Planning for incapacity means deciding, while you still have the legal capacity to decide, who will manage your finances, your homestead, and your medical care if illness or injury ever leaves you unable to act for yourself. In Florida, that planning is done mainly through a durable power of attorney, a health care surrogate designation, and a living will. Without those documents, your family may be forced into a court-supervised guardianship under Chapter 744 of the Florida Statutes just to pay your mortgage or speak to your doctors.
Most people who sit down to plan their estates are thinking about one thing: what happens when I die. Who gets the house, who gets named in the will, how do we keep the kids out of a probate fight. Those are real questions. But in more than two decades of practice, I’ve watched far more families get blindsided by incapacity than by death. A stroke at 68. A bad fall on the stairs. The slow fog of dementia that arrives years before anyone says the word out loud. Death is a single event you plan around. Incapacity is a season, sometimes a long one, and it almost always shows up before death does.
Why incapacity planning matters more for Florida homeowners
If your wealth is tied up in real estate, and in South Florida it usually is, incapacity planning isn’t optional. Think about what a homestead actually requires month to month. Property taxes. Homeowner’s and flood insurance. The mortgage or HELOC payment. HOA or condo association dues that pile up fast and can lead to a lien if missed. Hurricane repairs that need a contractor signature and an insurance claim filed on a deadline.
Now imagine the owner of that home is in a hospital bed, conscious but unable to manage anything, or sedated in an ICU. Who signs? Who deals with the insurer after the roof goes? A spouse cannot automatically act on jointly held property in every situation, and an adult child has no legal authority at all simply by being your child. Florida’s homestead is constitutionally protected, which is wonderful for creditor protection but adds real friction when someone needs to sell, refinance, or borrow against it on your behalf. Selling homestead during incapacity without the right paperwork can mean a court hearing, a guardian, and months of delay while the bills keep coming.
The whole point of planning ahead is to keep your home and money under the control of someone you chose, on terms you set, instead of someone a judge appoints under rules the legislature wrote.
The three documents that handle incapacity in Florida
Florida law gives you a clean toolkit. Used together, these three instruments cover money and property on one side and medical decisions on the other.
- Durable Power of Attorney (Chapter 709, Florida Statutes) — handles financial and property matters.
- Designation of Health Care Surrogate (Chapter 765) — names who makes medical decisions for you.
- Living Will (also Chapter 765) — states your wishes about life-prolonging procedures.
People often lump these together as “advance directives,” but only the last two are technically advance directives under Florida law. The power of attorney lives in a different chapter and follows different rules. Getting all three right is what keeps your family out of the courthouse.
The durable power of attorney: your financial lifeline
A power of attorney lets you name an agent (Florida calls this person the “attorney-in-fact”) to act on your behalf. The word that matters is durable. Under Chapter 709, a power of attorney must contain language showing you intend the authority to survive your incapacity. Without that durability language, the document dies the moment you become incapacitated, which is precisely when you need it most.
Florida’s Power of Attorney Act, which took effect in 2011 and replaced the old section 709.08, made two changes that catch a lot of people off guard:
- No more “springing” powers. Florida no longer allows a power of attorney that “springs” into effect only upon a later finding of incapacity. A durable power of attorney signed today is effective today. That feels uncomfortable to some clients, but it’s deliberate. A springing power forces your family to prove you’re incapacitated before the agent can act, which defeats the speed you wanted in the first place.
- Powers must be specifically granted. Certain “superpowers,” such as making gifts, changing beneficiary designations, or creating or amending a trust, must be enumerated and separately initialed in the document. A generic, fill-in-the-blank form pulled off the internet usually lacks them.
For a homeowner, the practical takeaway is this: your durable power of attorney should expressly authorize your agent to deal with real property, including the authority to mortgage, refinance, lease, and convey your homestead, and to handle insurance claims and association matters. If those powers aren’t spelled out, a title company or lender may refuse to honor the document when it counts.
The health care surrogate: who speaks to your doctors
Chapter 765 lets you designate a health care surrogate to make medical decisions when you cannot make them yourself. A 2015 amendment was a meaningful upgrade: you can now authorize your surrogate to access your medical information and even make decisions immediately, rather than waiting until a physician formally declares you incapacitated. That matters when you simply want a trusted person able to coordinate care without a bureaucratic delay.
The designation must be signed by you in the presence of two adult witnesses, and the person you name as surrogate cannot serve as one of those witnesses. Choose a surrogate who lives close enough, or is reachable enough, to actually show up and advocate. The best-drafted document in the world doesn’t help if your named decision-maker is unreachable in another time zone during a crisis.
The living will: your voice about end-of-life care
A living will, also under Chapter 765, is where you state in advance whether you want life-prolonging procedures withheld or withdrawn if you have a terminal condition, an end-stage condition, or are in a persistent vegetative state. It speaks for you when you can’t, and it spares your loved ones from having to guess, or argue, about what you would have wanted. Floridians of a certain age remember the Terri Schiavo case; a clear living will is the single best way to keep your family out of that kind of anguish.
