General Durable Power of Attorney for Property and Finances or Financial Effective upon Disability - Arizona 2025

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Choosing between durable and general depends on what you need for the future. We suggest talking to an estate planning lawyer to see which one is right for you. In short, durable powers of attorney give better protection if someone cant make decisions and keep decision-making going.
A general power of attorney gives someone wide legal authority. However, it ends if the person giving it becomes unable to make decisions. In contrast, a durable power of attorney stays in effect even if the person loses mental capacity. Both types are important for different situations.
Durable (Financial) Power of Attorney. Grants someone else the authority to act on your loved ones behalf in financial and legal matters. The term durable means that the POA remains valid even if your loved one becomes incapacitated or mentally incompetent.
One major downfall of a POA is the agent may act in ways or do things that the principal had not intended. There is no direct oversight of the agents activities by anyone other than you, the principal. This can lend a hand to situations such as elder financial abuse and/or fraud.
When someone makes you the agent in their power of attorney, you cannot: Write a will for them, nor can you edit their current will. Take money directly from their bank accounts. Make decisions after the person you are representing dies. Give away your role as agent in the power of attorney.
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People also ask

What is a durable financial power of attorney? If you POA is durable, it allows your agent to make decisions for you even if you have become mentally incapacitated. Can anyone in Arizona have a power of attorney? Arizona law allows any person over the age of 18, who is of sound mind, to have a power of attorney.
A power of attorney allows one person to give legal authority to another person to act on their behalf. A medical power of attorney allows for another person to make medical decisions for you, while a financial power of attorney authorizes another person to make financial decisions for you.

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