Advance Directives are legal documents that allow you to make known your end-of-life care ahead of time. The state of Idaho recognizes your right to decide the terms of your own medical treatment and to assign a person to make those decisions when you are not able to do so.
Here are some important questions to consider before beginning this process:
Is this document(s) state specific? No
Does this document(s) need to be notarized? No
Does this document(s) require witnesses? If so, how many? No
Can you legally use Aging With Dignity's 5 Wishes Doc? Yes
There is a single Advance Directive form for Idaho that you can download by clicking the button below:
(Source: Idaho Office of the Attorney General)
Death with Dignity laws allow the dying more control of their death and end-of-life decisions. These laws allow terminally-ill, able-minded state residents to request and receive prescription medication to hasten their death.
In Idaho, Death With Dignity legislation has not been passed nor submitted under a House or Senate bill.
Idaho law supports the appointment of a designated funeral agent to follow through on your written personal preferences (see below) or make funeral arrangements on your behalf if no written preferences are indicated. This should be done "in the same manner as required for instruments conveying real property. . .” The Funeral Consumers Alliance suggests outlining a funeral agent in a Durable Power of Attorney for Healthcare.
The appointment of a designated funeral agent will override the next-of-kin's usual authority and let the citizen designate whom he/she wants to control the disposition of his body.
Burial expense assistance may be available to you through social security, the Veterans Administration, or through your County's Indigent Fund.
See our Financial Assistance Chart for more details.
Homes funerals, or family led funerals, are 100% legal in Idaho. Your family or appointed agent may care for the deceased and handle all your funeral arrangements and necessary paperwork (permits and certificates) without a funeral director.
Check with the National Home Funeral Alliance for up-to-date details on how to navigate home funerals in Idaho.
Personal preference laws for body disposition obligate your survivors to follow your written [or verbal] personal preferences. This often goes hand-in-hand with designating a funeral agent to follow through with your funeral or body disposition preferences.
In Idaho, there is not a law obligating your survivors to follow your personal preferences. However, we always recommend outlining your funeral preference in writing and sharing them with your designated funeral agent, next-of-kin, or spouse, giving you the best chance of having them seen through or upheld in the courts.