(England & Wales)
Create your general power of attorney with attorney appointments, scope of authority, financial powers, and property management provisions.
Professionally drafted — structured following Powers of Attorney Act 1971 requirements for England and Wales.
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A General Power of Attorney is used whenever someone needs to authorise another person to act on their behalf — typically in financial or property matters — while the donor still has full mental capacity.
A General Power of Attorney is a legal deed that authorises your chosen attorney to manage your financial and property matters, executed under the Powers of Attorney Act 1971 for England and Wales.
A General Power of Attorney (GPA) is a legal document — executed as a deed — that authorises another person (your "attorney") to act on your behalf in financial and property matters. It is structured following Section 10 of the Powers of Attorney Act 1971 (England and Wales).
A General Power of Attorney is suitable for short-term, specific situations where the donor has full capacity and a defined need — such as a property transaction while abroad, or a period of illness. It automatically ends if the donor loses mental capacity.
A Lasting Power of Attorney (LPA) must be made in a prescribed form, registered with the Office of the Public Guardian (OPG), and can be used even if the donor loses capacity. If you want long-term or future protection, an LPA is the appropriate document.
Third parties including banks, solicitors and HM Land Registry require a properly executed deed. Informal arrangements will not be accepted and may cause delays or failure in property transactions.
A properly drafted £10 GPA helps reduce delays, refusals, and disputes — giving your attorney clear authority that institutions will accept.
Our template covers donor and attorney details, joint or individual attorney options, Section 10 authority clauses, limited authority options, revocation provisions, and proper deed execution with witness blocks.
Professionally drafted following the Powers of Attorney Act 1971 and LP(MP)A 1989.
Note: This document is a General Power of Attorney and does not function as a Lasting Power of Attorney (LPA). LPAs must be registered with the Office of the Public Guardian and are a separate type of document.
Common errors include using a GPA after capacity is lost, naming the attorney as witness, failing to execute as a deed, confusing GPA with LPA, and forgetting the 12-month property transaction rule.
Our template guides you through these requirements with clear instructions and professionally drafted clauses.
Execute as a deed: The donor must sign in the presence of an independent adult witness who also signs and adds their name, address and occupation. The attorney must not witness the donor's signature. Keep the original document safely. For property transactions, your conveyancer will certify a copy for HM Land Registry — you do not need to attend a solicitor for this purpose. A General Power of Attorney ceases to be valid if the donor loses mental capacity.
Solicitors typically charge £150–£500+ for drafting and executing a General Power of Attorney.
At TemplatesUK, our professionally drafted template is £10 one-time, saving you hundreds in legal fees. You still have access to interview and editor support included with your purchase.
Yes. There is no legal requirement to use a solicitor for a General Power of Attorney.
Our template provides everything you need to execute a valid deed yourself. The document must be properly witnessed — the attorney cannot witness the donor's signature — but a neighbour, colleague, or independent adult can serve as witness.
For property transactions, your conveyancer will handle HM Land Registry certification as part of standard conveyancing.
A General Power of Attorney is valid only while you have full mental capacity and is typically used for short-term situations — such as being abroad during a property transaction or a period of short-term illness.
A Lasting Power of Attorney (LPA) must be registered with the Office of the Public Guardian and remains valid even if you lose mental capacity. If long-term planning is your goal, an LPA is the appropriate document.
No. Unlike a Lasting Power of Attorney, a General Power of Attorney does not need to be registered with the Office of the Public Guardian.
This is one practical advantage of a GPA — simpler, faster execution for short-term needs. For property transactions, HM Land Registry will require a certified copy, but your conveyancer handles this as part of standard conveyancing.
Yes. When properly executed as a deed under the Powers of Attorney Act 1971 with an independent witness, a General Power of Attorney is a legally valid and binding document.
Banks, solicitors, and HM Land Registry will accept it for financial and property transactions. Our template is structured to meet the legal requirements for England and Wales.
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