MP Estate Planning UK

Preventing Power of Attorney Abuse

power of attorney abuse

We help homeowners protect money, property and care choices. The Office of the Public Guardian reports seven million LPAs registered and 1.37 million registration requests in 2023–2024 (OPG 2024). That scale shows how commonly people rely on these documents.

We will explain what safeguarding against power of attorney abuse uk looks like and why it matters. An LPA can be a practical tool. But it gives someone real authority, so it needs careful choice and ongoing oversight.

In this guide we outline two key protection points: get the lasting power attorney right at the start, and put simple checks in place afterwards. We also explain where the Office of the Public Guardian and the Court of Protection step in if things go wrong.

We flag the donor’s mental capacity and the duty to act in the donor’s best interests early. Expect plain-language advice, clear checklists and practical steps you can use with your family.

Key Takeaways

  • LPAs are common; registration numbers are high, so risk exists.
  • Choose representatives carefully and check capacity at signing.
  • Set basic oversight: regular accounts and a second reviewer.
  • The OPG and Court Protection offer routes for investigation and remedy.
  • Focus on best interests and seek timely legal advice if suspicious.

Why power of attorney abuse happens and why it can be hard to spot

Misuse often hides in plain sight when an attorney handles everyday bills and no one else checks statements or receipts. Small transactions blend into routine payments. That makes troubling patterns slow to surface.

Common late-discovery moments include a care crisis, a house sale, missing savings, or winding up an estate after death. Families may only learn there is a problem when a third party contacts the OPG or the Court of Protection.

power attorney misuse

Why people hesitate: relatives often fear conflict, feel guilty or simply do not want to make a fuss. That delay gives an unscrupulous attorney time to move funds or mislabel transactions.

Real-world risk factors

  • Fraud — deliberately taking money or falsifying documents (for example, the Zholia Alemi report).
  • Undue influence — pressuring a person to sign or make decisions that benefit someone else.
  • Abuse of position — professionals or trusted people using status to access funds (such as the solicitor theft case).

OPG investigations rose notably as more LPAs were registered, not necessarily because there are more wrongdoers. If you have concerns, act early — patterns are far easier to prove before records vanish. For practical steps on protecting family finances, see our guide Protect your family from power of attorney.

Understand what a Lasting Power of Attorney allows in the UK

Knowing exactly what an LPA lets someone do helps you spot whether actions match the document. The Mental Capacity Act 2005 (s9) lets an adult (the donor) grant legal authority to a chosen person to make decisions now or later, if they lose capacity. An LPA must be properly created and signed to take effect (MCA 2005 s9(3)).

Below we break the two main types into practical terms. The risks and safeguards differ between money and care.

Property and financial affairs LPA

This LPA covers day-to-day finances and larger transactions. It can include paying bills, managing bank accounts, dealing with investments, and handling property transactions such as selling or letting a house.

Health and welfare LPA

This LPA covers care plans, medical treatment decisions and living arrangements. It only applies when the donor lacks capacity to make those decisions themselves.

Key roles and duties

The donor grants the authority. An attorney acts for the donor and must make decisions on the donor’s behalf and in their best interests. Limits and instructions can be written into the lasting power to prevent a blanket grant of powers.

lasting power attorney

AspectProperty & Financial AffairsHealth & Welfare
Main authorityManage bank accounts, investments, property transactionsDecide on care, medical treatment and residence (when donor lacks capacity)
When it appliesImmediately if specified, or once donor lacks capacityOnly when donor cannot make decisions
Examples of actionsPaying bills, selling a house, arranging pensionsChoosing care provider, consenting to treatment, arranging care home placement
  • Practical takeaway: understanding what the document permits is the first step to spotting misuse later.

Check capacity and protect the donor at the point the LPA is made

The moment an LPA is created, the donor must clearly understand the lasting power and its consequences. This ensures decisions are made freely and can be defended later.

mental capacity

What “mental capacity” means under the Mental Capacity Act 2005

Mental capacity means the donor can:

  • understand the information relevant to the decision
  • retain that information long enough to make the decision
  • weigh up the available information to reach a choice
  • communicate that choice by any means

The certificate provider must confirm the donor had capacity and was not under pressure. That step is critical to reduce later disputes.

Reducing pressure and coercion before signing anything

Coercion can look polite. A relative who speaks for the donor or does all the “helping” can unintentionally steer decisions.

