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New Hampshire Healthcare Directive

A New Hampshire advance healthcare directive is the document that lets you choose who makes medical decisions if you cannot, and what end-of-life care you want. Without it, New Hampshire families can face delays, court hearings, and disagreement at the worst possible moment. This 2026 guide explains New Hampshire's rules and how VoiceWill™ drafts a directive by voice in minutes.

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

What goes into a New Hampshire advance directive

New Hampshire advance directives typically combine three things: a healthcare proxy (who decides for you), a living will (what care you want or don't want in end-of-life situations), and a HIPAA authorization (who can see your medical records). Some New Hampshire forms also cover organ donation and disposition of remains.

  • Healthcare proxy / agent — the decision-maker
  • Living will — end-of-life treatment preferences
  • HIPAA authorization — record-access rights
  • Organ donation, disposition of remains (optional)

New Hampshire signing rules for a healthcare directive

New Hampshire healthcare directives generally must be signed by you (the principal) in the presence of witnesses or a notary, depending on the form. Witnesses usually cannot be your named healthcare agent, your physician, or, in many states, an employee of the healthcare facility treating you. Confirm the specific New Hampshire statutory form before signing.

Choosing a healthcare proxy in New Hampshire

Pick a proxy who can stay calm under pressure, who knows your values, and who is reachable in an emergency. Talk to them about what "quality of life" means to you, your views on resuscitation and life support, and whether you want palliative or hospice care. Name an alternate in case your first choice is unavailable.

End-of-life choices to document

New Hampshire directives let you accept or decline specific interventions: CPR, mechanical ventilation, artificial nutrition and hydration, dialysis, and palliative-only care. There is no "right" answer — the goal is to make your wishes clear so your proxy and physicians never have to guess.

Storing and sharing your New Hampshire directive

A directive only helps if your proxy and physicians can find it. New Hampshire residents typically give signed copies to the named agent, primary care physician, and any specialty providers, and store the original in a known location. VoiceWill™'s personal vault stores the document and lets your agent retrieve it in an emergency.

Frequently asked questions about New Hampshire healthcare directive

What is a New Hampshire advance healthcare directive?

A New Hampshire advance directive is a written document that names a healthcare proxy and records your end-of-life treatment preferences so providers and family know your wishes if you cannot speak for yourself.

Do I need both a living will and a healthcare proxy in New Hampshire?

Most New Hampshire statutory forms combine them in a single advance directive. The proxy makes decisions; the living-will section tells the proxy and providers what you want.

Does a New Hampshire healthcare directive need to be notarized?

New Hampshire typically requires witness signatures or notarization (sometimes either). Check the current New Hampshire statutory form — VoiceWill™ generates the correct signing instructions for your state.

Can my healthcare proxy override my written wishes?

Generally no — your written preferences govern. The proxy fills in gaps for situations you didn't address. That's why a clear living-will section matters as much as choosing the right proxy.

How do I change my New Hampshire healthcare directive?

Revoke the old one in writing, sign a new New Hampshire-compliant directive, and give copies to your proxy and physicians. VoiceWill™ can regenerate an updated directive any time.

⚖️ 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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