How to claim unclaimed money in Iowa
The Great Iowa Treasure Hunt, run by the Iowa State Treasurer’s Office, currently has more than $587 million in safekeeping — and returned a record $33.6 million to Iowans in 2025 alone. Old bank accounts, uncashed checks, and insurance payouts sit with the state until someone comes looking. Here’s exactly how to find out if any of it belongs to you — and how to get it back for free.
Unclaimed property ends up with the state when a bank, employer, insurer, or utility loses touch with the rightful owner. Under Iowa Code Chapter 556, most financial assets are presumed abandoned after a three-year dormancy period — wages, commissions, and utility deposits after just one year — before the holder must report and remit the funds to the Great Iowa Treasure Hunt. From there, the state holds it under your name, waiting for you to claim it.
Search the official Great Iowa Treasure Hunt database with your current and past names.
Open Iowa search guide →Common ways people end up owed money in Iowa
You don’t need to still live in Iowa for the state to be holding something in your name. Most claims trace back to something ordinary:
- Closed a bank account and left a small balance behind
- Never cashed a payroll check, vendor check, or insurance payout
- Left funds sitting in an old digital payment service account
- Inherited from a relative who held an account or safe deposit box in Iowa
- Owned stock or dividends tied to an Iowa-based company
- Had a security or utility deposit go unclaimed after moving
Step-by-step: claiming your money in Iowa
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Search every name you’ve used
Enter your last name (and first name for best results) at GreatIowaTreasureHunt.gov. Try maiden names, nicknames, and past spellings, since property is often filed exactly as it was reported years ago.
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Confirm the listing is yours
Match the last known address, employer, bank, or company name in the record to somewhere you’ve actually lived, worked, or banked before you move on to filing.
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File the claim online
Select the properties that belong to you and submit your claim with photo ID and documentation linking you to the account. Estate claims require certified death records and legal appointment papers.
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Wait for review and payment
Simple, straightforward claims can clear in a few weeks. Claims requiring probate steps, holder confirmation, or additional documentation commonly take several months.
Unclaimed property is filed under your address at the time — not where you live now. If you’ve ever moved to or from Iowa, worked elsewhere, or banked in another state, that state may owe you too.
Check every state you’ve lived in →Frequently asked questions
Is it free to search for unclaimed money in Iowa?
Yes. Searching the Great Iowa Treasure Hunt database run by the Iowa State Treasurer’s Office is free, and there is no fee to file a claim for money that is rightfully yours.
How much unclaimed property does Iowa hold?
The Great Iowa Treasure Hunt currently has more than $587 million in safekeeping. In 2025, the program returned a record $33.6 million across more than 53,000 claims.
Is the Great Iowa Treasure Hunt a scam?
No — the Great Iowa Treasure Hunt is the state’s only legitimate unclaimed property program, run directly by the Iowa State Treasurer’s Office. The only real risk is third-party finder services that charge a fee for a search you can do yourself for free.
What happens if I never claim my money?
Iowa holds unclaimed funds for the rightful owner or their heirs indefinitely, so there’s no rush to search — you can check at any point, even years later.
Ready to check? Start with the Iowa unclaimed money search guide, then use the full 50-state checklist to cover every place you’ve ever lived.