Property or financial powers of attorney (POAs) are ubiquitous in estate planning and with very good reason. The likelihood of becoming incapacitated prior to death is significantly greater than the risk of dying at any particular time.1 Therefore, the actuarial odds are that the property or financial POA will be needed before other estate-planning documents are required.
All access premium subscription
Please Log in if you are currently a Trusts & Estates subscriber.
If you are interested in becoming a subscriber with unlimited article access, please select Subscription Options below.
Questions about your account or how to access content?
Contact: [email protected]
0 comments
Hide comments