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There May Be Unclaimed Money Waiting for You

State treasurers are holding over $70 billion in unclaimed property — forgotten bank accounts, utility deposits, paychecks, and insurance payouts. Our free guides walk you through finding yours and claiming it yourself.

$70B+Held by states nationwide
1 in 10Americans have unclaimed property
FreeThe state claim process costs nothing
No fees or commissions
No sign-up required
Official state portals only
All 50 states + D.C.

How the Claim Process Works

Four steps. No attorney required. Completely free.

1

Search Your Name

Search the official state database — or MissingMoney.com — under your name and any variations you've used.

2

Identify Your Property

Find matching records and note the property type, amount, and the original holder (bank, company, etc.).

3

Gather Documents

Collect your ID, proof of address history, and any property-specific documents. Our checklist tool tells you exactly what you need.

4

File Your Claim

Submit directly through the state's official portal. No middlemen, no fees. Most claims are resolved in 4–10 weeks.

Four-step visual guide to claiming unclaimed property: search, gather documents, track timeline, receive payment

What Kind of Property Are You Looking For?

Each property type has its own documentation requirements and claim quirks. Start with the guide that matches yours.

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Bank Accounts

Dormant savings, checking, CDs, and money market accounts transferred to the state after years of inactivity.

Bank Account Guide →

Utility Deposits

Security deposits paid to electric, gas, water, and phone companies that were never refunded.

Utility Deposit Guide →
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Insurance Payouts

Life insurance proceeds, annuity payments, and policy refunds that were mailed to an old address.

Insurance Guide →
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Paychecks & Wages

Final paychecks, bonus payments, expense reimbursements, and payroll checks that went uncashed.

Paycheck Guide →
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Stocks & Dividends

Shares, mutual fund accounts, dividend payments, and brokerage balances that became dormant.

Securities Guide →
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Safe Deposit Boxes

Contents of abandoned safe deposit boxes — jewelry, documents, coins, and other valuables.

Safe Deposit Guide →

Guides for Your Specific Situation

Heir claims, name changes, estate situations, and other circumstances that add complexity to the standard process.

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Claiming a Deceased Parent's Property

How to claim as an heir — including using small estate affidavits to skip probate in most states.

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Claiming a Deceased Spouse's Property

Surviving spouse claims, joint property, and what to do when accounts were in one name only.

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Estate Claims Without Probate

Small estate affidavit thresholds, alternative procedures, and when you actually do need a court order.

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Name Change: Marriage or Divorce

How to connect your current legal name to a prior name in the unclaimed property records.

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Business Entity Claims

Claiming unclaimed property belonging to a corporation, LLC, or other business entity.

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Foreign National Claims

How non-US residents can claim unclaimed property from US states, including document requirements.

Find Your State's Unclaimed Property Office

Direct links to every official state database — no middlemen, no fees.

Free Tools

Built to save you time and avoid the most common claim mistakes.

Claim Readiness Checklist Generator

Select your property type, state, and situation. Get a specific, printable checklist of exactly what documents to gather before you file.

Generate My Checklist
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Timeline Estimator

Enter your state, property type, and claim status to get a realistic estimate of when to expect your payment — and when to follow up.

Estimate My Timeline

Common Questions

Yes, it's completely real and administered by official state government offices — specifically state treasurers or comptrollers. The legitimate search portals are state .gov websites or MissingMoney.com, which is maintained by the National Association of Unclaimed Property Administrators. The claim process is free. Any company asking you to pay a fee to "find" your unclaimed property is charging you for something you can do yourself in minutes at no cost.

The only way to know for certain is to search. Go to MissingMoney.com or directly to your state treasurer's website and search your name. Try all name variations you've used — maiden name, middle name, nickname. Also search in every state you've lived in, since unclaimed property is held by the state where the account was established. See our complete search guide for a step-by-step walkthrough.

In most states, no — unclaimed property is held indefinitely and can be claimed at any time by the rightful owner or their heirs. A small number of states have "escheatment to state" provisions that permanently transfer certain property to the state after an extended period (sometimes 25+ years), but this is increasingly rare and typically applies only to specific property types. Don't assume urgency is required, but there's also no reason to delay if you've found a match.

File the claim anyway. The amount shown in the database may not include interest that accrues to the time of payment, and it also may be a minimum threshold (some states only display a range rather than an exact amount). If after receiving payment you believe it's significantly incorrect, you can request an accounting from the unclaimed property office showing how the payment was calculated.

Why Use UnclaimedPropertyHub?

There are a lot of sites about unclaimed property. Here's what makes this one different.

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Official Sources Only
Direct links to .gov portals
$0
Completely Free
No fees, ever
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Privacy First
No data collection
✍️
Original Content
Not scraped or templated
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All 50 States + D.C.
Every state covered
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Regularly Updated
Timelines verified 2025

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