Parents: Before Your Student Launches, Get These Legal Docs in Place
Parents: Before Your Student Launches,
Get These Legal Docs in Place

If your kid is about to head off to college, there’s one thing you absolutely need to do before the dorm drop-off and the tearful Target run: get your legal ducks in a row.
Most students are 18 or will turn 18 during freshman year. That means they’re legally adults and you no longer have automatic rights to access their medical or academic information.
If an emergency hits, and you’re not legally authorized, you could be left completely in the dark.
Here’s what you need—signed, sealed, and legally legit:
- Advance Care Directive for Health Care
- Advance Care Directive for Mental Health Care
- Durable Power of Attorney
- HIPAA Authorization Form
- FERPA Release
Let’s break it down:
- FERPA Release lets you access your child’s academic records (yes, grades too—but only if they sign off).
- HIPAA Authorization allows you to receive health info if your student is hospitalized, injured, or otherwise incapacitated. Without it? You might not even be notified.
- Advance Care Directives specify your child’s medical and mental health wishes in case they can't make decisions themselves.
- Durable Power of Attorney gives you authority to handle financial and legal matters if needed.
Now imagine this: your son’s at school, ends up in the ER, unconscious. You call for information—and are told nothing. You can’t access his records. You can’t help with care decisions. You’re locked out.
Don’t wait. If your student is 18+, talk to a lawyer or use a trusted service like Mama Bear Legal Forms to get it done affordably and correctly.
Care packages are great. But this is how you actually protect your college-bound kid—and stay legally connected when it counts.
And if you think your little darlin’ won’t do something stupid in college… well, remember your own freshman year.

