Arizona Power of Attorney
A Arizona power of attorney is one of the most important — and most under-used — estate planning documents. This 2026 guide covers durable vs springing POAs, financial vs medical authority, Arizona signing rules, and how to draft yours by voice with VoiceWill™.
Durable, springing, and limited POAs in Arizona
A durable POA stays in effect even if you become incapacitated — that's the whole point for estate planning. A springing POA only activates after a defined incapacity event, which can create delays and disputes. A limited POA grants narrow authority for a specific transaction (e.g., signing a closing). Arizona attorneys typically recommend a durable POA for incapacity planning.
Financial POA vs healthcare POA in Arizona
Arizona treats financial authority and medical authority as separate documents. A financial POA names an agent for money and property; a healthcare POA (or healthcare proxy, included in the advance directive) names an agent for medical decisions. You can name the same person or different people.
- Financial POA — banking, real estate, taxes, government benefits
- Healthcare POA / proxy — medical decisions, end-of-life choices
- Limited POA — single transaction or narrow scope
- Springing POA — triggers only on incapacity (use cautiously)
Arizona signing and notarization rules for POAs
Arizona POAs are typically signed in front of a notary; some banks and title companies also require witness signatures. Always check with the specific institution that will accept the POA — a perfectly valid Arizona POA can still be rejected by a bank that wants its own form, which is why Arizona attorneys recommend executing the statutory form when one is available.
Two witnesses required. Holographic (handwritten) wills are accepted in this state.
Choosing the right agent in Arizona
The agent (sometimes called "attorney-in-fact") has substantial power. Pick someone honest, organized, geographically reasonable, and willing to serve. Name at least one alternate. Arizona law makes agents fiduciaries — they must act in your interest, keep records, and avoid self-dealing.
Revoking a Arizona POA
You can revoke a Arizona POA at any time while competent. Best practice is a signed written revocation, notarized, and delivered to the agent and to every institution that has a copy of the prior POA. VoiceWill™ can regenerate a fresh Arizona POA whenever you need to change agents.
Frequently asked questions about Arizona power of attorney
Does a Arizona power of attorney need to be notarized?
Yes, in practice — Arizona financial institutions almost always require a notarized POA before they will honor it, and most Arizona statutory POAs are designed to be signed before a notary.
What is a durable power of attorney in Arizona?
A durable POA continues to work even after you become incapacitated. Without the durability language, Arizona POAs end the moment you lose capacity — exactly when you need them most.
Can I have separate financial and medical POAs in Arizona?
Yes — Arizona treats them as separate documents. Most estate plans include both, often naming different agents for each role.
When does a Arizona POA end?
A Arizona POA ends at your death, when you revoke it in writing, when the agent resigns, or on any expiration date written into the document. A non-durable POA also ends at incapacity.
Can VoiceWill™ draft a Arizona POA?
Yes. VoiceWill™ creates a Arizona-compliant durable POA, names alternates, and provides signing instructions specific to Arizona law — all from a short voice conversation.
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