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    For adult children of aging parents

    Helping a parent get organised, gently

    Many adult children find themselves quietly carrying the worry of an aging parent's affairs. This pathway is a calm framework for moving the conversation along, without taking it over.

    Written by When I Am Gone editorial, Editorial teamReviewed by Sean, Reviewing adviser (CFP®)
    Published: 18 April 2026Last reviewed: 18 April 2026

    What to think about now

    Start with respect. Your parent is the decision-maker, not you. Your role is to remove friction - finding documents, asking gentle questions, listening to wishes.

    • Find out whether your parent has a current will, and where the original is held.
    • Ask, kindly, who they would want as executor - and whether they have told that person.
    • Note any retirement annuities, pensions and life policies, and the named beneficiaries.
    • Take stock of bank accounts, medical aid, short-term insurance and any property.
    • Discuss whether they have considered a Power of Attorney (which falls away if they lose capacity) or a curator process.

    Documents and decisions that matter most

    The set of documents that supports an aging parent is wider than just a will. It includes wishes for healthcare, funeral, pets and digital accounts.

    • An up-to-date will that reflects current family circumstances.
    • A clear record of medical aid, hospital plan and chronic medication.
    • Funeral wishes - burial or cremation, religious or cultural rites, who to inform first.
    • A simple inventory of bank accounts, policies and retirement funds.
    • Digital details: email, banking apps, photos, password manager.

    Conversations to have

    The hardest part is starting. A short, low-pressure conversation - perhaps over a regular Sunday lunch - is far more effective than a single big sit-down.

    • Open with what you are worried about, not what they should do.
    • Ask whether they have written wishes anywhere - and offer to help write them down.
    • Discuss whether siblings are aligned, and how to keep the eventual executor away from family politics.
    • Confirm whether they would want to live with family, in a frail-care facility, or stay at home if their health changed.

    Common South African pitfalls

    These are the patterns we see most often when adult children try to help an aging parent.

    • Relying on a Power of Attorney that automatically falls away the moment the parent loses mental capacity.
    • Letting one sibling become the de facto executor without the rest of the family agreeing in writing.
    • Forgetting that retirement-fund payouts under Section 37C may be split between dependants, not paid as the will says.
    • Discovering, too late, that the family home was held in a long-dormant company or trust no one had documented.
    • Leaving digital accounts (email, cloud photos, banking apps) without a documented way for the family to retrieve them.

    This pathway is provided for general education only. It is not legal, tax or financial advice. Speak to a qualified professional before acting on any of it.

    Curated reading for adult children of aging parents

    A short, hand-picked list of guides from the resources hub that match this pathway.

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    Trust vs will: which one do you actually need?

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    Quiet next steps

    None of these are urgent. Pick the one that fits where you are today, or come back to them when you are ready.

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    Book a paid consultation

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