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PENNSYLVANIA-POWER-OF-ATTORNEY

Fill Out A Pennsylvania Power of Attorney Online in 2026

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This website is not affiliated with any government agency or tax authority. Form last updated: 05/2026. Please verify this is the current version before use

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What is a Pennsylvania Power of Attorney?

A Pennsylvania Durable Power of Attorney is a legal document that grants another person — called the agent or attorney-in-fact — broad authority to manage financial, legal, and property matters on behalf of the principal in Pennsylvania. Unlike a standard power of attorney, a durable power of attorney remains valid even if the principal becomes mentally incapacitated or unable to manage their own affairs. The word "durable" specifically refers to this continued effectiveness through incapacity.

In Pennsylvania, a durable power of attorney, governed by 20 Pa. C.S. § 5601, must be signed by the principal in the presence of two adult witnesses and notarized to be legally valid. The document typically takes effect immediately upon execution unless it specifies a future date or a triggering event. It remains in force until the principal revokes it in writing, the principal passes away, or a court terminates it.

Pennsylvania law (20 Pa. C.S. § 5601) requires a specific "Notice to Principal" statement to appear prominently before the principal's signature line. The agent must also sign a separate "Acknowledgment by Agent" section. Both the principal's signature and the acknowledgment must be witnessed by 2 witnesses and notarized.

What is a Pennsylvania Power of Attorney used for?

A Pennsylvania Durable Power of Attorney is used to give a trusted person legal authority to manage your financial and property affairs — and to ensure those decisions can continue seamlessly if you become unable to act for yourself. Specifically, it is used to:

  • Manage bank accounts, investments, and other financial assets while the principal is incapacitated
  • Pay bills, mortgage payments, insurance premiums, and everyday expenses on the principal's behalf
  • Handle real estate transactions — buying, selling, leasing, or mortgaging property
  • File federal and state tax returns and manage tax-related matters
  • Operate or manage a business owned by the principal
  • Apply for government benefits such as Social Security, Medicare, or Medicaid
  • Manage retirement accounts and collect distributions
  • Make legal and financial decisions to avoid the need for court-appointed guardianship

How to fill out a Pennsylvania Power of Attorney

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To fill out a Pennsylvania Durable Power of Attorney, follow these steps:

  1. 1

    Download or open a Pennsylvania Durable Power of Attorney form (20 Pa. C.S. § 5601).

  2. 2

    The form must include a "Notice to Principal" section — this must appear prominently before the principal's signature and must be acknowledged by the principal.

  3. 3

    Enter the principal's full legal name and address.

  4. 4

    Name your agent and any successor agents with their full legal names and contact information.

  5. 5

    Specify the financial powers you are granting (banking, real estate, tax, etc.).

  6. 6

    Sign the document in the presence of two adult witnesses AND a notary public.

  7. 7

    Both witnesses sign the document (the agent cannot be a witness).

  8. 8

    The notary completes the acknowledgment.

  9. 9

    The agent must sign the "Agent's Acknowledgment" section confirming they understand their duties.

  10. 10

    Give a copy to your agent and keep the original in a secure place.

What should a Pennsylvania Power of Attorney include?

A Pennsylvania Durable Power of Attorney should include the following:

  • Notice to Principal — a specific statutory warning that must appear before the signature line
  • Principal's full legal name and address
  • Agent's full legal name and address; any successor agents
  • List of specific powers granted to the agent
  • Durability clause (must be explicitly stated)
  • Signatures of the principal, two witnesses, and notary public
  • Agent's signed Acknowledgment confirming they understand their fiduciary duties

Who needs to sign a Pennsylvania Power of Attorney?

A Pennsylvania Durable Power of Attorney must be signed by:

  • Principal (the person granting the powers) — must sign voluntarily and with mental capacity
  • Two adult witnesses — both must be present while the principal signs and must sign the document
  • Notary public — must acknowledge the principal's signature

The agent cannot serve as a witness. Some states also restrict family members or those who would benefit from the POA from serving as witnesses.

