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State of South Carolina
General Power of Attorney · South Carolina

Free South Carolina General Power of Attorney Forms

Create a South Carolina-compliant general power of attorney that meets all SC state requirements. Attorney-reviewed and accepted statewide.

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Suna Gol
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Anderson Hill
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Jonathan Alfonso

Last updated March 24, 2026

South Carolina General Power of Attorney Overview

In South Carolina, a General Power of Attorney is a powerful legal document that grants your chosen agent broad authority to manage your financial, legal, and business affairs. South Carolina has adopted the Uniform Power of Attorney Act (UPOAA), providing a clear statutory framework for the creation, execution, and enforcement of powers of attorney.

A General POA in South Carolina is particularly useful when you need someone to manage your affairs during travel, military deployment, or extended absence. However, a General POA automatically terminates if you become mentally incapacitated. If you need protection during incapacity, consider a Durable Power of Attorney instead.

Yes

Notarization Required

2 witnesses

Witnesses Required

Yes

UPOAA Adopted

Yes

Recording for Real Estate

South Carolina Execution Requirements

To create a legally valid general power of attorney in South Carolina, you must follow these state-specific execution requirements:

  • Signing: The principal must sign the POA while mentally competent
  • Notarization: Yes in South Carolina
  • Witnesses: 2 witnesses + notary
  • UPOAA: South Carolina has adopted the Uniform Power of Attorney Act
  • Recording: Required for real estate transactions — file with the county recorder

How to Create Your South Carolina General POA

Follow these steps to create a general power of attorney that complies with South Carolina law.

1

Choose Your Agent Carefully

Select a trusted person who is at least 18 years old and mentally competent to serve as your agent in South Carolina. This person will have broad authority over your affairs. Consider naming a successor agent as well.

2

Define the Scope of Authority

Specify the broad financial, legal, and business powers you want to grant. You can customize which categories of authority to include or exclude.

3

Execute According to South Carolina Law

Sign the document before a notary public. Provide copies to your agent, successor agent, and any financial institutions that will rely on the POA. Record with the county recorder if the POA will be used for real estate transactions.

Sample South Carolina General Power of Attorney

Below is a preview of our South Carolina-specific general power of attorney template.

STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA

GENERAL POWER OF ATTORNEY

Broad Financial and Legal Authority

PRINCIPAL:

Name: [Principal Name]
Address: [South Carolina Address]

AGENT (Attorney-in-Fact):

Name: [Agent Name]
Address: [Agent Address]

POWERS GRANTED

[As defined in the document]

South Carolina General Power of Attorney FAQ

Answers to common questions about general power of attorney documents in South Carolina.

Official South Carolina Resources

Use these official resources to verify South Carolina power of attorney requirements and access state forms.

Other South Carolina Power of Attorney Types

Need a different type of power of attorney for South Carolina? We offer state-specific templates for every type of POA.

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