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Georgia Power of Attorney

A Georgia 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, Georgia signing rules, and how to draft yours by voice with VoiceWill™.

Witnesses (will)
2
Notary (will)
Optional
Holographic
Not accepted

Durable, springing, and limited POAs in Georgia

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). Georgia attorneys typically recommend a durable POA for incapacity planning.

Financial POA vs healthcare POA in Georgia

Georgia 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)

Georgia signing and notarization rules for POAs

Georgia 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 Georgia POA can still be rejected by a bank that wants its own form, which is why Georgia attorneys recommend executing the statutory form when one is available.

Two witnesses required. Notarization is optional but recommended for a self-proving affidavit.

Choosing the right agent in Georgia

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. Georgia law makes agents fiduciaries — they must act in your interest, keep records, and avoid self-dealing.

Revoking a Georgia POA

You can revoke a Georgia 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 Georgia POA whenever you need to change agents.

Frequently asked questions about Georgia power of attorney

Does a Georgia power of attorney need to be notarized?

Yes, in practice — Georgia financial institutions almost always require a notarized POA before they will honor it, and most Georgia statutory POAs are designed to be signed before a notary.

What is a durable power of attorney in Georgia?

A durable POA continues to work even after you become incapacitated. Without the durability language, Georgia POAs end the moment you lose capacity — exactly when you need them most.

Can I have separate financial and medical POAs in Georgia?

Yes — Georgia treats them as separate documents. Most estate plans include both, often naming different agents for each role.

When does a Georgia POA end?

A Georgia 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 Georgia POA?

Yes. VoiceWill™ creates a Georgia-compliant durable POA, names alternates, and provides signing instructions specific to Georgia law — all from a short voice conversation.

⚖️ Legal Notice: VoiceWill™ is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. We are a self-help document preparation service. Documents you prepare become enforceable only after they are signed, witnessed, and/or notarized as your state's law requires. We recommend a licensed attorney in your state review your documents before signing.

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