Simple steps help. Hold private chats with the donor. Delay signing so the individual can reflect. Seek a professional opinion if capacity is borderline.

CheckHow to testWhy it matters
UnderstandingAsk the donor to explain the LPA in their own wordsShows they grasp the nature and likely actions
RetentionReturn later and ask the same questionConfirms the decision is stable, not a momentary choice
Weighing upDiscuss pros and cons and observe reasoningProves the donor considered outcomes and best interests
CommunicationEnsure the donor can signal their choice clearlyNeeded for valid consent and formal signing

Practical checklist: can the donor name the attorney, explain why they were chosen and describe at least one action the attorney may take? If not, seek independent advice before proceeding.

Build safeguards into the LPA document before registration

Before registration, set practical limits so an LPA does the job without creating blind spots. Small, clear instructions keep authority focused on the donor’s best interests and make later disputes less likely.

lasting power attorney

Choosing attorneys and when to appoint more than one

Pick an attorney for trust, money habits and openness. We favour people who will keep simple records and answer family questions.

Appointing two or more attorneys can reduce single-person control. Choose whether they act jointly, jointly and severally, or a mix. That choice affects how decisions and transactions happen.

Use instructions and preferences to limit risky decisions

Write short, specific rules: require family consultation for large sales, ban gifts above a set amount, or insist on professional valuations before property deals. These notes steer routine action without creating daily admin.

People to notify: a built‑in heads-up

When registering an LPA you can name people to notify. This sends a prompt to those listed and adds an early layer of oversight. It helps surface concerns quickly if something looks wrong.

Certificate providers and witnesses

An independent certificate provider must confirm the donor had capacity and was not pressured. Witnesses check identity and signing formalities. Those steps make the lasting power harder to challenge later.

“Good drafting now is far easier than trying to recover money or undo decisions later.”

For practical templates and where to get forms, see our guide on where to get lasting power attorney and further tips on how to build protections into an LPA.

Safeguarding against power of attorney abuse UK through ongoing oversight

Practical transparency keeps everyday decisions visible without creating conflict. We favour simple systems that make routine actions easy to review.

safeguarding against power of attorney abuse uk

Set up practical transparency

Shared folders for receipts and a brief decision log turn single actions into easily checked information. A short note for each transaction explains why it happened.

Monitor accounts and property dealings

Review monthly statements and set bank alerts for unusual withdrawals or transfers. Watch for sudden changes in who manages the home or pressure to sell property quickly.

Annual accounts and regular reviews

Prepare a yearly summary of transactions and assets. Annual accounts reveal patterns and help spot financial abuse rather than isolated transactions.

Extra protections for business and high-value assets

  • Separate business banking and professional bookkeeping for company affairs.
  • Dual authorisation for large payments to protect the donor and the attorney.
  • Third-party read-only reviews for a trusted family member or adviser.

“Clear records protect the donor and defend honest attorneys if questions arise.”

If transparency is refused or records go missing, escalate to the Office of the Public Guardian for investigation and get legal advice early.

Recognise early warning signs of financial abuse and welfare concerns

Small changes in spending or social life often hint at larger problems. We recommend acting on early signs. Quick steps can stop harm and protect assets and wellbeing.

financial abuse warning signs

Financial red flags

  • Unexplained cash withdrawals that don’t match living costs.
  • New loans to relatives or frequent large gifts out of character.
  • Sudden changes to how an individual pays bills or manages property and assets.
  • Missing paperwork, vague answers about transactions, or repeated “temporary” transfers that never return.

Welfare warning signs

Look for isolation from family and friends. Note blocked calls or someone speaking for the donor in appointments.

Coercive control can hide as “help”. In Norfolk CC v CA [2024] the court limited an attorney’s role after professionals raised concerns about harmful behaviour. That case shows welfare harm may sit alongside financial wrongdoing.

SignWhat it suggestsAction
Odd withdrawalsPossible financial abuseCheck statements; ask for receipts
IsolationRisk to health and welfareArrange private visit; contact GP or social services
Refusal to share recordsAttempt to hide actionsSeek legal advice; preserve documents

If you see two or more signs, act. Use calm language: “We’re worried about X and want to help.” For practical next steps on how to use an LPA properly, see our guide on how to use a power of attorney in the.

What to do if you suspect misuse: reporting, investigations and urgent steps

If you suspect wrongdoing, start by gathering clear facts and keeping a calm head.

