Monroe County Durable Power of Attorney Form

Last validated May 18, 2026 by our Forms Development Team

Monroe County Durable Power of Attorney Form

Monroe County Durable Power of Attorney Form

Fill in the blank form formatted to comply with all recording and content requirements.

Document Last Validated 4/20/2026
Monroe County Durable Power of Attorney Guidelines

Monroe County Durable Power of Attorney Guidelines

Line by line guide explaining every blank on the form.

Document Last Validated 5/18/2026
Monroe County Completed Example of the Power of Attorney

Monroe County Completed Example of the Power of Attorney

Example of a properly completed form for reference.

Document Last Validated 5/7/2026
Monroe County Agents Certification Form

Monroe County Agents Certification Form

Agent certifies he/she is authorized to act. Often required by third parties.

Document Last Validated 2/16/2026

All 4 documents above included • One-time purchase • No recurring fees

Immediate Download • Secure Checkout

Important: Your property must be located in Monroe County to use these forms. Documents should be recorded at the office below.

Where to Record Your Documents

Monroe County Probate Office

Address:
65 N Alabama Ave / PO Box 665
Monroeville, Alabama 36460 / 36461

Hours: 8:00 to 5:00 Mon through Wed & Fri; Thu until noon

Phone: (251) 743-4107

Recording Tips for Monroe County:
  • White-out or correction fluid may cause rejection
  • Verify all names are spelled correctly before recording
  • Avoid the last business day of the month when possible
  • Recording fees may differ from what's posted online - verify current rates

Cities and Jurisdictions in Monroe County

Properties in any of these areas use Monroe County forms:

  • Beatrice
  • Excel
  • Franklin
  • Frisco City
  • Goodway
  • Megargel
  • Mexia
  • Monroeville
  • Perdue Hill
  • Peterman
  • Uriah
  • Vredenburgh

View Complete Recorder Office Guide

Hours, fees, requirements, and more for Monroe County

How do I get my forms?

Forms are available for immediate download after payment. The Monroe County forms will be in your account ready to download to your computer. An account is created for you during checkout if you don't have one. Forms are NOT emailed.

Are these forms guaranteed to be recordable in Monroe County?

Yes. Our form blanks are guaranteed to meet or exceed the applicable formatting requirements used for recording in Monroe County, including margin requirements, font requirements, and other layout standards. This guarantee applies to formatting, not to the legal sufficiency of information entered by the user or the suitability of a form for a particular transaction.

Can I reuse these forms?

Yes. You can reuse the forms for your personal use. For example, if you have multiple properties in Monroe County you only need to order once.

What do I need to use these forms?

The forms are PDFs that you fill out on your computer. You'll need Adobe Reader (free software that most computers already have). You do NOT enter your property information online - you download the blank forms and complete them privately on your own computer.

Are there any recurring fees?

No. This is a one-time purchase. Nothing to cancel, no memberships, no recurring fees.

How much does it cost to record in Monroe County?

Recording fees in Monroe County vary. Contact the recorder's office at (251) 743-4107 for current fees.

Questions answered? Let's get started!

Alabama's Durable Power of Attorney operates under a comprehensive statutory framework — the Alabama Uniform Power of Attorney Act (Chapter 1A, Title 26) — that defines every authority the agent receives by reference to a specific code section. That structure matters in practice: a broadly worded grant that works in a non-UPOAA state may fall short in Alabama because the Act enumerates what each granted power actually authorizes. If the power is not expressly listed or tied to a statutory category, third parties — banks, title companies, county probate offices — are entitled to refuse it. Understanding how Alabama's version differs from generic power of attorney forms is the first step toward executing one that actually works.

What the Alabama Durable Power of Attorney Does

A durable power of attorney authorizes an agent (also called an attorney-in-fact) to act on behalf of the principal in legal and financial matters. Under Alabama law, "durable" means the authority survives the principal's incapacity — the power is not terminated by the principal's loss of capacity (26-1A-102(2)). This is the default under the Act: unless the document expressly provides otherwise, incapacity does not end the agent's authority. The instrument becomes effective when executed unless the principal specifies a future date or a triggering event or contingency, such as a physician's certification of incapacity (26-1A-109). These two provisions — durability and immediate effectiveness — are the baseline in Alabama, but both can be modified by the document itself.

Alabama Statutory Authority Structure

The Alabama UPOAA takes a catalog approach to agent authority. Each category of power — real property transactions, personal property transactions, stock and bond transactions, banking and financial institution transactions, business operations, insurance, estates and trusts, claims and litigation, government benefits, tax matters, and more — is defined by its own statutory section (26-1A-204 through 26-1A-216). When the principal grants authority over "real property transactions," the agent receives exactly the powers described in 26-1A-204, no more and no less, unless the document expands or limits that grant.

