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Wills
We prepare wills that address estate trustees, beneficiaries, rural property, cottages, family businesses, and specific gifts.
Prince Edward County Wills And Power Of Attorney Lawyer
Goldstone Law PC helps Prince Edward County clients prepare wills, continuing powers of attorney for property, personal care POAs, and updates involving rural property, cottages, family businesses, homes, and trusted decision-makers.
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How We Help
We help clients document estate wishes, appoint trusted people, plan for incapacity, and address property or family business concerns.
Prince Edward County wills and powers of attorney often involve property with financial and personal meaning. Clear documents can help families understand how land, cottages, businesses, care choices, and estate responsibilities should be handled.
Goldstone Law PC helps clients prepare practical wills and POAs that give trusted people clear direction.
For Prince Edward County clients, planning may involve a family home, farm, cottage, waterfront property, rental property, business interests, vehicles, insurance, and relatives who care deeply about the same assets. A will can explain who should administer the estate and what should happen to property after death. Powers of attorney can give trusted people authority during lifetime if property, banking, bills, housing, or care decisions need attention.
We help clients think carefully about who should act. An executor may need to manage property, communicate with beneficiaries, and work with advisors. A property attorney may need to handle accounts, insurance, repairs, or sale decisions. A personal care attorney should understand the client’s values and be able to speak with care providers.
Our work includes preparing wills, continuing powers of attorney for property, powers of attorney for personal care, trust wording where appropriate, and updates to older documents. We also help clients review beneficiary designations, joint ownership, insurance, document storage, and future update triggers. The goal is a Prince Edward County plan that respects important property while giving loved ones practical guidance.
We also help clients separate family hopes from instructions that need legal clarity. A property may feel shared emotionally even when ownership is not shared legally. Clear documents can make the difference between a plan that family members understand and one that leaves them guessing.
We also talk about what should happen if keeping property is no longer realistic. Sale authority, carrying costs, repairs, insurance, and family communication should be considered before loved ones are forced to decide under pressure.
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We prepare wills that address estate trustees, beneficiaries, rural property, cottages, family businesses, and specific gifts.
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We prepare continuing POAs for banking, land, business interests, real estate, bills, and financial decisions.
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We prepare personal care POAs for health, housing, care, and support decisions.
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We update documents after property transfers, business changes, family changes, executor changes, or succession decisions.
What To Watch For
Land, cottages, rental use, carrying costs, taxes, and future sale or transfer plans should be reviewed.
Shares, operating assets, signing authority, debts, and succession expectations may need careful planning.
When one beneficiary uses or operates property more than others, instructions should be especially clear.
How It Works
We review family, property, and business details, discuss appointments, prepare documents, and explain signing and storage.
Step 1
We discuss family, land, cottages, business interests, accounts, debts, existing documents, and concerns.
Step 2
We help consider estate trustees, attorneys, backups, beneficiaries, and guardianship wishes.
Step 3
We draft wills and POAs that reflect your instructions.
Step 4
We explain signing requirements, storage, copies, and when documents should be updated.
We prepare estate and incapacity planning documents for clients with homes, rural property, cottages, business interests, and family decision-making concerns.
Prince Edward County clients may need planning that accounts for homes, farms, cottages, investment property, small businesses, adult children, and loved ones with strong expectations about family property. We help prepare documents that give clearer direction.
Where land, cottages, or family businesses are involved, the will and powers of attorney should be practical and specific. We help clients consider authority, costs, future sale decisions, and the people best suited to act.
Property With Meaning
Clear documents can reduce conflict and make it easier for trusted people to manage estate, financial, and care responsibilities.
Common Questions
Yes. Ownership, taxes, carrying costs, use, and family expectations should be reviewed before drafting.
Yes. Business interests, shares, debts, signing authority, and succession goals should be considered.
Yes. You can appoint different people for property and personal care decisions.
Yes. Insurance, repairs, taxes, family use, and carrying costs should be considered before instructions are finalized.
Yes. A property POA can allow a trusted person to manage financial and property matters during incapacity.
That depends on the family. We can discuss what information may help reduce confusion while respecting privacy.
Bring ownership records, income and expense notes, insurance details, booking or lease information, and future-use wishes.
Yes. A will can address use, expenses, sale, transfer, trustee authority, and beneficiary fairness.
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.