In New York, a Power of Attorney (POA) and a Health Care Proxy are two separate legal documents that do two completely different jobs: a POA lets someone you trust manage your money and property, while a Health Care Proxy lets someone make your medical decisions if you cannot speak for yourself. A financial Power of Attorney does not cover health care, and a Health Care Proxy does not cover banking, bills, or real estate. Most New Yorkers need both. At Morgan Legal Group, the service we provide is simple to describe: we sit down with you, figure out exactly who should hold which authority, draft both documents to match New York law, and walk you through signing them correctly so they actually work when the moment comes.
This article explains the difference, what each document covers, how New York law governs the financial POA, and what the experience of having us prepare these documents looks like for you.
What Each Document Actually Does
The cleanest way to understand these two instruments is to look at them side by side.
| Feature | Power of Attorney (Financial) | Health Care Proxy (Medical) |
|---|---|---|
| Governing law | NY General Obligations Law (GOL) §5-1513 | NY Public Health Law (the Health Care Proxy statute) |
| Covers | Banking, bills, real estate, investments, taxes, benefits | Medical treatment decisions, choosing doctors, accepting or refusing care |
| Who you name | An agent (sometimes called attorney-in-fact) | A health care agent |
| When it works | Durable by default — survives incapacity unless you say otherwise | Takes effect only when a physician determines you cannot make your own medical decisions |
| Signing rules | Notarized + two disinterested witnesses | Two witnesses (no notary required) |
The key takeaway: these are not interchangeable, and one cannot substitute for the other. Hospital staff will not accept a financial POA to authorize treatment, and a bank will not accept a Health Care Proxy to move money. This is exactly why we prepare them as a matched pair, so there are no gaps in your authority planning.
You can read more about the financial document on our Power of Attorney overview page, and about the medical document on our Health Care Proxy page.
The New York Financial Power of Attorney: What the Law Requires
New York’s financial POA is governed by GOL §5-1513, the Statutory Short Form Power of Attorney. Major amendments took effect June 13, 2021, and they changed several things that matter to you in practice.
Durable by Default
A New York POA is durable by default. That means it remains effective even if you later become incapacitated — unless the document expressly states otherwise. Durability is the whole point for most people: you want the document to keep working precisely when you can no longer act for yourself. Learn more on our Durable Power of Attorney page.
How It Must Be Executed
Under §5-1513, the form must be:
- Signed, initialed, and dated by you, the principal;
- Acknowledged before a notary — the same formality used for a real-property conveyance; and
- Witnessed by two disinterested witnesses. The notary may serve as one of the two witnesses. A witness may not be the named agent or anyone who is a permissible recipient of gifts under the document.
Execution is where do-it-yourself forms most often fail. A POA signed without the correct witnesses, or witnessed by the wrong people, can be rejected by a bank exactly when your family needs it most. Handling this correctly is a core part of what we do for you.
The Safe Harbor and Why Banks Cooperate More Now
Before 2021, the form had to match the statutory wording almost word for word, and banks routinely rejected POAs over trivial differences. The amendments replaced that with a “substantial conformity” standard: the document must substantially conform to the §5-1513 statutory wording, but exact wording is no longer required. Just as important, third parties who accept a conforming POA in good faith receive a statutory safe harbor from liability. The practical result: a properly drafted New York POA is now far more likely to be honored by banks and other institutions. Our Statutory Short Form POA page goes deeper on this.
Gifts Under the New Form
A common point of confusion involves gifting authority:
- Your agent may make gifts up to $5,000 aggregate per year without any special modification.
- For larger gifts, or any gift to the agent personally, you must include an express grant in the Modifications section of the form.
- The old separate Statutory Gifts Rider has been eliminated — gifting authority now lives directly in the Modifications section of the POA itself.
This matters for families doing Medicaid or estate planning, where larger transfers may be part of the strategy. We tailor the Modifications section to your goals rather than leaving it blank.
Durable, Springing, and the Health Care Proxy: Three Tools, Three Jobs
It helps to distinguish three instruments people often blur together:
- Durable POA — effective immediately and survives incapacity. This is the most common and most reliable choice for everyday use.
- Springing POA — effective only upon a stated future event, typically your incapacity. It sounds appealing, but it is harder to use in practice because the triggering event must be proven before the agent can act, which can cause delay at the worst possible time. Our Springing Power of Attorney page explains the trade-offs.
- Health Care Proxy — a separate document for medical decisions only. A financial POA does not cover health care, full stop.
For a complete walkthrough of the statute, see our New York POA Law Guide.
What We Handle For You: The Client Experience
People often imagine signing a POA is a quick errand. The drafting is the easy part; the value is in getting the details right so the documents perform under pressure. Here is what working with Morgan Legal Group looks like:
- Consultation. We learn your family, your assets, and your wishes — who you trust with money, who you trust with medical choices (often two different people), and what you want each of them empowered to do.
- Agent selection guidance. We help you name a primary agent and a successor, and we flag pitfalls — like accidentally disqualifying a witness or naming an agent who is also a gift recipient.
- Tailored drafting. We draft the §5-1513 financial POA, customize the Modifications section (including any gifting authority above $5,000), and prepare a matching Health Care Proxy so the two work together.
- Correct execution. We supervise signing — notary, two qualified witnesses, initials and dates in the right places — so nothing can be challenged later on a technicality.
- Delivery and guidance. You leave with originals, copies for your agents, and clear instructions on when and how each document is used, plus how to revoke or replace one if circumstances change. See our Revoking a Power of Attorney page for that process.
The goal is a finished set of documents your bank will honor and your hospital will accept — without you having to learn New York’s statutory mechanics yourself.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does a Power of Attorney let my agent make medical decisions?
No. A financial POA under GOL §5-1513 covers money and property only. Medical decisions require a separate Health Care Proxy. This is why we prepare both documents together.
Is a New York Power of Attorney automatically durable?
Yes. New York POAs are durable by default — they survive your incapacity unless the document expressly states otherwise. If you want the document to end upon incapacity, that has to be written in.
Can my agent give themselves gifts from my accounts?
Only within limits. An agent may make gifts up to $5,000 aggregate per year without special language. Larger gifts, or any gift to the agent personally, require an express grant in the Modifications section of the form.
Why do banks reject some Powers of Attorney?
Usually a defective signing or a form that does not substantially conform to §5-1513. Since the 2021 amendments, a conforming POA accepted in good faith carries a safe harbor for the institution, which is why properly drafted documents are now more readily honored.
Get Both Documents Done Right
If you want a New York Power of Attorney and a Health Care Proxy prepared and executed correctly — as a coordinated pair that your bank and your doctors will actually accept — we can handle the entire process for you. Schedule a consultation with Russel Morgan, Esq. of Morgan Legal Group.
Book your 30-minute consultation →
Further reading from Morgan Legal Group: how a durable power of attorney works.