Families are frequently left facing urgent questions:
Who can make decisions?
Who can manage finances or property?
What happens if no legal authority exists?
At this stage, many people are unsure what steps to take or who to contact. That uncertainty is common. However, delays can make situations more complex if legal authority is required and no arrangements are in place.
Understand decisions that need to be made
Retain information long enough to make those decisions
Use or weigh information as part of decision-making
Communicate decisions in any way
Incapacity may be permanent or temporary and can affect some decisions but not others.
Capacity is decision-specific, not a blanket label. An adult may still be able to make some decisions while lacking capacity for others. Incapacity may also be temporary or change over time.
Because of this, legal advice is often needed to determine whether formal authority is required.
These may include:
Power of Attorney – where authority was granted before capacity was lost
Access to funds arrangements – limited authority to manage certain finances
Intervention orders – authority for specific, one-off decisions
Guardianship orders – ongoing authority for welfare, financial matters, or both
A solicitor can advise which option is appropriate and whether a court application is required.
No Power of Attorney is in place
Existing legal authority is insufficient
Long-term decisions about welfare or finances are needed
Court oversight is required to protect the adult’s interests
A solicitor can assess whether guardianship is necessary or whether another legal measure may be more suitable.