Does a Pennsylvania Power of Attorney need to be notarized?

Yes. Pennsylvania law (20 Pa. C.S. § 5601) requires both notarization AND two adult witnesses to create a valid durable power of attorney. All three — the two witnesses and the notary — must be present when the principal signs.

The agent named in the document cannot serve as a witness. Check Pennsylvania's specific restrictions on who else may be disqualified (such as family members or those who would benefit from the POA). A document without all required signatures is not legally valid.

How long is a Pennsylvania Power of Attorney valid?

A Pennsylvania Durable Power of Attorney does not have an automatic expiration date. Once properly executed, it remains valid indefinitely — through the principal's incapacity (that is the defining characteristic of a "durable" document).

The Pennsylvania Durable Power of Attorney terminates automatically when:

  • The principal revokes it in writing and delivers the revocation to the agent
  • The principal passes away (a POA is not a substitute for a will and does not survive death)
  • A court declares the POA invalid or terminates it
  • The document itself specifies a termination date or condition

To revoke a Pennsylvania Durable Power of Attorney, the principal must be mentally competent, create a written revocation document, and notify the agent — and ideally notify any institutions (banks, brokers) where the agent has been acting.

Where can I get a Pennsylvania Power of Attorney form?

A free Pennsylvania Durable Power of Attorney form is available from several sources:

  • The Pennsylvania state legislature or courts website — many states publish the official statutory form or a recommended template at no cost
  • State bar association websites and legal aid organizations
  • Estate planning attorneys who practice in Pennsylvania

You can also use PDF Guru to fill out your Pennsylvania Durable Power of Attorney online. Our editor lets you complete all required fields, add your electronic signature, and download the finished document as a PDF — ready to bring to your notarization appointment.

How to sign a Pennsylvania Power of Attorney online

PDF Guru makes it easy to prepare your Pennsylvania Durable Power of Attorney online. Open the form in our editor and complete all required fields — the principal's information, agent details, powers granted, and the durable clause. Use the text tool to fill in all sections without printing or scanning.

When the form is complete, click the Sign tool in the editor. You can draw your signature with a mouse or trackpad, type your name, or upload a saved signature image. Once your electronic signature is placed, click Done to download the completed PDF to your device.

Pennsylvania requires in-person notarization and two witnesses. Use PDF Guru to prepare your form (including the Notice to Principal and Agent Acknowledgment sections), then print and complete the required signatures in person.

Frequently asked questions

  • What is the Notice to Principal on a Pennsylvania power of attorney and where does it appear?

    Pennsylvania law (20 Pa. C.S. § 5601.1) requires that every power of attorney include a specific statutory "Notice to Principal" — a bold-text warning that must appear immediately before the principal's signature line. The Notice informs the principal of the significant authority they are granting and the potential for abuse. The principal must read and acknowledge this notice before signing. A Pennsylvania POA executed without this required Notice is invalid under state law.

  • Who cannot serve as a witness on a Pennsylvania durable power of attorney?

    Under 20 Pa. C.S. § 5601(b)(3), the following are disqualified as witnesses: the agent named in the document; a person who will share in the principal's estate (by will or intestacy); a person who signed the document at the principal's direction; anyone who would benefit directly from the agent's authority. Both witnesses must be adults. The agent also must sign a separate Acknowledgment section — but the agent is not a witness.

  • Can a Pennsylvania agent make gifts from the principal's assets using the durable power of attorney?

    Only if the power is expressly granted. Under 20 Pa. C.S. § 5601.3, an agent cannot make gifts unless the power of attorney explicitly authorizes this — including gifts to the agent themselves. Self-dealing gift authority must be stated with particular specificity. Agents who make unauthorized gifts can face civil liability for breach of fiduciary duty and potential criminal charges for financial exploitation under Pennsylvania law.

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Fill Out A Pennsylvania Power of Attorney Online in 2026