In 1991, the American Bar Association (ABA) Commission on the Mentally Disabled and Commission on Legal Problems of the Elderly conducted a national study on guardianship monitoring and recommended steps courts could take to strengthen guardian accountability (1991 ABA study). The intervening fifteen years have seen vast changes in demographics, court technology, and adult guardianship law. These developments provide a compelling need to review guardianship-monitoring practices and assess changes since the ABA study. Therefore, in 2005 the AARP Public Policy Institute, in conjunction with the ABA Commission on Law and Aging, conducted an updated survey to examine current court practices for guardian oversight (2005 AARP survey). This Article presents the 2005 survey findings.