Power of attorney requirements

North Carolina

What you need to create a valid durable financial power of attorney in North Carolina.

Notarization

Required

Needed for validity and acceptance

Witnesses required

None

No witnesses needed

Online notary

Authorized

Since 2020

Execution requirements

Notarization — Required

Witnesses — None required

North Carolina does not require witnesses for a power of attorney.

Written and signed by principal

The power of attorney must be in writing, signed by you (the principal) while of sound mind and at least 18 years old.

Durability language

Must explicitly state that the power of attorney remains effective upon the principal's incapacity. Without this language, it terminates if you become incapacitated.

North Carolina-specific notes

Acknowledged before a notary public — N.C. Gen. Stat. §32C-1-105
Durability is presumed unless the instrument states otherwise
Remote online notarization: North Carolina authorized RON in 2020. You may be able to have your power of attorney notarized via video conference through an approved RON provider.

What a power of attorney covers

A durable financial power of attorney lets your agent handle financial matters on your behalf if you become incapacitated. Common powers include:

  • Banking and financial accounts
  • Real estate transactions
  • Investment management
  • Tax filings
  • Government benefits (Social Security, Medicare)
  • Business interests

You choose which powers to grant — you can grant all of them or limit to specific categories.

This information is general in nature and not legal advice. Laws change — consult a licensed estate planning attorney in North Carolina for guidance specific to your situation.