Need a Power of Attorney?
When there is no power of attorney in place, no one has immediate legal authority to manage a person’s finances or make medical decisions on their behalf—even a spouse or adult child. Instead, family members must go through court proceedings to obtain guardianship or conservatorship, a process that is costly, time-consuming, and unpredictable. This guide covers what actually happens to your financial affairs, your medical care, and your family when no POA is in place and what you can do right now to avoid it.
Situations like these affect real people every day: an adult child trying to pay a parent's bills after a stroke, or a spouse locked out of joint accounts after an unexpected accident. A power of attorney is one of the most straightforward estate planning steps you can take and one of the most consequential to skip.
A power of attorney is a vital legal document that allows a person, known as the principal, to grant authority to another individual, called the attorney in fact or agent, to act on their behalf. This authority can cover a wide range of financial affairs and important decisions, ensuring that someone trusted can manage the principal’s affairs if they become mentally incapacitated or otherwise unable to make decisions.
Powers of attorney are an essential part of estate planning, providing peace of mind that financial, legal, and personal matters will be handled according to the principal’s wishes. Depending on the type of POA, the authority granted can be broad or limited to certain issues or events. Understanding how a power of attorney works and the responsibilities it entails is crucial for anyone looking to protect their interests and ensure their affairs are managed effectively in the event they are unable to act for themselves.
Who controls your finances if you are incapacitated and have no POA?
The short answer is: no one, at least not immediately. Family members, including spouses, do not automatically gain access to your bank accounts, investment accounts, or real estate simply because you are unable to act for yourself.
Without a POA in place, the following financial scenarios can unfold:
What is conservatorship, and how does it differ from guardianship?
When there is no POA, the court may need to appoint someone to step in. A conservatorship grants a designated person authority over your financial affairs. A guardianship grants authority over your personal and daily-living decisions, such as where you live and what care you receive. Both require formal court proceedings, can take months to resolve, and may result in the appointment of someone you would not have chosen yourself.
The bottom line: Without a POA, your loved ones face the prospect of petitioning a probate court just to pay your bills—spending time, money, and emotional energy they cannot afford during an already difficult situation.
Who can make medical decisions if you are incapacitated and have no POA?
State law determines the answer, and there is no guarantee it will reflect your wishes.
Most states follow a priority hierarchy for medical surrogate decision-makers. This typically moves from spouse, to adult children, to parents, to siblings. However, this hierarchy is not automatic in every state and does not account for the complexity of real family situations. Key issues include:
A healthcare proxy is a person designated to make medical decisions on your behalf, functionally the same role as an agent under a medical power of attorney (also called a healthcare power of attorney). The distinction is largely terminological, varying by state, but neither exists without a formal legal document granting someone these powers.
Who can make medical decisions if incapacitated? Only a person with documented legal authority. A spouse, adult child, or other individual formally named as your healthcare agent can reliably step in, speak with your providers, and make decisions that align with your values and wishes.
What does the court do when there is no POA? When no agent has been legally designated to act on your behalf, a probate court may become involved to establish formal authority.
Here is how that process typically unfolds:
The bottom line: Court proceedings are a safety net, not a solution. A power of attorney completed in advance eliminates the need for court involvement entirely.
Without a named agent, family members have no legally designated authority, and if they disagree, there is no mechanism to resolve the conflict without court involvement.
This dynamic surfaces most often in two situations:
A power of attorney does not just protect your wishes—it protects your family from having to make impossible decisions without guidance, and from having to fight through a legal process during an already painful time.
Not automatically. While spouses may share certain accounts or property, a spouse has no inherent legal authority to act on behalf of an incapacitated partner in matters involving solely-owned accounts, investments, or real estate transactions. Without a POA, they would typically need to pursue conservatorship through the courts.
Generally, no—not accounts held solely in the incapacitated person's name. Financial institutions require documentation of legal authority before allowing account access to anyone other than the account holder. Family members without that authority may be unable to pay bills, manage funds, or access critical financial information.
Bills may go unpaid and accounts may remain inaccessible until a court grants a conservator the authority to manage them. Depending on how long the process takes, this can result in missed mortgage payments, lapsed insurance, and significant financial disruption—all of which falls on family members to manage with limited legal recourse.
In a medical emergency, healthcare providers will act to preserve life without waiting for legal authorization. However, for ongoing decisions—treatment plans, care transitions, communication with providers—family members without formal legal authority may face barriers. Financial emergencies, such as needing to access funds to pay for care, are even harder to navigate without a POA.
No. A power of attorney terminates at the moment of the principal's death. After death, authority over the estate transfers to an executor named in a will, or through the probate process if no will exists. A POA cannot be used to manage estate affairs after the principal has passed.
The simplest way to avoid all of the above is to create a power of attorney before you need one. The following documents address the primary areas where legal authority matters most.
| Document | Purpose | Link |
|---|---|---|
| Durable Power of Attorney | Grants an agent authority over financial and legal affairs, including bank accounts, real estate, and investments. Remains effective if you become incapacitated. | Create a Durable POA |
| Medical Power of Attorney | Designates an agent to make healthcare decisions on your behalf if you are unable to do so. | Create a Medical POA |
| General Power of Attorney | Grants an agent authority for specific tasks or a limited time period. Does not remain effective upon incapacitation. | Create a General POA |
LegalNature offers intuitive power of attorney forms that meet state-specific requirements across all 50 states and the District of Columbia.