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Old 03-23-2005, 09:13 AM
mjrube94 mjrube94 is offline
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Default Re: Durable Power of Attorney.

My husband and I did the whole estate planning thing (wills, health care proxy, power of attorney) right before our first child was born. We should have done it sooner. Seeing cases like Terri Schiavo reminds everyone that no matter what your family situation, you never know what's going to happen and it's better to have one than not. No winners there!

Anyway, it can be costly to get the paperwork done (but definitely worth it imo). Two ways to make it less costly: Some companies offer legal insurance during their open enrollment period. My husband's did, and it cost about $225 for one year. If you go to one of the lawyers in their network, you only pay a copay for each of the documents. We signed up for the insurance when we planned to do our wills, so between the $225 and the copays, I think we got all the documents for less than $400.

A second way to make it cheaper is to do it yourself. I know there is software called WillMaker from Nolo press. It guides you step-by-step through the process, is much less expensive, and completely legal. Assuming you don't have anything really complicated going on in your financial life, this makes a lot of sense.
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