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Wills
We prepare Shelburne wills that appoint estate trustees, name beneficiaries, address property, and set out clear estate instructions.
Shelburne Wills And Power Of Attorney Lawyer
Goldstone Law PC helps Shelburne individuals, couples, parents, homeowners, rural property owners, 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, choose trusted decision-makers, address property and family concerns, and prepare for incapacity with clear authority.
Shelburne wills and powers of attorney often need to address homes, rural property, young families, retirement savings, business interests, aging parents, and future care decisions. A will names the person who should administer the estate, identifies beneficiaries, and explains how property should be distributed. Powers of attorney name trusted people to act during lifetime if support is needed with banking, investments, property, health care, housing, or personal decisions.
Goldstone Law PC helps Shelburne clients prepare planning documents that are practical for their family and property circumstances. Some clients are planning after buying a home, getting married, having children, or building savings. Others may need to consider rural land, a family business, adult children, a blended family, aging parents, or beneficiaries who live elsewhere.
We begin by reviewing the full picture. Homes, land, mortgages, insurance, bank accounts, registered accounts, investments, debts, business records, beneficiary designations, and family obligations can all affect the plan. The will should coordinate with assets that pass through the estate and assets that may pass directly to named beneficiaries. Powers of attorney should give trusted people authority that is useful for banks, care providers, property contacts, and family members.
For Shelburne families, planning for children and property can be especially important. Parents may want guardian wishes documented and funds held responsibly for children. Property owners may want family members to understand expenses, insurance, maintenance, and sale decisions. Clear records reduce stress for the people appointed.
Our work includes wills, continuing powers of attorney for property, powers of attorney for personal care, updates to older documents, signing guidance, and storage guidance. We also help clients organize supporting records so trusted people have a practical starting point.
Those records may include property papers, account information, insurance contacts, business details, school or child-related notes, advisor names, and storage instructions for later.
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We prepare Shelburne wills that appoint estate trustees, name beneficiaries, address property, and set out clear estate instructions.
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We prepare continuing powers of attorney for banking, homes, rural property, investments, debts, and financial decisions.
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We prepare personal care powers of attorney for health, housing, care support, medical communication, and personal decisions.
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We update documents after property changes, marriage, separation, retirement, children, executor changes, or business changes.
What To Watch For
Shelburne planning may involve houses, rural lots, farms, outbuildings, mortgages, insurance, savings, and family-owned assets.
Parents may need guardian wishes, trust wording, and clear appointments for property and care decisions.
Powers of attorney can help trusted people manage accounts, care, housing, and property decisions if support is needed.
How It Works
We review family, property, investment, and business details, discuss appointments, prepare documents, and explain signing and storage.
Step 1
We discuss family, property, accounts, debts, insurance, business interests, existing documents, and planning goals.
Step 2
We help consider estate trustees, attorneys, alternates, guardian wishes, and beneficiary instructions.
Step 3
We prepare wills and powers of attorney tailored to 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, savings, children, business interests, and trusted decision-makers.
Shelburne clients may need documents that address homes, rural property, savings, minor children, adult children, blended family concerns, aging parents, and business interests.
We help clients prepare wills and powers of attorney that are practical for loved ones, banks, care providers, property contacts, and the people appointed to act.
Clear Instructions
Clear documents can help trusted people handle homes, land, accounts, children, care decisions, and estate responsibilities.
Common Questions
Yes. Parents can include guardianship wishes and trust wording for minor children.
Yes. Ownership, mortgages, insurance, tax, access, and sale or transfer instructions should be reviewed.
Yes. A property POA can authorize a trusted person to manage accounts, bills, and property decisions.
Often yes. Alternates are helpful if the first person named cannot act.
Yes. Marriage, separation, children, death, and changed relationships can affect the plan.
Yes. Business ownership, signing authority, debts, and succession goals can affect the documents.
Property details, account lists, insurance, debts, business records, existing documents, and advisor contacts are useful.
We prepare wills and POAs, review family and property concerns, explain appointments, and guide signing and storage.
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.