Guide to Signing, Registering & Using your LPA

How do you sign, register and use a Lasting Power of Attorney? This guide explains the correct signing order, how registration works and when an LPA can be used, helping ensure your LPA is ready and effective when needed.

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All Guide to Signing, Registering & Using your LPA questions

A Lasting Power of Attorney must be signed in a specific order to be legally valid.

The Donor signs first, followed by the certificate provider. The Attorneys and any Replacement Attorneys then sign their sections.

Each signature must be correctly dated. If the order or dates are wrong, the Office of the Public Guardian will reject the application.

An LPA must be registered with the Office of the Public Guardian before it can be used.

Registration involves submitting the completed LPA form, paying the registration fee and allowing time for the Office of the Public Guardian to review the application.

Registration can take 8-10 weeks. It is often best to register the LPA as soon as it has been signed to avoid delays when it is needed.

Once registered, a Lasting Power of Attorney can be used when needed.

A Property and Financial Affairs LPA can be used as soon as it is registered, with the Donor’s permission, or if the Donor lacks capacity.

A Health and Welfare LPA can only be used if the Donor lacks mental capacity to make the relevant decision.

Using an LPA means Attorneys must act in the Donor’s best interests and follow the Mental Capacity Act.

Attorneys should keep records of decisions, consult others where appropriate, and follow any Preferences or Instructions set out in the LPA.

Errors in signing or registration are one of the most common reasons an LPA is delayed or rejected.

Correct completion helps ensure the LPA is accepted by the Office of the Public Guardian and trusted by banks, care providers and medical professionals.

Delays usually happen because of small but critical errors in the application. Common causes include missing signatures, incorrect dates, signing sections in the wrong order or witnesses not completing their details correctly.

The Office of the Public Guardian must return any LPA that does not meet legal requirements. This can add weeks or months to the registration process. Careful checking before submission significantly reduces the risk of delay.

The Office of the Public Guardian checks that the LPA follows the law and protects the donor.

This includes confirming that all required sections are completed, signatures are valid and correctly ordered, dates make sense, witnesses are eligible and the certificate provider has properly confirmed the donor’s understanding and lack of pressure.

They also review the document for safeguarding concerns or unclear instructions that could create legal risk.

If signatures are completed in the wrong order, the LPA will usually be rejected.

The donor must sign first, followed by the certificate provider, and then the attorneys and witnesses. If this sequence is broken, the Office of the Public Guardian cannot register the LPA, even if all parties intended to sign correctly.

In most cases, the entire document must be completed again.

If a witness makes an error such as missing a signature, using the wrong date or being ineligible to act as a witness, the LPA may be rejected.

Some minor errors can be corrected if identified early, but many witness mistakes cannot be fixed once the document has been sent to the Office of the Public Guardian. This is why careful checking before submission is essential.

Safeguarding concerns can be raised by the Office of the Public Guardian if something in the LPA suggests pressure, coercion or risk to the donor.

Concerns may also be raised by people notified during the registration process. If an objection is made, the registration may be paused while the issue is reviewed.

The Court of Protection has the authority to intervene at any time if there are concerns about how an LPA is being made or used.

It can give directions, remove attorneys, cancel an LPA, or make decisions on behalf of the donor if necessary. Even with a registered LPA, the Court of Protection remains the ultimate safeguard.

During an investigation, the Office of the Public Guardian gathers information to assess whether the donor is being protected and whether the attorney is acting lawfully.

This may involve requesting documents, contacting attorneys, speaking to professionals or referring the matter to the Court of Protection. Investigations are designed to protect donors, not to punish attorneys acting properly.

A solicitor can’t override a valid Lasting Power of Attorney on their own.

Attorneys appointed under an LPA have legal authority to make decisions within the scope of the document. A solicitor can advise, raise concerns or apply to the Court of Protection if there are safeguarding issues, but they cannot replace or override an attorney unless the court orders it.

Yes, a Lasting Power of Attorney can be challenged after it has been registered.

Challenges usually relate to concerns about mental capacity at the time it was made, pressure or abuse, or attorneys not acting in the donor’s best interests. Concerns can be raised with the Office of the Public Guardian, which has powers to investigate and, if necessary, involve the Court of Protection.

Care homes must usually respect decisions made by a valid attorney, but there are limits.

Attorneys must act within the powers granted by the LPA and in the donor’s best interests. Care homes can question or escalate decisions if they believe a decision is unsafe, unlawful, or outside the attorney’s authority. Serious concerns may be referred to safeguarding teams or the Court of Protection.

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