You’re realizing your family needs legal paperwork in place.
The hardest legal conversation often happens too late — when your parent can’t make decisions anymore and your family is arguing about who decides what. This page is about the four documents every family should have in place before capacity is lost. These conversations are uncomfortable, but a single conversation now prevents months of family pain and legal costs later. The window to do this is usually shorter than families think.
Common questions
My parent doesn’t have a power of attorney. What do I do?
If your parent still has legal capacity — which they likely do, even with some cognitive decline — the time to act is now. Contact an elder-law attorney to draft the documents; this typically takes days, not weeks. The two essential documents: a Durable Power of Attorney (for finances) and a Health Care Proxy or Health Care Power of Attorney (for medical decisions). Both are required.
What legal documents does my parent need to have in place?
The Core Four: a Health Care Proxy (who makes medical decisions if your parent cannot), a Living Will or Advance Directive (what medical interventions your parent does or doesn’t want), a Durable Power of Attorney (who manages finances), and a Last Will and Testament (how assets are distributed). Every aging parent should have all four — but if a health condition is present, getting these in place before capacity is lost is urgent.
What happens if my parent gets seriously ill and has no legal documents in place?
Without a Health Care Proxy, medical decisions may fall to state law — which determines who decides, and it may not be who your parent would have chosen. Without a Durable Power of Attorney, managing your parent’s finances requires going to court for guardianship — a process that is slow, expensive, and stressful during an already difficult time. These documents exist precisely to prevent that scenario.
Can my parent still sign legal documents if they have some cognitive decline or a dementia diagnosis?
It depends on the stage and type of impairment — legal capacity is specific to the decision being made, not an all-or-nothing condition. In early-stage dementia, many people retain the capacity to sign legal documents. An elder-law attorney can assess capacity or recommend a formal physician evaluation. If your parent clearly no longer has capacity, the only legal option is guardianship through the courts — which is exactly why acting early matters.
What is the difference between a Health Care Proxy and a Living Will?
A Health Care Proxy names the person who will make medical decisions on your parent’s behalf if they cannot speak for themselves. A Living Will documents your parent’s specific wishes — what interventions they do or don’t want at the end of life. Both are necessary and serve different functions: the Proxy handles who decides; the Living Will handles what they decide.
Do this first
- Understand the Core Four — the four documents every family needs. (1) Health Care Proxy: names the person who makes medical decisions if your parent can’t speak for themselves. (2) Living Will (also called Advance Directive): documents what kind of medical treatment your parent wants or doesn’t want at the end of life. (3) Durable Power of Attorney: names the person who manages money and legal matters if your parent becomes unable to do so. (4) Last Will and Testament: states where assets go and who manages the estate. These documents only matter if they’re signed and on file.
- Start the conversation with your parent while they can decide. “I need to know your wishes about your medical care and your money. I want to be the one you trust to make decisions if you can’t.” Frame it as a gift to them and to your family, not as morbid planning.
- Hire an elder law attorney to draft these documents. Don’t use a template from the internet. Your parent’s situation — state of residence, assets, family dynamics — matters. An attorney costs $1,000–$3,000 for all four documents. It’s one of the best money decisions a family can make.
- Make sure your parent’s doctor knows the documents exist. Give the health care proxy and living will to the doctor. It goes in the medical chart. If your parent lands in a hospital without these documents on file, the hospital won’t have time to read them.
- Tell your siblings where everything is. Safe deposit box? Attorney’s office? Your home? Everyone who might need to know should know the location. Write it down and keep it somewhere safe but accessible.
Free chapter: “Caring for the Caregiver” from Ron’s book, The CareGiving Navigator
Download your legal readiness checklist. Use it to track which documents you have, which you still need, and where everything is filed. Share it with your family so nobody’s guessing when the time comes.
Go deeper
Legal Readiness Checklist
PDF to track which of the Core Four you have, which you need, and next steps for getting them signed and filed.
Get the checklist →Power of Attorney Refusal
If your parent is resisting signing a Power of Attorney, you’re not alone. Read about why it happens and how families have navigated it.
Read the page →The Money Side of Caregiving
Understanding your parent’s finances, planning for long-term costs, and protecting the family’s assets while supporting your parent’s care.
Read the pillar →