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Estate planning for people with dementia can be one of the most difficult and emotionally charged situations families face. By the time many families realize planning is needed, it may already be too late.
A common question I hear is this. My parents have dementia now and can no longer set up a trust. Does that mean everything has to go through probate?
In some cases, the answer is yes.
Dementia can affect legal capacity, and once capacity is lost, the ability to create or change an estate plan often disappears with it. Understanding how capacity works in California and why timing matters can help families avoid devastating outcomes.
Estate planning depends on capacity. In California, a person must understand what they are doing in order to create or change legal documents.
This includes understanding:
If a person lacks this understanding, they cannot legally create or amend an estate plan. California Probate Code Capacity Standards
Dementia exists on a spectrum. Some individuals may have mild cognitive impairment. Others may have advanced dementia. The challenge is that capacity is not based on diagnosis alone, but on the individual’s ability to understand and make decisions at the time documents are signed.
In California, creating a will or trust requires testamentary capacity.
This means the person must understand:
If a person does not meet this standard, any estate plan created can later be challenged and potentially invalidated. California Courts Capacity and Conservatorship
This is why estate planning should never be delayed when early cognitive decline is suspected.
If a person with severe dementia never created a living trust and no valid power of attorney exists, their assets are usually stuck. Real estate held in their individual name must go through probate when they pass away. Financial institutions may freeze accounts. Family members cannot step in automatically. Why Californians still end up in probate
Probate in California commonly takes 12 to 24 months and is based on the gross value of the estate.
Many families assume a power of attorney solves everything. Unfortunately, that is not always true.
A power of attorney must be signed while the person still has capacity. If dementia has progressed too far, a power of attorney cannot be created.
Even when a power of attorney exists, it does not allow the agent to create a trust if one was never established, unless the power explicitly grants that authority and capacity existed at signing.
Related link:
Essential estate planning documents
Sometimes, yes. Sometimes, no.
If the person still understands what a trust is, what assets they own, and who should benefit, they may still have capacity.
This is often evaluated with the help of:
Timing is critical. Waiting too long can permanently eliminate the opportunity.
When planning is delayed and capacity is lost, families are often left with limited and expensive options.
These may include:
Conservatorship proceedings are intrusive, expensive, and time consuming. They require court approval for major decisions and ongoing reporting.
Without a trust or proper beneficiary designations, California law dictates how assets pass. Probate vs trust in California
Even modest estates can trigger probate. Real estate almost always does.
For families already coping with dementia, probate adds unnecessary stress, cost, and delay.
Encouraging parents to plan early is one of the greatest gifts adult children can give.
Early planning allows parents to:
Read more:
How to keep your estate plan safe
Many parents resist estate planning because it forces them to confront aging and mortality. Dementia makes these conversations even harder.
Approaching the topic as a matter of protection rather than control can help. Estate planning preserves independence rather than taking it away.
If a parent is showing early signs of dementia:
Time matters more than perfection in these situations.
Read more: How to find a good estate planning lawyer
Only if they understand what they are signing at that moment.
No. Capacity is evaluated at the time documents are signed.
Their estate will likely go through probate.
Only in limited situations and only if capacity existed when signed.
No. Planning should begin at the first signs of cognitive decline.
Estate planning and dementia do not mix well with delay. Once capacity is lost, options shrink dramatically and court involvement becomes far more likely.
Families who act early preserve dignity, independence, and peace of mind. Families who wait often face probate, conservatorship, and conflict.
Encouraging aging parents to plan early is not about taking control. It is about protecting them and the family they love.
Schedule your free 30-minute Strategy Session today or call (949) 377-2996 with Michael Pevney, your trusted Orange County estate planning attorney.
SECURE YOUR LEGACY
With over 18 years of legal experience in Orange County, Michael Pevney focuses on estate planning to help families protect assets, avoid probate, and secure their legacy with confidence.