First Light / Signing Guide / Connecticut

Connecticut Document Signing Requirements

Witness counts, notary requirements, and signing steps for wills, powers of attorney, and healthcare directives — with primary source citations.

✓ Primary source citations✓ Attorney-verified data✓ State statute references
Connecticut — verified requirements

Requirements sourced from primary state statutes and verified by First Light's legal data team.

1
Sign the will in the presence of 2 adult witnesses at the same time. Do not pre-sign the document — your witnesses must watch you sign.
2
Each witness must then sign the will in your presence and in each other's presence. Witnesses must be adults and should not be named as beneficiaries in your will.
Connecticut does NOT require notarization for a valid will. Witnesses alone are sufficient.

Note: Connecticut does NOT recognize handwritten wills. Your will must be typed, signed, and witnessed to be legally valid.

What to Know

  • ·Your will requires 2 witnesses — you may sign or acknowledge your signature in their presence, notarization is not required.
  • ·If you cannot sign, another person may sign on your behalf in your presence and at your direction.
  • ·Divorce revokes your ex-spouse's bequests but may not revoke their appointment as executor. Beneficiary designations are also not automatically updated.
  • ·Marriage does not revoke a prior will. Update your will after marrying to include your spouse.
  • ·Your state has limited protection for children born after your will. If your family grows, update immediately.
  • ·Spousal inheritance protection is limited — if your will omits your spouse, outcomes vary. Attorney review is recommended for married individuals.
  • ·Guardian nominations for minor children in your will carry strong weight with courts.
  • ·Estates under $40,000 may qualify for simplified probate.
1
Sign the Power of Attorney in the presence of 2 witnesses.
Connecticut does not require notarization for a valid Durable Power of Attorney. However, notarization is strongly recommended — many banks and financial institutions will refuse to honor a POA without a notary seal.

Tip: Connecticut has an official statutory POA form. First Light's document is structured to be consistent with Connecticut's statutory requirements.

What to Know

  • ·Your POA must include explicit durability language to survive incapacity. Without it, the POA terminates at the moment you need it most.
  • ·2 witnesses required. Notarization is not required but recommended.
  • ·Springing POAs are permitted — the POA can activate only upon incapacity.
  • ·Remote online notarization is accepted.
  • ·Some financial powers (like changing beneficiaries or managing trusts) must be explicitly granted — a general POA is not enough.
  • ·For real estate transactions, the POA should be recorded with the county recorder.
  • ·Photocopies carry the same legal effect as the original.
  • ·You can nominate a guardian or conservator for yourself in your POA.
1
Sign the Advance Healthcare Directive in the presence of 2 witnesses.
2
Witnesses must be adults. Witnesses should not be:
  • Your Healthcare Proxy
  • A relative by blood or marriage
  • An heir or beneficiary
  • Your attending physician or healthcare provider
  • An employee of a healthcare facility where you are a patient
Connecticut does NOT require notarization. Two witnesses are sufficient to execute your Healthcare Directive.
After signing, give a copy to your Healthcare Proxy and your primary care physician. Store the original with your other legal documents — not in a safe deposit box that your proxy cannot access.

What to Know

  • ·A single combined document covers both healthcare agent appointment and treatment preferences.
  • ·2 witnesses required. Notarization is not required.
  • ·Your healthcare agent cannot also serve as a witness.
  • ·Wet-ink execution is required — electronic signatures are generally not accepted.
  • ·Explicitly addressing artificial nutrition and hydration is recommended, though not strictly required.
  • ·Your directive may be suspended or limited during pregnancy. Your document should acknowledge this provision.
  • ·A separate HIPAA authorization is recommended so your agent can access your medical records.

What happens if I sign it wrong?

A will or legal document that is not properly executed — missing witnesses, signed in the wrong order, or lacking a required notary — may be declared invalid by a probate court. This means your wishes may not be honored and your estate could be distributed by Connecticut intestacy law.

Some states have a harmless error doctrine that can save a defectively signed will if the court is satisfied the document reflects your true wishes — but this is never guaranteed and always involves litigation.

The safest approach: follow the signing steps above carefully, and consider having an estate attorney present at signing.

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