Robert Chesser Jr Law

Estate Planning Attorney in Chattanooga, Tennessee

423-445-1188
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The Difference Between a Power of Attorney and a Conservatorship in Tennessee

June 19, 2026 by Robert Chesser Jr

It’s a conversation I have more often than you might think․

It’s so common․ A grown adult child sits down across the desk from me in my Chattanooga office or on Zoom‚ and tells me their mom or dad had a stroke‚ or a fall‚ or a diagnosis that changed everything overnight․ And now they’re trying to figure out how to pay their parent’s bills‚ talk to the bank‚ or make a medical decision‚ and nobody will let them․ Because legally? They have no authority to do any of it․

That’s when I have to explain the difference between a Power of Attorney and a conservatorship and why that matters and why the timing of it all matters even more․

If you are a senior thinking of planning ahead‚ or an adult child of a parent whose health is starting to change‚ this post is for you․

First, Let’s Talk About What a Power of Attorney Actually Is

A Power of Attorney‚ also often referred to as a Durable Power of Attorney‚ is a legal‌ document that allows you to name someone you trust (an “agent” or “attorney-in-fact”) to manage your legal and financial affairs․ It‌ is “Durable” because it remains effective even in the event of your disability or incapacity․ That‌ last part is critical․

A Healthcare Power of Attorney (also known as a‌ Healthcare Proxy and included with the Tennessee Advance Directive for Health Care) allows someone you approve to make health care decisions regarding your medical treatment and procedures in the event that you’re unable to make such decisions․

They are created while you’re still capable and able to make your own decisions‚ and you pick who takes over when you no longer can‚ setting their limits․ You have control over how you engage with them․

These two documents‚ a Durable Power of Attorney and a Healthcare Power of Attorney‚ are often the most important parts of a comprehensive Tennessee estate plan.  and yet are often the most procrastinated․

So What Is a Conservatorship?

A conservatorship (called a “guardianship” in other states) is established when someone becomes incapacitated and there is no Power of Attorney․

In Tennessee if you become disabled‚ and you did not execute any document giving anyone else power to handle your affairs‚ no one in your family‚ or anyone else‚ has any legal entitlement to do so for you․ You must ask a judge to appoint a conservator to do this‚ which takes time‚ money and is a matter of public record․

As lawyers like to say‚ conservatorships are “living probate”․ Like a court-administered estate after someone dies‚ conservatorships require paperwork‚ lawyers‚ hearings‚ and annual accountings․ And‚ just as with a court-administered estate‚ it all happens under the supervision of the court․ Families often spend thousands of dollars — sometimes tens of thousands — navigating a process that could have been avoided with a simple document signed years earlier.

And‚ by the way‚ the court doesn’t have to appoint that person that you would have appointed․ A judge appoints the person․ You have lost control over who will take care of your affairs when you need it most․

The Key Difference: Timing and Control

This is really the heart of it․ Here’s the simplest way I know to explain it:

  • A Power of Attorney is something you create before a crisis. You’re in control. You choose your agent. You set the rules. It can take effect immediately or only upon incapacity — your call.
  • A conservatorship is something a court creates after a crisis. You’ve lost the ability to plan. A judge decides who’s in charge of your finances and your care. Your family pays for it. And it continues under court supervision indefinitely.

One puts you in the driver’s seat․ The other means you’ve lost the wheel․

But Conservatorship Isn’t Always the Enemy

I want to be honest with you here‚ because I think oversimplifying this does a disservice to families who are actually in the middle of it․

Conservatorships are time-consuming‚ intrusive‚ and expensive․ But they are sometimes exactly what a family needs․ If there’s no Power of Attorney, if there’s financial abuse happening, if family members are in serious conflict over a loved one’s care, or if someone needs a court’s authority to act on behalf of a person who truly cannot advocate for themselves — a conservatorship can be a lifeline. When it’s handled well, it protects people who might otherwise have no protection at all.

You’re not trying to avoid a conservatorship out of fear‚ but to do enough planning so that your family doesn’t have to go through it․

The Window You Don’t Want to Miss

This is now the part of this conversation that gets a bit urgent‚ and I don’t say that to scare you‚ but I’ve seen what happens when families wait too long․

A Power of Attorney can only be created by someone who is mentally competent. Once a person has lost capacity — due to dementia, a stroke, a serious accident — the window is closed. No attorney can draft a Power of Attorney for someone who can no longer understand what they’re signing. At that point, a conservatorship isn’t a backup plan. It’s the only option.

So if you’re a senior who has been putting this off, or an adult child whose parent is “doing just fine right now” — please don’t wait for a health crisis to force the conversation. That’s exactly when it’s too late to use the simpler, less expensive path.

If you’re not sure how to bring this up with a parent, I’ve written about how to involve your family in estate planning conversations — can help make that first conversation feel a lot less daunting.

What These Documents Look Like in a Real Estate Plan

When clients come in and I do an estate plan‚ the Durable Power of Attorney and the Healthcare Power of Attorney‚ I’m never making them an afterthought․ They’re just as important as the will or trust because they protect you when you’re alive․

We talk through questions such as:

  • Who do you‌ trust most to handle your finances if you can’t?
  • Is that the same person you’d trust to help make a‌ medical decision?
  • Would you want your agent to be able to act right away or only if you’re unable?
  • If your first choice cannot or will not serve‚ who would be next?

They’re not theoretical questions․ They’re decisions that affect whether your family can step in smoothly when they need to — or whether they end up in front of a judge․

A Note for Adult Children Reading This

If you’ve read this and think‚ ‘Uh-oh‚ my parent needs help‚’ trust your instinct․ The best thing you can do is have the conversation; there’s still time to make a plan․ Instead of starting with legal documents‚ start with the relationship․ Start by asking your parent whom they would want to make decisions for them if they were unable to do so․

If they have a Power of Attorney‚ ensure it is up to date․ Estate plans need to be reviewed and updated as life circumstances change․ A legal document created 20 years ago may not reflect your parent’s current wishes and your parent’s agent may no longer be able to serve in the role․

The Bottom Line

The Power of Attorney is one of the most powerful – and also the most overlooked – tools in estate planning‚ and very easy to implement․ It costs less than a conservatorship and gives your family the ability to act quickly and privately when the time comes‚ without going to court․

Conservatorships are sometimes appropriate․ But conservatorships should not be the first option we’re pursuing․

If you don’t have a Durable Power of Attorney‚ or if you’re not sure that your Durable Power of Attorney says what you want it to say‚ contact us․ This is one of those things that’s genuinely easy to do now and genuinely hard to fix later․

Schedule a call with me today by clicking the link below.

423-445-1188

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Filed Under: estate planning wills and trusts, Family in Estate Planning, Guardianship

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