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Wills
We prepare Sarnia wills that appoint estate trustees, name beneficiaries, address family property, and set out clear instructions.
Sarnia Wills And Power Of Attorney Lawyer
Goldstone Law PC helps Sarnia individuals, couples, parents, homeowners, retirees, and business owners prepare wills, continuing powers of attorney for property, personal care POAs, and updated estate documents.
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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 estate wishes, appoint trusted people, plan for incapacity, and update documents as family, property, and retirement needs change.
Sarnia wills and powers of attorney help clients prepare for the decisions loved ones may eventually need to make. Clear documents can reduce uncertainty around retirement, property, business interests, care choices, and estate responsibilities.
Goldstone Law PC helps clients prepare practical wills and POAs with clear authority and written direction.
For Sarnia clients, planning may involve a family home, retirement savings, pensions, insurance, business interests, adult children, a spouse, or trusted people who live outside the area. A will can name the estate trustee, identify beneficiaries, and set out instructions for property. Powers of attorney can help during lifetime if someone needs support with banking, bills, investments, housing, or care decisions.
We help clients choose people who can manage the responsibility. An executor may need to deal with records, beneficiaries, advisors, tax information, and property. A property attorney should be reliable with finances and practical decisions. A personal care attorney should understand health, housing, and support wishes.
Our work includes wills, continuing powers of attorney for property, powers of attorney for personal care, updates to existing documents, and guidance on signing and storage. We also help clients review beneficiary designations, registered accounts, insurance, joint ownership, and document storage. The goal is a Sarnia plan that gives loved ones clear authority before pressure appears.
We also explain how to keep the plan current. Retirement, property changes, a new relationship, separation, business changes, death of a decision-maker, or changing family trust can all affect the documents. Reviewing the plan helps Sarnia clients keep authority and instructions aligned.
We also help clients think about what loved ones will need first if they must act. Account information, insurance details, property records, advisor contacts, and document storage notes can make a difficult situation easier to manage.
That organization supports the legal authority in the documents.
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We prepare Sarnia wills that appoint estate trustees, name beneficiaries, address family property, and set out clear instructions.
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We prepare continuing powers of attorney for property for banking, investments, 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 retirement, property changes, children, marriage, separation, business changes, or executor changes.
What To Watch For
Pensions, registered accounts, adult children, health concerns, and trusted helpers should be considered.
Real estate ownership, mortgages, joint title, insurance, and future sale plans can affect the estate plan.
Shares, benefits, insurance, pensions, and succession plans may need review for some clients.
How It Works
We review your family and asset picture, discuss appointments, prepare documents, and explain signing and storage.
Step 1
We review family, property, accounts, debts, business interests, 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 reflect your instructions.
Step 4
We explain signing requirements, storage, copies, and when to update.
We prepare estate and incapacity planning documents that help clients name trusted people and record clear instructions for property, care, and estate decisions.
Sarnia clients may be planning around retirement accounts, a family home, business interests, adult children, insurance, or loved ones who may need to help with care or property. We help prepare documents that make those decisions clearer.
A will and power of attorney package can help trusted people communicate with banks, advisors, care providers, and beneficiaries with fewer questions. We focus on reliable appointments and practical instructions.
Prepared Before Pressure
A thoughtful document package helps trusted people understand their authority and your wishes.
Common Questions
Yes. Registered accounts, pensions, beneficiary designations, insurance, and joint assets should be reviewed.
Yes. You can appoint one person for property matters and another for personal care decisions.
Every few years, and after major life events such as marriage, separation, children, property changes, or death of a decision-maker.
Yes. Shares, operating interests, signing authority, insurance, and succession plans should be reviewed.
Yes. A property POA can help a trusted person manage accounts, bills, and property decisions during incapacity.
Sometimes, but shared appointments should be considered carefully because cooperation and availability matter.
Mention beneficiaries, property, accounts, advisors, or decision-makers outside Canada so those details can be considered.
Yes. Beneficiary designations should be checked so they support the overall plan.
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.