Record what you see. Note dates, amounts, bank transactions and any unusual actions. Save copies of statements, bills and messages. Short, orderly notes are better than shaky memories.

How the Office of the Public Guardian can help

Report your concerns to the office public guardian. You do not need perfect proof to raise a concern. The public guardian can open formal investigations and use Court of Protection Visitors to check the donor in private.

What an investigation can involve

  • Requests for bank records and accounts.
  • Interviews with the donor, family or professionals.
  • Visitors may view and copy health, care or social services information.

When to involve other services and the police

If there are welfare risks, refer to local adult services. If you suspect fraud or theft, contact police and get legal advice quickly.

Urgent steps to preserve assets

Download statements, secure wills and property papers, and ask a bank to freeze online access if needed. Early legal advice increases the chance of recovery and protects the donor’s interests.

Need more detail? See our practical note on what to do if you suspect for step-by-step advice.

“Swift, calm action protects the donor first and gives the best chance of recovery.”

How the Court of Protection can restrict or remove an attorney

When local checks fail, the court provides firm remedies to protect the donor’s interests. The Court of Protection decides whether an LPA is valid and can step in when an attorney acts outside their authority or may have used fraud or undue pressure.

Revoking an LPA for fraud or undue pressure

Under the Mental Capacity Act 2005 (ss22–23) the court can cancel a lasting power if it was procured by fraud or undue pressure. The court asks: was the donor able to make the decision freely? If not, the LPA can be revoked.

Practical court orders to control actions

The court tailors orders to the problem. Common directions include:

  • Require detailed accounts and reports from the attorney.
  • Limit or forbid large gifts and certain transactions.
  • Restrict specified authority so other routine acts can continue.

Example: Norfolk CC v CA [2024] shows the court can narrow an attorney’s role rather than remove them, reducing risk while keeping family ties intact.

When the court appoints a deputy

If the court finds continuing risk, it may appoint a deputy to manage the donor’s finances, affairs or welfare. Deputies are supervised by the Public Guardian and must file accounts.

IssueCourt actionEffect
Fraud in signingDeclare LPA invalidLPA revoked; attorney loses authority
Misuse of fundsOrder accounts and repaymentTrace missing sums; restrict transactions
Risk to welfareLimit health decisions or appoint deputyProtect donor’s health and daily care choices

“The Court of Protection can tailor remedies — from strict reporting to full removal — to protect the donor’s best interests.”

Practical takeaway: court protection is a last resort, but it is powerful. If you suspect fraud or undue pressure, gather records and get legal advice early. For related guidance on family obligations under an LPA, see our note on attorney obligations to family members.

Conclusion

, act early. A clear family plan makes decisions simple when capacity changes. Agreeing roles and a few plain rules reduces friction and keeps everyday choices visible.

Three simple layers: pick trustworthy people, build brief checks into the document, and keep clear records. These steps cut the risk that a power attorney will misuse access or cause financial abuse.

Watch for warning signs — sudden control of money or social isolation. If you see them, gather facts and raise concerns promptly.

Report to the office public guardian if needed and expect the public guardian or court protection to act where serious risk appears. Early action protects the donor’s interests.

If you have complex assets or family friction, get tailored legal advice now. We can help you plan and take the right steps.

FAQ

What is the difference between a Property and Financial Affairs LPA and a Health and Welfare LPA?

A Property and Financial Affairs LPA gives an attorney authority over money, bank accounts, property, bills and business transactions. A Health and Welfare LPA covers care, medical treatment and where the donor lives. Each LPA covers distinct decisions, so people often make both to cover all needs.

Why does misuse of an LPA sometimes go unnoticed until a crisis or after death?

Misuse can be subtle. Small unexplained withdrawals, odd changes in wills, or gradual transfers of property can look like ordinary events at first. If the donor is isolated, has reduced capacity, or lacks regular contact with family, signs may not be noticed until finances run low or the donor dies.

What makes someone vulnerable to fraud, undue influence or abuse of position?

Risk rises when the donor is lonely, frail or has dementia. A single trusted attorney with sole access to accounts, or a busy family with little oversight, increases the chance of coercion or self‑dealing. Scammers may exploit gaps in checks and paperwork.

What does "mental capacity" mean under the Mental Capacity Act 2005?

Mental capacity means the ability to understand, retain, weigh up information and communicate a decision. It is decision‑specific and time‑specific. An assessment must focus on the particular choice at the time it is made, not on a diagnosis alone.

