The call I get is often from an adult child, usually on a Tuesday morning. Their father, living on his own in Brooklyn, has had a fall. Or maybe their mother’s memory is not what it was. Suddenly, they are faced with a stack of bills, a concerned doctor, and a will from 1998 that is completely silent on who has the authority to manage their parent’s affairs right now. The will only speaks about what happens after death. It does nothing for the living.
This is the moment a family discovers the difference between estate planning and elder law. Estate planning is about the orderly transfer of assets at death. Elder law is about protecting your dignity, your autonomy, and your assets during your lifetime. It’s about planning for the contingencies of a long life.
Authority Is Not Automatic
A common misconception is that a spouse or an adult child can automatically step in to make financial or medical decisions for a loved one who becomes incapacitated. This is simply not true. Without the right documents in place, no one has the authority to speak to a bank, pay a bill from a parent’s account, or direct a doctor on a course of treatment. The will is irrelevant; it has no power until its maker has passed away and the will is admitted to probate in Surrogate’s Court.
The foundational documents of elder law are the Durable Power of Attorney and the Health Care Proxy. These instruments grant a trusted agent the authority to act on your behalf when you cannot. The Power of Attorney addresses financial matters, while the Health Care Proxy covers medical decisions. Without them, your family’s only recourse is to petition a court to have you declared incapacitated and appoint a guardian. This is a public, costly, and often emotionally draining process we work deliberately to help our clients avoid.
The Financial Realities of Long-Term Care
A lifetime of prudent saving can be depleted with stunning speed by the costs of long-term care. Whether it’s in-home assistance or a skilled nursing facility, the expense can easily exceed a family’s resources. This is where deliberate planning becomes a critical act of stewardship for the next generation.
Many clients believe they must spend down their entire life savings before Medicaid will assist with long-term care costs. While there are strict income and asset limits, the law provides mechanisms for protecting a significant portion of a family’s assets, particularly for a healthy spouse who remains at home. This is not about hiding money; it is about understanding the rules and restructuring assets in a lawful and prudent way. This often involves creating specific types of trusts and making strategic transfers. However, these actions are time-sensitive. New York has a five-year “look-back” period for most asset transfers, meaning any gifts or transfers made within five years of a Medicaid application can result in a penalty period of ineligibility—a fact that makes advance planning essential.
When a Guardianship Is the Only Option
Sometimes, we meet a family after a crisis has already struck. A parent has dementia or suffered a stroke, and no Power of Attorney or Health Care Proxy exists. In these situations, the family must commence a legal proceeding to have a guardian appointed.
In New York, this is governed by Article 81 of the Mental Hygiene Law. It is a formal court case where a judge must be convinced that an individual is incapacitated and requires a guardian to manage their personal or financial affairs. The court—not the family—decides who is appointed, and that guardian has a fiduciary duty to report back to the court regularly. While necessary in some cases, a guardianship represents a profound loss of autonomy for the individual. It is the option of last resort, invoked only when foresight and planning were absent. Our work is to ensure our clients never need it.
Planning for your later years is about more than just a will. It is an intentional process of putting the right legal tools in place to protect your choices, your assets, and your family from uncertainty. It’s about ensuring your final chapters are written on your own terms.
If you are the custodian of your parents’ estate documents, a good first step is to review them for a Health Care Proxy and a Durable Power of Attorney. If you cannot locate these documents or find they are more than a decade old, schedule a conversation with our firm to assess what contingencies may be unaddressed.