What happens in Florida if you do nothing: guardianship
Skip this planning and the default is guardianship under Chapter 744. When someone becomes incapacitated without valid documents in place, a court must determine incapacity through a formal proceeding. A three-member examining committee evaluates the person, lawyers get appointed, and a judge decides whether to strip away legal rights and hand them to a guardian.
Guardianship is slow, public, and expensive. Annual accountings and reports to the court are required. Many actions, including selling the homestead, need a judge’s prior approval. The guardian the court selects may not be the person you would have chosen. Florida law expressly favors the “least restrictive alternative,” and a durable power of attorney and health care directives are those alternatives. The legislature built the planning tools precisely so families can avoid guardianship. Choosing not to use them hands the decision to the system.
One useful detail in the statutes: if a guardian is later appointed, a health care surrogate you named generally continues making your medical decisions unless the court modifies or revokes that authority. The law gives weight to the choices you made while you were able. That’s a strong argument for making them now.
How incapacity planning fits with the rest of your estate plan
Incapacity documents work alongside your will and any trusts, not instead of them. A common and effective structure for Florida homeowners pairs a revocable living trust with a “pour-over” will and the three incapacity documents above. The trust can hold your home and other assets, and your successor trustee can manage everything seamlessly if you become incapacitated, with no court involvement at all. The durable power of attorney then handles anything that, for whatever reason, sits outside the trust.
If you have a child or other beneficiary with a disability, incapacity planning and inheritance planning intersect in an important way. Leaving assets outright can disqualify someone from needs-based benefits like Medicaid or SSI. A properly drafted protects that inheritance while preserving eligibility, and it’s worth coordinating with your incapacity documents so the same trusted people are in the right roles. While rules vary by state, the planning principles are consistent, and the attorneys at Morgan Legal Group handle this work in both Florida and New York.
It’s also worth remembering that your will only governs what happens after death. Many clients assume that naming an executor or finalizing a covers them for life’s emergencies. It does not. A will has no legal force until you die. Everything that happens during a long illness, the season before death, is governed by your incapacity documents or, in their absence, by the guardianship court.
A short checklist for South Florida homeowners
- Confirm your power of attorney is durable and was drafted under the current Florida Power of Attorney Act, not the repealed 709.08.
- Make sure it specifically authorizes real estate transactions, including mortgaging and conveying your homestead.
- Execute a health care surrogate designation with two qualifying witnesses, and consider authorizing immediate access to medical information.
- Sign a living will so your end-of-life wishes are documented, not debated.
- Coordinate these documents with your will, trust, and beneficiary designations so nothing conflicts.
- Review everything after any move, marriage, divorce, or death of a named agent, and ideally every few years regardless.
If you’re not certain your documents check these boxes, that uncertainty is itself the answer: it’s time for a review. Our team focuses on estate planning for Florida families, and you can also learn more about our local wills and trusts work or schedule a consultation to put a plan in place before you need it. For a deeper look at what happens when no plan exists, see our overview of Florida probate and guardianship.
Death gets all the attention in estate planning. Incapacity is the part that quietly tears families apart. Plan for both, and plan for the one that’s far more likely to come first.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between a power of attorney and a health care surrogate in Florida?
A durable power of attorney under Chapter 709 governs financial and property decisions, such as paying your mortgage, handling insurance claims, or selling your home. A health care surrogate designation under Chapter 765 governs medical decisions, such as consenting to treatment or coordinating with your doctors. They cover different domains, so most Floridians need both. The two documents are signed separately and follow different witnessing rules.
Does a will cover incapacity in Florida?
No. A will has no legal effect until you die. It cannot authorize anyone to manage your money, home, or medical care while you are alive but incapacitated. To handle incapacity you need a durable power of attorney, a health care surrogate designation, and a living will. A will and incapacity documents are complementary parts of a complete estate plan, not substitutes for one another.
What happens in Florida if I become incapacitated without a power of attorney?
Your family would likely have to petition the court for a guardianship under Chapter 744 of the Florida Statutes. That process involves an examining committee, court-appointed attorneys, a formal hearing, and ongoing court supervision with annual reports. It is slower, more public, and more expensive than acting under documents you signed in advance, and the court, not you, chooses your guardian.
Can my agent sell or refinance my Florida homestead under a power of attorney?
Only if the durable power of attorney specifically authorizes real property transactions, including the power to mortgage, convey, and lease. Because Florida homestead carries constitutional protections, title companies and lenders scrutinize these documents closely. A generic form often lacks the necessary language, so homeowners should have an attorney confirm the document expressly grants real estate authority.
Does Florida still allow springing powers of attorney?
No. Since the Florida Power of Attorney Act took effect in 2011, the state no longer permits new springing powers of attorney that take effect only upon a later finding of incapacity. A durable power of attorney signed today is effective immediately. Because of this, it is essential to name an agent you trust completely and to keep the original document in a secure place.
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