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Wills
We prepare Orillia wills that appoint estate trustees, name beneficiaries, address children, and set out property instructions.
Orillia Wills And Power Of Attorney Lawyer
Goldstone Law PC helps Orillia clients prepare wills, continuing powers of attorney for property, personal care POAs, and updated documents involving homes, cottages, family assets, retirement, and trusted decision-makers.
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A short intake is often the fastest way for our team to point you in the right direction and follow up with clear next steps.
How We Help
We help clients document wishes, name trusted people, plan for incapacity, and keep estate documents current as property and family responsibilities change.
Orillia wills and powers of attorney help clients prepare for family, property, and care decisions before urgency arrives. Clear documents are especially useful when homes, cottages, retirement plans, and loved ones all need to be considered together.
Goldstone Law PC helps clients prepare practical wills and POAs that give trusted people clear authority and direction.
For Orillia clients, planning may involve a home, cottage, lake-area property, retirement accounts, insurance, adult children, young children, or parents who need support. A will can name an estate trustee, identify beneficiaries, and set out instructions for property. Powers of attorney can give trusted people authority during lifetime if banking, bills, housing, or care decisions need attention.
We help clients choose people who can handle the responsibility. An executor should be organized and able to communicate with family, advisors, and beneficiaries. A property attorney should be reliable with money and records. A personal care attorney should understand health, housing, and support wishes. Backup choices are also important if family members travel, live away, or have changing responsibilities.
Our work includes preparing wills, continuing powers of attorney for property, powers of attorney for personal care, child-focused wording where needed, and updates to older documents. We also help clients review beneficiary designations, joint ownership, insurance, and document storage. The goal is an Orillia plan that feels clear, practical, and easier for loved ones to follow.
We also explain when the documents should be revisited. A new home, retirement, separation, new child, death of a decision-maker, cottage change, or shift in family trust can all make an update important. Regular review helps Orillia clients keep the plan aligned with real life.
We also encourage clients to think about how family members will actually use the documents. Clear storage, reliable backups, and practical notes about property, accounts, and advisors can make the plan much easier to follow.
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We prepare Orillia wills that appoint estate trustees, name beneficiaries, address children, and set out property instructions.
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We prepare continuing POAs for banking, real estate, cottage matters, investments, bills, and financial decisions.
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We prepare personal care POAs for health, care, housing, and support decisions.
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We update wills and POAs after property purchases, retirement, family changes, or executor changes.
What To Watch For
Use, ownership, carrying costs, sale plans, and family expectations should be reviewed carefully.
Pensions, registered accounts, health concerns, and trusted helpers should be reflected in the plan.
Clear appointments help spouses, adult children, parents, and caregivers understand who has authority.
How It Works
We review your family and asset picture, discuss appointments, prepare documents, and guide signing and storage.
Step 1
We discuss family, property, accounts, debts, retirement concerns, existing documents, and priorities.
Step 2
We help consider estate trustees, attorneys, backups, beneficiaries, and guardianship wishes.
Step 3
We draft wills and POAs that match your instructions.
Step 4
We explain the documents, signing steps, storage, and when to update.
We prepare estate and incapacity planning documents that help clients name trusted people and record clear property, care, and family wishes.
Orillia clients may be planning around a home, cottage, retirement, children, adult children, or an aging parent. We help prepare documents that make authority and wishes clearer for the people who may one day need to act.
A will and power of attorney package can help reduce confusion if property or care decisions become urgent. We focus on plain wording, practical appointments, and instructions that fit the client's family and property picture.
Clear Family Direction
The right documents can reduce confusion around homes, cottages, accounts, health decisions, and executor responsibilities.
Common Questions
Yes. Cottage planning should consider ownership, costs, taxes, sale decisions, and family expectations.
Yes. They are lifetime documents that allow trusted people to act for property or care decisions if needed.
Often, yes. Retirement can change assets, income, property plans, and who is best able to act.
Yes. Cottage ownership, family use, expenses, repairs, and future sale or transfer plans should be reviewed.
Spouses can plan together, but each person needs separate instructions and separate documents.
Yes. Many clients choose different people depending on judgment, availability, and the type of decision involved.
Bring ownership records, insurance details, expense notes, access instructions, and wishes about use, sale, or transfer.
Yes. Powers of attorney apply during lifetime and can help trusted people manage property or care decisions if needed.
Ontario Coverage
Goldstone Law PC supports clients across Ontario, including:
Next Step
Legal support is now more accessible and straightforward than ever. Our team guides you through every step with clarity, confidence, and care.