Contact the bank before having a financial power of attorney drafted by a lawyer. ... Send or deliver your previously drafted financial power of attorney document to the bank. ... Provide identification and a copy of the financial power of attorney to the bank teller when you ready to complete a transaction.
Visit your local bank branch with the person you'd like to add to your account and inform the teller of your intentions. Depending on the bank, the teller simply may add the person to the existing account, or suggest you close out that account and open a different joint account based on your new needs.
By adding an authorized signer to your business's bank account, you're granting them access. Depending on how you set up the agreement, they might have permission to: Check the balance. Sign checks on behalf of the account. Pay bills and transfer funds to other accounts.
The IRS suggests signature authority, which allows an adult child access to their aging parent's bank account. They can use it to pay bills and make purchases as long as they're in the loved one's interest. Your local bank branch can set this up easily with both signatures.
Jointly Owned Accounts If you own an account jointly with someone else, then after one of you dies, in most cases the surviving co-owner will automatically become the account's sole owner. The account will not need to go through probate before it can be transferred to the survivor.
Typically, an authorized signer has many of the same rights to the account as the account owner. Not only can he sign checks from the account, he can access the account's balance and view transactions. The Uniform Commercial Code also grants him the right to close the account or stop payments on checks.
You can name a friend or family member to act on your behalf by creating and signing a document called a power of attorney (or “durable” power of attorney). In that case, your bank account can remain in your name only, but the person you name in your power of attorney – your “agent” – can help you with banking.
A joint account is a bank or brokerage account shared by two or more individuals. Joint account holders have equal access to funds but also share equal responsibility for any fees or charges incurred. Transactions conducted through a joint account may require the signature of all parties or just one.