Financial Power of Attorney
Without This Document, Your Bills Stop Getting Paid the Day You're Incapacitated
If a stroke, accident, or medical emergency leaves you unable to act, who pays your mortgage tomorrow? Who moves money to cover payroll? Who signs for your business or accesses your retirement accounts? Without a durable power of attorney for finances, the answer is: no one—until your family goes to court.
Banks freeze accounts. Bills pile up. Business operations stall. Even if you have joint accounts with your spouse, that doesn't cover IRAs, business interests, insurance claims, or real estate transactions. And if both of you are in an accident? Your family is completely locked out.
In this video, you'll discover why everyone over 18 needs a financial power of attorney, what powers your agent actually needs to keep your life running, and how "springing" authority protects you by activating only when you're incapacitated—not before.
Watch now to learn how to prevent financial chaos during a health crisis and ensure your family can keep the lights on, payroll running, and your credit intact while you recover.
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