Living Documents

Who Makes Decisions If You Cannot?

Estate planning is not only about what happens after death. Living documents protect you while you are alive if illness, injury, memory loss, or incapacity makes it difficult to act for yourself.

Financial power of attorney, healthcare power of attorney, and advanced directives help your family avoid confusion, court involvement, and rushed decisions.

Financial decisions Healthcare decisions Advanced directives
Senior man reviewing important healthcare and estate planning documents
POA Financial authority
Healthcare Medical decisions
Financial POAMoney and Property Decisions
Healthcare POAMedical Decision Authority
DirectiveEnd-of-Life Care Wishes
IncapacityPlan Before Crisis
FamilyAvoid Confusion
ControlYour Wishes Stay Clear

Why these documents matter

Living Documents Protect You Before Death

A will and trust mostly deal with what happens after death. Living documents help answer a different question: who can make financial and medical decisions if you are alive but unable to act?

Financial Power of Attorney

Allows a trusted person to handle financial matters, bills, accounts, property, and important paperwork if you cannot.

Healthcare Power of Attorney

Names who can speak with doctors and make medical decisions if you are unable to communicate.

Advanced Directives

Clarifies your wishes for care, treatment, and end-of-life decisions so your family is not left guessing.

Without these documents

Your Family May Need Court Permission to Help You

If you become incapacitated without the right documents, loved ones may not automatically have authority to manage money, access accounts, talk to providers, or make medical decisions.

That can create delays, court involvement, family conflict, and stress during an emergency.

Common Problems Without Living Documents

  • Banks may not speak with family members.
  • Doctors may not know who should make decisions.
  • Family members may disagree.
  • Court involvement may be required.
  • Bills, care, and property decisions may be delayed.

Document breakdown

The Three Living Documents Every Family Should Understand

01

Financial Power of Attorney

Lets a trusted person help with financial and legal matters while you are alive.

  • Pay bills and manage accounts
  • Handle property or insurance paperwork
  • Work with financial institutions
  • Help avoid court-appointed control
02

Healthcare Power of Attorney

Names who can make medical decisions if you are unable to speak for yourself.

  • Speak with doctors and care teams
  • Make healthcare decisions
  • Coordinate with family
  • Reduce confusion during emergencies
03

Advanced Directive

Clarifies treatment preferences and end-of-life wishes before a crisis.

  • Document care preferences
  • Reduce family guesswork
  • Guide difficult decisions
  • Protect dignity and wishes

Family Clarity Matters

Many family conflicts begin because nobody knows who has authority or what the parent wanted. Living documents reduce uncertainty by making decision roles clear.

BeforeConfusion, delays, disagreements
AfterClear authority and written wishes

Avoid confusion

Do Not Leave Your Family Guessing

These documents do not just protect you. They protect the people who love you from having to make decisions without guidance.

The right documents can make emergencies easier to manage and help families act quickly.

Protect decision-making

Not Sure Who Could Act for You in an Emergency?

We help you review whether your current plan has the living documents needed for financial, healthcare, and end-of-life decisions.

Financial POA

Who can manage money and property?

Healthcare POA

Who can make medical decisions?

Directive

Are your care wishes written clearly?

Living document questions

Common Questions Families Ask

It allows a trusted person to help manage financial matters if you are unable to act for yourself.

It names who can make healthcare decisions if you cannot communicate or make decisions yourself.

No. They serve a different purpose. Living documents help during incapacity, while wills and trusts address estate distribution.

Before a crisis. Once someone is incapacitated, it may be too late to sign new documents.

Yes. Clear documents reduce confusion about who has authority and what decisions should be made.

Protect Your Family from Emergency Confusion

Get honest guidance about financial power of attorney, healthcare power of attorney, advanced directives, and how they fit into your full estate plan.

No obligation • No sales pitch • Plain-English guidance