What a POA Is, and the Court It Saves You From
A power of attorney lets someone you choose (your “agent”) handle your money and property. Without one, if you become incapacitated your family has to ask a court to appoint a guardian, which is slow, public, and expensive. A correctly drafted durable POA is the document that avoids that. It’s governed by the Florida Power of Attorney Act (Chapter 709). Setting one up for an aging parent? →
Why It Must Be “Durable”
A plain power of attorney dies the moment you lose capacity, exactly when you need it most. A durable POA survives your incapacity, but only if the durability language is actually in the document. The title alone won’t do it; a specific sentence stating it survives incapacity has to be there.
Florida POAs Are Effective When Signed
Florida law makes a POA effective the day you sign it. Since 2011, you cannot make a Florida POA that activates only upon incapacity; the lone exception is a military deployment POA. Your agent can act the day you sign.
People worry about that at first, which is exactly why we build in controls: a trusted agent, a named successor, and the option to have our office hold the original in escrow and release it only when it is needed.
Execution Requirements
In writing, signed by you, with two witnesses and a notary (a stricter ceremony than a Florida will, which needs only the witnesses). Your agent must be a competent adult or a Florida institution with trust powers, and the agent should not be in the room at signing.
”Superpowers” Must Be Separately Initialed
Seven high-risk powers work only if you separately sign or initial next to each one: create a trust; amend or revoke a trust; make a gift; create or change survivorship rights; change a beneficiary designation; waive survivor rights under an annuity or retirement plan; and disclaim property. A form that lists them in a block without separate initials grants none of them.
These are the powers that let an agent handle Medicaid spend-down or fund a trust. One trap: if a witness is not physically present at signing, these powers are void, so we always sign in person.
An “All Powers” Clause Grants Nothing
Florida does not honor an omnibus “my agent may do everything I could do” clause. Every authority has to be specifically listed. That is the second reason DIY forms fail: they lean on vague language and miss the powers you actually need.
A POA your bank rejects is just paper.
We include the Florida banking language and an agent’s affidavit so it gets honored.
Book your free consultBanks Must Accept a Proper POA, With Teeth
For banks and brokers, about four business days is the presumed reasonable time to accept or reject a POA. A rejection has to be in writing with a reason, and a wrongful rejection can cost the bank a court order plus damages, attorney fees, and costs.
The key is including the specific Florida banking and investment language verbatim, which makes banks far more likely to honor the document. A bank may also ask for a short agent’s affidavit confirming authority; we provide one with every POA.
Agent Duties and Controls
The agent is a fiduciary: they must act in good faith, within the scope you granted, and in your interest. A non-relative agent cannot gift to himself or name himself as a beneficiary unless the POA expressly allows it.
The controls we build in answer the “isn’t that risky?” worry: a trusted agent and a named successor, leaving risky superpowers out unless you actually need them, and the attorney-escrow option for the original.
Health Care Is a Separate Document
A property POA does not cover medical decisions. Those live in a Designation of Health-Care Surrogate under Chapter 765, paired with a living will and a HIPAA authorization. See Florida advance directives (living will, surrogate, medical power of attorney), or we prepare them together in the full plan. A POA is also how you avoid guardianship. And know its hard stop: every POA ends at death.
Revoking, Updating, and the “Stale POA” Problem
A POA ends at death or on revocation. A non-durable POA also ends the moment you lose capacity, and a court that adjudicates you incapacitated can suspend or end even a durable one. To revoke, sign a later writing that expressly revokes the old one. A new POA by itself does not cancel a prior one. Collect and destroy old originals and notify your former agent and your banks in writing.
Divorce ends a spouse-agent’s authority. Banks get nervous about old documents, so we re-execute every few years to keep a current instrument. A POA ends at death; what happens after is probate.
Flat Fee
A standalone durable power of attorney is $350, or it is included in the will-based plan from $1,200 individual / $1,950 couple (will, POA, health-care surrogate, living will, and HIPAA). See full pricing →
Frequently Asked Questions
What Is a Durable Power of Attorney in Florida?
It is a document that lets someone you trust manage your money and property, and it keeps working if you become incapacitated. The “durable” language (§709.2104) is what lets it survive incapacity, which is the whole point for incapacity planning.
When Does a Florida Power of Attorney Take Effect?
The day you sign it. Florida law makes a POA exercisable when executed (§709.2108) and bans POAs that only spring into effect upon incapacity. Your agent can act immediately, which is why choosing the right agent and controls matters.
Can I Make a “Springing” POA That Only Kicks in if I’m Incapacitated?
No. Florida outlawed springing POAs in 2011 (the only exception is a military deployment POA). If you want a buffer, your attorney can hold the original and release it to your agent only when it’s needed.
Does a Florida POA Avoid Guardianship?
Usually yes. A valid durable POA is the leading less-restrictive alternative a court must consider before appointing a guardian (§744.331(6)(b)). It is the cheapest insurance against guardianship court.
What Are the Signing Requirements for a Florida POA?
It must be in writing, signed by you, witnessed by two people, and notarized (§709.2105). If it includes “superpowers,” the witnesses must be physically present, or those powers are void.
Why Won’t My Bank Accept My Power of Attorney?
Often because it is old, missing Florida’s banking language, or vague. A proper Florida POA includes the §709.2208 banking statements; a bank then has about four business days to accept or must reject in writing with a reason, and a wrongful rejection can cost the bank damages and fees.
Can My Agent Change My Beneficiaries, Make Gifts, or Fund My Trust?
Only if you separately initialed those specific “superpowers” (§709.2202). A general POA does not include them by default, and a non-relative agent cannot benefit himself unless you expressly allow it.
Is a Power of Attorney the Same as a Medical Power of Attorney?
No. Medical decisions need a separate Designation of Health-Care Surrogate under Chapter 765, plus a living will and a HIPAA release. We prepare those together in the will-based plan.
How Do I Revoke a Florida Power of Attorney?
With a later POA or a signed writing that expressly revokes the old one, then notify your former agent and any banks in writing. A new POA by itself does not cancel a prior one. Divorce also ends a spouse-agent’s authority.
How Much Does a Power of Attorney Cost in Florida?
A standalone durable POA is a $350 flat fee at our firm, or it is included in the will-based plan from $1,200.
Common Situations
The guardianship that didn’t have to happen. A Miami daughter couldn’t pay her mother’s bills or sell the car to fund her care, because her mother, now in late-stage dementia, never signed a POA. The family spent months and thousands in guardianship court for authority the mother could have granted in one signing. A durable POA done years earlier would have made all of it unnecessary.
The form the bank rejected. A Broward man downloaded a POA template and named his son. When the son tried to use it, the bank balked: no Florida banking language, no agent’s affidavit, and an “all powers” clause that granted nothing. By the time they sorted it out, the father had declined further. A Florida-specific POA with the §709.2208 language would have been honored in days.
Sources of Law
- Fla. Stat. ch. 709: §709.2104 (durability), §709.2105 (execution), §709.2108 (effective when executed; no springing), §709.2201 (enumeration), §709.2202 (superpowers; remote-witness void), §709.2208 (banking language), §709.2119/§709.2120 (acceptance, affidavit), §709.2114 (agent duties), §§709.2109 to 709.2110 (termination/revocation). Guardianship alternative §744.331(6)(b); health care ch. 765. flsenate.gov (retrieved 2026-06-07)
Updated June 10, 2026. Reviewed by Kevin D. Klagge, Esq., Fla. Bar No. 99502. General information about Florida law, not legal advice, and no attorney-client relationship is created.