- ID / document number The unique number is the main key for impersonation and account fraud.
- Date of birth Combined with your name, it unlocks most identity-verification checks.
- Home address Exposes where you live and enables address-based fraud; rarely needed for an identity check.
- Signature Can be copied onto forged paperwork.
What to keep visible (so it's still accepted)
- Your photo
- Your full name
- The expiry date, if validity must be confirmed
The watermark to add
Stamp a purpose watermark so the copy can't be reused beyond getting a document notarized:
Redact your ID card in 4 steps
- Pick the photo. Open Cachera and choose the photo of your ID card with the system picker — only that photo is read, never your whole library.
- Black out the sensitive fields. Drag a black block over the id / document number and date of birth. On export those pixels are destroyed — there's no hidden layer to recover underneath.
- Add a purpose watermark. Stamp "For this notarization only" so the copy can't be reused beyond getting a document notarized.
- Export and send. Lay it out on A4, export a PDF, and share it with a notary. Everything happened on your iPhone — nothing was uploaded.
Is this OK to do?
FAQ
Will a notary still accept a redacted ID card?
Yes. Keep your photo and your full name visible so they can confirm what they need, redact only the sensitive fields, and add a clear "For this notarization only" watermark. A watermarked, partially-redacted copy is normal, accepted practice.
What should I never show on a ID card?
Hide iD / document number, date of birth, home address, signature. With your ID number, name, and date of birth, a thief can open accounts and pass identity checks as you.
Can the black bars be removed from the copy later?
No. Cachera flattens the redaction into the image on export — there is no hidden layer beneath the black blocks, so the covered text cannot be recovered from the PDF.
Should I send the original ID card instead?
A notary should verify your ID in person rather than keep a full scan. If a copy is requested, provide a redacted one. A redacted copy with a purpose watermark is usually the safer choice.
Redact it now — on your iPhone, nothing uploaded
Cachera blacks out the pixels for good, stamps a purpose watermark, and exports a print-ready PDF. Fully offline.