Episode Summary: When life changes, moving, marriage, or shifting relationships, you may want to change who can make decisions for you. In this episode of Thoughtful Planning, Honey and Santiago explain how to revoke a Medical Power of Attorney or a Texas Statutory Durable Power of Attorney (Financial POA). They cover what revocation means, how the eFileTexas guided tool works, why notarizing helps, and how to make sure the revocation is actually honored. Essential Question: If you signed a Medical Power of Attorney or a Statutory Durable Power of Attorney and you want to revoke it, what steps help make sure your revocation is clear and actually honored? Episode Highlights: [00:00] When life changes and you want to update your decision-maker [00:44] Today’s topic: revoking medical POA or financial POA in Texas [01:07] Disclaimer and Texas-based context [02:15] Today’s essential question [02:40] What revoking a POA means, canceling your agent’s authority [03:26] Written revocation is not always required, but often recommended [03:42] Why notarizing helps with banks and businesses [04:05] Using the free eFileTexas revocation tool [04:30] What info the interview asks for [05:49] Sign in front of a notary and keep your signed copy [06:04] The step people miss: deliver copies and update records [06:20] Who to notify for Financial POA revocation [07:27] Who to notify for Medical POA revocation [08:28] Before you revoke, consider a replacement agent [09:01] Medical POA vs HIPAA authorization, separate documents [10:12] Final recap: revoke it, then make sure the right people know Takeaways: • Revoking a POA cancels your agent’s authority, but it only protects you if the right people and institutions are aware it has changed. • A written revocation creates a clearer paper trail, and notarizing it can help institutions take it seriously. • After revocation, give copies to your former agent and any places that relied on the old document. • For medical decisions, make sure your doctor and healthcare providers update what they have on file. • HIPAA authorization is separate from a Medical Power of Attorney, and revoking generally must be done in writing. Action Steps: Decide whether you are revoking your Medical POA, Financial POA, or both. Use the eFileTexas guided interview or a written revocation for a clear paper trail. Sign the revocation in front of a notary public. Deliver copies to your former agent and any institutions or providers that relied on the old document. Keep a list of who received copies and when. If needed, complete new documents to name a replacement agent. Resources (If a link breaks, search by name): TexasLawHelp.org Powers of Attorney Fact Sheet https://texaslawhelp.org/article/powers-of-attorney-fact-sheet TexasLawHelp.org Medical Power of Attorney https://texaslawhelp.org/article/medical-power-of-attorney eFileTexas Guided Interview https://texas.tylertech.cloud/SRL/SRL/ExecuteInterview HHS HIPAA FAQ: Can an individual revoke an authorization? https://www.hhs.gov/hipaa/for-professionals/faq/474/can-an-individual-revoke-his-or-her-authorization/index.html Episode 61 (YouTube): HIPAA & Your Teen https://youtu.be/UYZsMcGL1JM Next Episode: Continuing our foundational planning documents series Questions? info@legacytoolkit.com Disclaimer: We are not attorneys, financial advisors, or medical professionals. This content is for educational purposes only. Laws vary by state and can change. Please consult an estate planning attorney for legal guidance. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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