Is Power of Attorney Necessary If You Have a Joint Account? (2024)

When many Connecticut residents get older, they start to consider ways to allow their children or loved ones to assist them with everyday tasks, like paying bills and banking. Two of those ways are powers of attorney and joint accounts. Whether one or both of these “homegrown” estate planning options are right for you depends on your situation, your health, and what you want to happen to your money in your lifetime, and after you pass away.

What is a Power of Attorney?

A power of attorney (sometimes abbreviated POA) is an estate planning document that allows you to designate one or more people to make legal and financial decisions in your place. Sometimes, you will want to sign a POA to allow someone (your “agent”) to manage your financial affairs while you are on a vacation, or recovering from a medical procedure. You may also want to include a POA in your plans for your end-of-life care.

A durable power of attorney is a key part of most estate plans. This document continues to grant your agents the authority to act on your behalf even after you are no longer able to make decisions yourself. It can allow your loved ones to make decisions for you after you become physically or mentally incapacitated without having to seek a conservatorship from the Connecticut probate court.

Medical decisions are not within the scope of a power of attorney, however. For that, you can create an Advance Directive (or Appointment of Health Care Administrator), which gives your agent authority to make medical decisions for you. An advance directive can give your agent authority to continue or terminate life sustaining treatment (based on your wishes) and decide what happens to your body after your death. However, your health care agent cannot access your financial accounts to pay for the care they authorize.

Do You Need a Power of Attorney for Joint Accounts?

Banks often suggest that aging account holders add the names of their children or regular caretakers to their bank accounts so they can access funds on the account holder’s behalf. In many ways, this has the same effect as creating a durable power of attorney for just that account. A joint account holder does not need a power of attorney to get information from your bank, access the funds in the account, or make deposits or withdrawals on your behalf.

However, joint accounts give your loved one far more control over your money than a power of attorney does. Creating a joint account or adding a loved one’s name to an account you already own essentially makes them a joint owner. Each person on the account has the legal authority to use the entire account balance for any reason. In contrast, a person holding a power of attorney also has access to the grantor’s bank account, but he or she is legally required to use those funds for the benefit of the grantor. A person holding a power of attorney is a “fiduciary” of the grantor. That means they must always act in the grantor’s best interest. This gives you much more assurance that your money will be used for your benefit, even after you are no longer the one driving to the bank.

Joint account holders being treated as owners can also hurt you if your co-owner has debts, including alimony or child support. Your joint owner’s creditors have the ability to garnish the contents of a joint bank account, even if 100% of the assets in the account were deposited by you and used for your benefit. If you choose to use a joint account instead of a power of attorney, you should have a frank conversation with your child or loved one first, to make sure no one is trying to collect from them.

How are Joint Accounts Used in an Estate Plan?

If a power of attorney gives your agent the authority to control your accounts, why might you still consider a joint account? Even a durable power of attorney expires when you do. If you were to die today and your agent took your power of attorney to the bank tomorrow to withdraw your assets, the bank could turn them away empty-handed. If instead you created a joint account with survivorship rights, that ownership and control of the account would pass to your co-owner automatically upon your death.

This automatic transfer means that joint accounts aren’t part of the Connecticut probate process. Your loved ones won’t need to include it in your estate administration. That means the funds will be available to your family immediately after your death, and can be used to support the family while they grieve and go through the estate administration process.

Both powers of attorney and joint accounts can play important roles in your end-of-life care and estate planning. But those roles are not the same. The estate planning attorney at Lawrence & Jurkiewicz, LLC represents clients in Hartford and Litchfield Counties. If you have questions about the interaction between a power of attorney and a joint account, or if you are ready to start planning for your future, Attorney Edward Jurkiewicz can help. He will explain the differences between the two estate planning strategies, and help you make the best strategic choices to protect you and your family. Please call us at (860) 264-1551 or contact us at your convenience to start planning for your family’s future today.

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Is Power of Attorney Necessary If You Have a Joint Account? (2024)

FAQs

Is Power of Attorney Necessary If You Have a Joint Account? ›

A joint account holder does not need a power of attorney to get information from your bank, access the funds in the account, or make deposits or withdrawals on your behalf. However, joint accounts give your loved one far more control over your money than a power of attorney does.

Is joint account better than power of attorney? ›

Most estate planning attorneys recommend the use of a POA rather than adding an owner to a joint account.

Can a POA withdraw money from a joint bank account? ›

Through the use of a valid Power of Attorney, an Agent can sign checks for the Principal, withdraw and deposit funds from the Principal's financial accounts, change or create beneficiary designations for financial assets, and perform many other financial transactions.

Why would the bank deny the power of attorney? ›

A few exceptions do exist. For example, if the bank believes in good faith that your agent doesn't have the authority to perform the act requested, or if the bank is aware of a report that your agent might be exploiting or abusing you, the bank doesn't have to accept the document.

What does the POA mean on a bank account? ›

A financial power of attorney is a legal document that authorizes an agent to act on your behalf in financial matters. Financial POAs function as proof that the designated agent has the power to manage the principal's finances.

Can a POA be added to a joint account? ›

A person with Power of Attorney for their parents can't actually “add” the POA to their bank accounts. However, they may change bank accounts to be jointly owned. There are some pros and cons of doing this, as discussed in the article “POAs vs. joint ownership” from NWI.com.

What happens if you have a joint bank account and one person dies? ›

Most joint bank or credit union accounts are held with “rights of survivorship.” This means that when one account owner dies, the money passes to the surviving owner, or equally to the rest of the owners if there are multiple people on the account.

Can a power of attorney freeze a bank account? ›

If you're wondering if power of attorney can be used to close a bank account, the short answer is “yes.” But whether you're the principal or the agent, you'll want to make sure the power of attorney documents are valid and explicitly give the agent the ability to close a bank account in the principal's name.

Why do banks need power of attorney? ›

A financial power of attorney authorizes a loved one to manage your finances and to conduct business transactions on your behalf, should you become unable to handle those matters yourself.

Why won't Wells Fargo accept my power of attorney? ›

Why won't Wells Fargo accept power of attorney? To protect themselves from liability, banks, especially large banks such as Wells Fargo, have been known to reject powers of attorney, for fear of being parties to fraud.

Which is a key disadvantage of a power of attorney? ›

A Power of Attorney Could Leave You Vulnerable to Abuse

When you have designated an agent to act for you, that person gets a lot of authority over your money, property, and decision-making.

Is power of attorney more powerful than spouse? ›

If your spouse has given someone else power of attorney over certain matters, you may not have the final say. A power of attorney grants another person or entity decision-making power over some or all matters just as if you decided yourself.

What three decisions cannot be made by a legal power of attorney? ›

What three decisions cannot be made by a legal power of attorney? A power of attorney cannot change or invalidate a will, act outside of the principal's best interest, or violate the terms of nominating documents, and cannot make decisions on behalf of the principal after their death.

Does a joint bank account override a will? ›

Yes, joint ownership of an account overrides a Will. The joint ownership will be effective over and supersede any directions in your Last Will and Testament regarding a specific account and how those assets are divided.

Can you still withdraw money from a joint account if one person dies? ›

Joint bank accounts

If one dies, all the money will go to the surviving partner without the need for probate or letters of administration. The bank may need the see the death certificate in order to transfer the money to the other joint owner.

What are the cons of opening a joint account? ›

Co-owners on the account are both responsible for fees, such as overdraft charges. If one holder lets debts go unpaid, creditors can go after money in the joint account. Both holders can see transactions in the account, which can present privacy issues.

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