Notary & Powers of Attorney

Notary & Powers of Attorney

A Power of Attorney is only useful if it is accepted by the receiving institution. Banks, civil registry offices, consulates, and real estate transactions often require specific wording, identity formats, and execution standards. We help you structure a POA that matches your purpose and reduces the risk of rejection.

We focus on practical execution: scope and limitations, correct party details, signature blocks, notarization planning, and—when needed—apostille/legalization and certified translations. You receive a checklist and clear sequencing so your document is valid where you need it.

  • Purpose-built POA: property, banking, family, business matters

  • Clear authority, limitations, and validity period language

  • Notarization plan aligned to the receiving institution’s standards

  • Translation and authentication coordination for cross-border use

Drafting That Matches the Use Case

Drafting That Matches the Use Case

We tailor the POA scope and wording to the transaction so it is practical and defensible.

Execution & Cross-Border Acceptance

Execution & Cross-Border Acceptance

When required, we align notarization, apostille/legalization, and translations to destination rules.

What type of Power of Attorney do I need?

It depends on your purpose (banking, property, family matters, or business) and the receiving institution’s requirements. We confirm the use case first and draft the correct scope.

Will a U.S.-notarized POA work in Mexico or Vietnam?

Sometimes, but many institutions require additional authentication, specific formatting, or translations. We verify destination requirements and provide the correct sequence.

Do I need apostille/legalization or certified translations?

It depends on the destination country and receiving authority. We identify the required path (Hague vs. non-Hague) and coordinate preparation to reduce rejections.

Do you support English, Spanish, and Vietnamese?

Yes. We coordinate communication and documentation to keep names, dates, and supporting records consistent across languages.