If you become incapacitated — car accident, stroke, medical emergency — someone needs legal authority to act on your behalf. Without a power of attorney, your family has to go through a costly court process. Here's how to avoid that.
Types of power of attorney in Texas:
-
Statutory Durable Power of Attorney (financial):
- Covers financial decisions: bank accounts, paying bills, managing investments, filing taxes, selling property
- "Durable" means it remains effective if you become incapacitated (Texas Estates Code 752)
- Texas provides a statutory form in Estates Code 752.051 — you can use this template
-
Medical Power of Attorney:
- Designates someone to make healthcare decisions if you can't
- Texas Health & Safety Code Chapter 166, Subchapter D
- Only activates when you're unable to make your own decisions
- Your agent can consent to or refuse medical treatment on your behalf
-
Directive to Physicians (Living Will):
- Texas Health & Safety Code 166.033
- States your wishes about life-sustaining treatment
- Works alongside the Medical POA
How to set it up:
- DIY (valid in Texas): Texas law provides statutory forms. Print them, fill them out, sign before a notary (financial POA) or two witnesses (medical POA).
- Attorney: $200-500 for a basic estate planning package including both POAs and a will.
- Free resources: Legal Aid of NorthWest Texas provides free estate planning clinics for qualifying individuals.
Critical details:
- Sign while you're mentally competent. If you wait until after a diagnosis, it may be challenged.
- Give copies to your agent, your doctor, and your bank.
- You can revoke it at any time while mentally competent.
- Texas POA forms are available free at texaslawhelp.org.
Without a POA: Your family must petition for guardianship in probate court. This costs $2,000-5,000+, takes months, and a judge makes decisions for you instead of your chosen person.
Sources:
- Texas Estates Code Chapter 752 (Durable Power of Attorney)
- Texas Health & Safety Code Chapter 166 (Medical POA / Directive to Physicians)
- TexasLawHelp.org — free statutory forms
- State Bar of Texas — estate planning FAQ
You need this at 25, not just 75. One car accident changes everything.