If you ask most people what's in their estate plan, they'll mention a will. Some will mention a trust. Almost no one mentions a durable power of attorney — and yet, in many ways, it's the most important document you'll ever sign.
Here's why every adult, regardless of age or wealth, needs one in place.
What Is a Durable Power of Attorney?
A power of attorney (POA) is a legal document where you (the "principal") give another person (your "agent" or "attorney-in-fact") authority to act on your behalf. A durable power of attorney is one that remains in effect even if you become incapacitated.
Without the word "durable," a regular POA becomes invalid the moment you can no longer make decisions — exactly when you need it most.
What Can a Power of Attorney Do?
A properly drafted Florida durable power of attorney can authorize your agent to:
- Pay bills and manage bank accounts
- Buy, sell, or refinance real estate
- File tax returns
- Access retirement and investment accounts
- Apply for government benefits, including Medicaid
- Run your business
- Hire and pay caregivers
- Settle insurance claims
In short — almost anything you could do yourself, financially.
What Happens Without One?
If you become incapacitated without a durable power of attorney, your family cannot simply step in. Banks won't talk to them. The IRS won't accept their signature. Insurance companies will refuse to cooperate.
Their only option is to file a guardianship petition in circuit court — a process that:
- Takes weeks or months
- Costs thousands in attorney, court, and examining committee fees
- Strips you of your legal rights
- Requires annual court reports for the rest of your life
- Becomes part of the public record
All of this can be avoided with a single document signed in advance.
Florida Law Has Specific Rules
Florida's power-of-attorney statute (Chapter 709) is unusually strict. A few important points:
- "Springing" POAs are no longer valid in Florida. Your POA must be effective the moment you sign it (with limited exceptions for military service members).
- Certain powers must be initialed separately — including the power to make gifts, create or change a trust, change beneficiary designations, and waive survivor rights. If your POA doesn't expressly grant these powers with initials, your agent cannot exercise them.
- Two witnesses and a notary are required for the POA to be valid for real estate transactions.
A POA downloaded from the internet often misses these requirements and is rejected when your family tries to use it.
Choose Your Agent Carefully
Your agent has enormous authority. Choose someone who is:
- Trustworthy — they could literally drain your accounts
- Financially competent — paying bills, dealing with banks, filing taxes
- Available — geography matters; an agent across the country can be impractical
- Willing to serve — talk to them first
Always name a successor agent in case your first choice can't serve.
The Bottom Line
A durable power of attorney costs a few hundred dollars to prepare and may save your family tens of thousands in guardianship fees and months of court proceedings. It's the highest-leverage document in any estate plan.
If you don't have one — or your existing POA is more than a few years old — let's fix that. Contact Zacharia Frey PLLC to schedule a consultation.
Have Questions?
Schedule a consultation to discuss how this topic applies to your situation.
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