What is the difference between a Living Trust and a Power of Attorney?
A Power of Attorney empowers an Attorney-in-Fact to do certain specified things for the Principal during the Principal’s lifetime. A Living Trust also allows a person, called a “trustee,” to do certain things for the maker of the trust during that person’s lifetime but these powers also extend beyond death. A Living Trust is like a Power of Attorney in that it allows a person to manage another’s assets. Like an Attorney-in-Fact, the Trustee can do banking transactions, investments, and many other tasks related to the management of the person’s assets. Unlike a Power of Attorney, however, the Trustee has control only over those assets that are titled in the name of the Living Trust. For example, if a bank account is titled in the name of the person alone, the Trustee has no power over that asset. In order to give the Trustee control over an asset, the maker of the Trust must arrange for the account or property to be owned by the Trust. Also unlike an Attorney-in-Fact, upon death the Tru