How can we reduce pressure or coercion before someone signs an LPA?

Simple steps help: ensure independent advice, allow time for the donor to consider choices, involve a trusted third party during discussions, and use a certificate provider who assesses capacity and absence of undue influence.

How should we choose attorneys and when should we appoint more than one?

Choose people with integrity, financial sense and availability. Joint attorneys can add checks, but require agreement on decisions. Appointing multiple attorneys with clear rules (jointly, jointly and severally, or in stages) tailors oversight to the donor’s wishes.

What are instructions and preferences in an LPA and why use them?

Instructions are legally binding directions the attorney must follow. Preferences are non‑binding wishes that guide decisions. Both let the donor limit risky powers, set limits on gifts or sales, and state how they want care managed.

Who are "people to notify" and how do they help when registering an LPA?

People to notify are individuals the Office of the Public Guardian (OPG) tells before registration. They can raise concerns if something looks wrong. Selecting family members or trusted friends adds a layer of early oversight.

What must certificate providers and witnesses confirm?

Certificate providers must confirm the donor understands the LPA and is not under pressure. Witnesses verify signatures and identity. Their role reduces the risk that an attorney will later argue the document was invalid.

What practical transparency should attorneys keep to reduce risk of misuse?

Keep clear records: regular bank statements, receipts for major purchases, a decision log explaining reasons for transactions, and copies of correspondence. Share summaries with a nominated family member or professional adviser.

How should bank accounts and property dealings be monitored for unusual activity?

Set up alerts for large withdrawals, review statements monthly, restrict online access where possible, and notify banks that the account is held under an LPA so staff can offer appropriate safeguards. For property, require estate agent paperwork and independent valuations for any sale.

Should attorneys prepare annual accounts or regular reviews?

Yes. Annual accounts showing income, outgoings and decisions help spot patterns that might indicate misuse. Regular reviews with a solicitor, accountant or trusted family member add independent scrutiny.

How do you protect business interests or high‑value assets under an LPA?

Include specific instructions about running or selling a business. Consider restricted powers or requiring professional advisers for major decisions. Appoint attorneys with relevant commercial experience or require court approval for significant transactions.

What are common financial red flags that suggest possible wrongdoing?

Watch for large or frequent unexplained withdrawals, sudden gifts to the attorney, changes to wills or beneficiaries, unpaid bills despite funds, and transfers to unknown accounts. These warrant immediate review.

What welfare warning signs should family watch for?

Look for sudden isolation, cancelled social activities, unexplained changes in medication or care, the donor being moved without clear reason, or decisions that seem contrary to their known wishes. These can signal coercive control or neglect.

How can the Office of the Public Guardian investigate concerns?

The OPG can open an inquiry, request documents, compel copies of accounts, interview the attorney and others, and make safeguarding recommendations. They can also apply to the Court of Protection for urgent action if necessary.

What evidence can investigators access during an OPG probe?

Investigators can obtain bank records, account books, property deeds, correspondence and witness statements. They may visit the donor, interview professionals and inspect financial transactions to build a clear picture.

When should we involve adult safeguarding services or the police?

Involve adult safeguarding if there is immediate risk to health or welfare. Contact the police if you suspect theft, fraud or criminal conduct. Early reporting helps preserve evidence and prevent further loss.

What urgent steps can protect assets while an investigation is underway?

Collect and secure documents, ask banks to freeze suspicious accounts, withdraw attorney access where possible, record concerns in writing, and get prompt legal advice. Acting quickly prevents irreversible transactions.

How can the Court of Protection restrict or remove an attorney?

The Court can make orders to suspend or remove an attorney, limit their powers, require detailed accounts, and direct how decisions should be made. The Court acts to protect the donor’s best interests when misuse is proven or likely.

How is an LPA revoked for fraud or undue pressure?

A Court of Protection application can ask to revoke or cancel an LPA if there is convincing evidence of fraud, undue influence or that the donor lacked capacity when signing. The court examines documents, testimony and expert reports.

What orders can the court make to control an attorney’s actions?

The court can order directions about specific transactions, require regular reporting and accounts, restrict gifting powers, freeze assets, and appoint someone else to oversee or make decisions for the donor.

When will the court appoint a deputy rather than rely on an LPA?

If there is no valid LPA, or if existing attorneys are unsuitable, the Court of Protection may appoint a deputy to make ongoing decisions about finances or welfare. Deputies are supervised by the OPG and must file regular reports.

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