How Alabama handles incapacity (POAs and advance directives)
Without documents in place, an Alabama court decides who manages your money and your medical care if you can’t. A power of attorney and an advance directive let you choose those people in advance — and replace what the court would otherwise decide for you.
These are the questions that matter most when you’re planning for incapacity.
What happens if I become incapacitated without any documents?
Your family generally has to ask an Alabama court for permission to act for you. The court runs a guardianship and conservatorship proceeding — public, supervised, and not quick.
Without documents
The court decides
- Family must petition for guardianship and conservatorship
- The court picks who manages your decisions
- Public proceeding with ongoing supervision
With documents
You decide in advance
- You name the people you trust
- No court involvement needed in most situations
- Takes effect immediately when needed
What does a power of attorney actually do?
A durable power of attorney lets you name the person who will manage your finances and legal affairs if you can’t.
It takes effect under the conditions you choose — either immediately or only on incapacity — and stays valid until you revoke it or die. Without one, your family generally has to go to court.
What is an advance directive, and how is it different?
An advance directive covers healthcare. A power of attorney covers finances. Most Alabama plans use both, because each covers what the other can’t.
Financial decisions
Power of attorney
Pays bills, manages accounts, handles real estate and investments, signs contracts and tax returns, and communicates with insurers and government agencies.
Healthcare decisions
Advance directive
Names your healthcare decision-maker, records your wishes about life-sustaining treatment, and speaks for you when you can’t. Sometimes called a living will or healthcare proxy.
How do these documents work together?
Together they replace what an Alabama court would otherwise decide for you — at a small fraction of the cost and time of guardianship.
A 30-second guided check. See whether the documents that keep your family out of court are in place.
How Brent helps you
- Walks you through what would happen to your family right now without these documents
- Drafts your power of attorney so the right person can act for your finances
- Drafts your advance directive so your healthcare wishes are clear
- Coordinates both with the rest of your plan so they actually work when needed