There’s a moment most family caregivers know. A parent is in the hospital, or has just moved, or something has happened, and you need a document. A specific document. Right now.
You don’t have it. You don’t know where it is. You’re not entirely sure it exists.
That moment is one of the most preventable situations in family caregiving. The documents exist. They just haven’t been organized before they were needed.
This is the list.
Why this matters more than you think
Financial documents for an aging parent aren’t just paperwork. They’re the infrastructure that determines what you can do when something goes wrong, and how quickly you can do it.
Without a power of attorney, you may not be able to manage your parent’s accounts if they become incapacitated. Without insurance documents, you may not know what coverage exists or how to file a claim. Without a basic account inventory, a simple task like paying a bill or canceling a subscription can take hours of calls and verification.
The time to organize these documents is before they’re needed.
Legal authority
- Durable Power of Attorney (financial): authorizes you to act on your parent’s behalf for financial matters. “Durable” means it stays valid if your parent becomes incapacitated. Without this, court-ordered guardianship may be required.
- Healthcare Power of Attorney / Healthcare Proxy: designates who makes medical decisions. Keep with the financial POA.
- Living Will / Advance Directive: documents wishes for end-of-life care. Not financial, but frequently needed in the same conversations.
- Trust documents: if a living trust exists, who is named trustee, and what assets are held in trust?
Government and benefit accounts
- Social Security card and current benefit statement: confirms Social Security number and monthly benefit amount
- Medicare card (Parts A and B): required by healthcare providers and for filing claims
- Medicare Supplement / Medigap policy: if applicable, secondary coverage details
- Medicare Part D plan: prescription drug coverage, plan name, and member ID
- Veterans benefits documentation: if applicable, VA benefit details and contact information
Bank and financial accounts
- List of bank accounts: institution name, account type, last four digits. You rarely need full account numbers, but knowing where accounts are held is essential.
- Investment and retirement accounts: brokerage accounts, IRAs, CDs, 401(k) rollovers
- Pension details: administrator contact and monthly benefit amount
- List of recurring bills and payment methods: what auto-pays, what comes by check, what requires manual action each month
Insurance
- Life insurance policies: insurer name, policy number, death benefit, beneficiary designations
- Long-term care insurance: policy details and how to initiate a claim (often time-sensitive)
- Homeowner’s or renter’s insurance: insurer, policy number, agent contact
- Auto insurance: if your parent still drives
Property and estate
- Will: and the name of the attorney who prepared it, if one was involved
- Deed to real property: if your parent owns a home or land
- Vehicle titles
- Safe deposit box: which bank, box number, and key location
Beneficiary designations
Don’t skip this one. Beneficiary designations on retirement accounts, life insurance policies, and some bank accounts override what’s written in a will. A document review should confirm:
- All beneficiary designations are current and intentional
- Contingent beneficiaries are named where appropriate
- No accounts are payable to a deceased person
This is the most commonly overlooked item on this list, and one of the most consequential.
Once the documents are organized, the next step is staying current. CoveyFi gives families ongoing financial visibility, so you know when something changes, not just where things stand today.
Get early accessWhere to find them
- POA, Will, Trust: Attorney who prepared them, home safe, or filing cabinet
- Medicare card: Wallet, or request replacement at ssa.gov
- Bank accounts: Paper statements, online banking, or call the institution
- Insurance policies: Home files, insurer’s website, or insurance agent
- Investment accounts: Statements, brokerage websites, or financial advisor
- Beneficiary designations: Request directly from each account-holding institution
The conversation that makes this possible
Getting organized requires a conversation, usually more than one. The goal isn’t to demand documents or take over. It’s to make a clear case for why having them on hand protects everyone.
A useful frame: “I’m not trying to get involved in your finances. I just want to make sure that if something happened, an emergency, a hospitalization, anything, I’d know where to look and what to do. Can we spend an hour on this?”
Most parents respond well to that. They’ve thought about it too. They may already have a file cabinet or a safe. Your job is to know where it is, understand what’s in it, and fill in the gaps.
One afternoon of organization means you’ll never be the person standing in a hospital hallway, searching for a document that should have been in a folder. Start now, before you need it.
Getting organized is the foundation. The next challenge is staying current: knowing when something changes, not just knowing where things stand today. For some families, a shared spreadsheet reviewed monthly is enough. For others, an ongoing visibility tool like CoveyFi fills that role, surfacing changes automatically without requiring you to sit down and check statements each month.
CoveyFi gives families ongoing visibility into a parent’s finances, surfacing changes automatically so you always know where things stand without a monthly sit-down.
See how it works