This means a form drafted for another state's common-law POA framework may leave gaps or create ambiguities that Alabama recorders and financial institutions will flag. The Alabama-specific form links each granted power to the corresponding statutory definition, giving third parties a clear basis for reliance.

Hot Powers Requiring Express Authorization

Alabama law identifies a set of actions so significant that they require explicit authorization in the document — a grant of general authority is not enough. These are sometimes called "hot powers." Unless the power of attorney expressly grants one of the following, the agent cannot exercise it:

  • Create, amend, revoke, or terminate an inter vivos trust
  • Make gifts
  • Create or change rights of survivorship
  • Create or change a beneficiary designation
  • Delegate authority to another person
  • Waive the principal's right as a beneficiary of a joint and survivor annuity
  • Exercise fiduciary powers the principal has authority to delegate
  • Disclaim property, including a power of appointment

Each of these categories must be called out specifically in the document (26-1A-201). A form that includes checkboxes or signature lines for each hot power — and leaves unselected items visibly excluded — gives the principal the clearest record of intent and gives third parties the clearest basis for reliance or refusal.

Execution Requirements

The principal must sign the power of attorney, or direct another individual to sign in the principal's presence. The signature must be acknowledged before a notary public (26-1A-105). Alabama does not require witness signatures for a durable power of attorney to be valid under the Act itself, which differs from states that mandate one or two disinterested witnesses at execution. However, if the power of attorney will be recorded in the county probate office — necessary when the agent will conduct real property transactions — notarization is required for recording, and some financial institutions impose their own witness requirements regardless of the statutory minimum.

The agent is not required to sign the document at execution, but Alabama law provides a statutory agent certification form that agents can use when presenting the power of attorney to third parties (26-1A-302). Many Alabama banks and title companies expect the agent to sign an acknowledgment of their duties and the scope of their authority before honoring the instrument.

Agents, Co-Agents, and Successor Agents

A principal may name one agent, co-agents who act jointly or severally, or successor agents. Successor agents become active only when all predecessor agents have resigned, died, become incapacitated, lost qualification, or declined to serve (26-1A-111(b)). Unless the document says otherwise, a successor agent has the same authority as the original agent — there is no need to re-enumerate powers in the successor designation. The principal may also grant an agent or a named third party the power to designate successors, which is useful when the principal cannot predict who will be available years in the future.

Co-agent arrangements require careful drafting. If co-agents must act jointly and one becomes unavailable, the power may be paralyzed unless the document addresses that contingency. If co-agents may act severally (independently), third parties dealing with one agent cannot verify what the other may have done. Alabama's Act does not default to one arrangement or the other — the document controls.

Real Property Transactions and Recording

When the agent will execute deeds, mortgages, or other instruments affecting Alabama real property, the power of attorney should be recorded in the County Probate Office of the county where the property is located. Alabama's probate courts serve as the recorder of deeds and real property instruments, so a power of attorney used in a real estate closing will need to meet the same acknowledgment standards as the deed it authorizes. Recording protects third parties who rely on the agent's authority and establishes a public record of the grant. An unrecorded power of attorney used in a real estate transaction creates title risk that title insurers and subsequent purchasers will scrutinize.

The power of attorney form includes lines for real property to be specifically identified, which is useful when the principal intends to authorize the agent to act on one or more specific parcels rather than all real property the principal owns.

Agent Duties and Limitations

Alabama's Act imposes a baseline of fiduciary duties on the agent regardless of what the document says. The agent must act in good faith, within the scope of authority granted, and in accordance with the principal's reasonable expectations to the extent known. The agent must act loyally, avoid conflicts of interest, and keep the principal's property separate from the agent's own. These duties cannot be waived by the document — they are statutory minimums (26-1A-114). The principal can expand or restrict certain default rules, but the core loyalty and good-faith obligations remain.

Termination

A durable power of attorney terminates when the principal revokes it, when the principal dies, when the purpose of the power is accomplished, or when the agent's authority terminates and no successor agent is available to serve (26-1A-110). Revocation is effective when communicated to the agent, but it does not affect a third party who acts in good faith without notice of the revocation. For revocations affecting real property authority, recording a revocation in the County Probate Office provides constructive notice. A principal who has recorded the original power of attorney should record the revocation in the same office.

Download Package

The Alabama Durable Power of Attorney package includes the power of attorney form drafted to conform to the Alabama Uniform Power of Attorney Act (Chapter 1A, Title 26), a completed example showing how a properly executed instrument looks, and a guide covering execution, agent responsibilities, recording in the County Probate Office, and revocation. The form includes enumerated statutory authority grants, express lines for hot-power authorization, successor agent designation, and space to identify specific real property. Everything needed to prepare, execute, and record the instrument is included in a single download.

Important: Your property must be located in Monroe County to use these forms. Documents should be recorded at the office below.

This Durable Power of Attorney meets all recording requirements specific to Monroe County.

Our Promise

The documents you receive here are guaranteed to meet or exceed the applicable Monroe County recording format requirements. If there is a rejection caused by our formatting, we will correct the issue or refund your payment. This guarantee applies to document formatting only and does not extend to information entered by the user, the selection of the form, or the legal effect of the completed document.

Save Time and Money

Get your Monroe County Durable Power of Attorney form done right the first time with Deeds.com Uniform Conveyancing Blanks. At Deeds.com, we understand that your time and money are valuable resources, and we don't want you to face a penalty fee or rejection imposed by a county recorder for submitting nonstandard documents. We constantly review and update our forms to meet rapidly changing state and county recording requirements for roughly 3,500 counties and local jurisdictions.

4.8 out of 5 - ( 4720 Reviews )

Chase J.

June 2nd, 2022

This is the best service. It has made my life so easy when I have to record things with the county! Thanks so much for such a streamlined no hassle process.

Reply from Staff

We appreciate your business and value your feedback. Thank you. Have a wonderful day!

Arthur M.

December 8th, 2020

A good service that saves a lot of time and precludes making a trip to the County Assessors Office. Valuable service.

Reply from Staff

Thank you!

Robert B.

June 28th, 2019

Fast and easy and Jefferson County Colorado excepted the forms.

Reply from Staff

Thank you!

Denise P.

April 19th, 2021

Seamless transaction. Was pleased with the additional information that was provided. Thank you!

Reply from Staff

Thank you for your feedback. We really appreciate it. Have a great day!

Cessaly D H.

December 27th, 2022

Excellent service bc you create your own account and have immediate access to documents!

Reply from Staff

We appreciate your business and value your feedback. Thank you. Have a wonderful day!

David T.

September 6th, 2022

This is a great service and terrific value. The form package provided (blank form, example form & set of instructions) was clear and easy to follow. Being able to complete the forms using the computer to insert the needed information saved countless hours. My completed form was accepted by the Clerk & Recorder office without any issue. Well worth the investment

Reply from Staff

We appreciate your business and value your feedback. Thank you. Have a wonderful day!

Tonni L.

June 15th, 2021

Quick and easy with great instructions and accurate documents. I plan to make this site a part of our financial planning. Highly recommend. Saved big by this DIY process. TL

Reply from Staff

Thank you for your feedback. We really appreciate it. Have a great day!

Scott W.

February 5th, 2024

Quick and simple.

Reply from Staff

Thank you!

John Q.

June 26th, 2020

I downloaded the forms, which was very easy, and filled them out with the help of the very helpful instructions! I was able to go down to my court house and file the forms within 24 hours of downloading! I am at peace knowing my son's will avoid a lot of headaches when I pass because my property deed will transfer to them without probate court TOD !!!!

Reply from Staff

We appreciate your business and value your feedback. Thank you. Have a wonderful day!

ed d.

December 23rd, 2020

Fast efficient hassle free

Reply from Staff

Thank you for your feedback. We really appreciate it. Have a great day!

Duane L.

September 5th, 2020

Easy to use with very helpful directions.

Reply from Staff

Thank you!

Burr A.

November 7th, 2020

So far so good. Prompt and responsive. Thank you.

Reply from Staff

Thank you!

Craig J.

June 7th, 2021

Package downloaded without any problems. Help sheet was fair. Maybe they could cross reference the help number on the help sheet to the form better - somehow. Overall, I was pleased. I was able to download, fill in the blanks and do what edits I thought it needed with ease. Cost was very reasonable. I'll give it a 5.

Reply from Staff

Thank you for your feedback. We really appreciate it. Have a great day!

Greg F.

October 14th, 2022

Sorry that this a little late. I'm VERY HAPPY with everything. The deeds paperwork was just what I was looking for. It was very to fill out, it was different than n the folks used years ago. I called the county clerk, and they were very helpful. Thank you for the paperwork it was easy to use and understand.

Reply from Staff

Thank you for your feedback. We really appreciate it. Have a great day!

marshall w.

September 24th, 2019

was not ready to pay for much needed forms but very important

Reply from Staff

Thank you for your feedback. We really appreciate it. Have a great day!