Unclaimed money by state: the complete directory

Unclaimed Money by State: The Complete 50-State Directory (2026) | Free Mulla
US Unclaimed property guide · All 50 states + D.C.

Unclaimed money by state: the complete directory

Every U.S. state — plus Washington, D.C. — runs its own free unclaimed property program, and collectively they’re holding tens of billions of dollars in forgotten bank accounts, uncashed checks, and insurance payouts. Below you’ll find what each state currently reports holding, how long an asset typically sits dormant before it’s transferred to the state, and a direct link to that state’s official, government-run search site — no third-party finder fees required.

51state & D.C. programs
$70B+estimated held nationwide
1 in 7Americans estimated to have a claim
$0to search or claim, always

What is unclaimed property?

Unclaimed property (sometimes called unclaimed money, abandoned property, or escheated funds) is any financial asset that a bank, employer, insurer, utility, or other business has lost contact with the rightful owner over. Common examples include dormant checking and savings accounts, uncashed payroll or dividend checks, matured CDs, insurance payouts, stock and mutual fund shares, utility deposits and refunds, and the contents of abandoned safe deposit boxes.

Every state operates under some version of the Uniform Unclaimed Property Act, which requires holders of these assets to:

  • Review their records annually for accounts with no owner activity
  • Attempt to contact the owner at their last known address once the dormancy period is reached
  • Report and remit the property to the state treasury or revenue department if the owner can’t be located
  • File the report by the state’s annual deadline, typically November 1st

From that point, the state acts as custodian of the property — usually holding it indefinitely — until the rightful owner or their heirs come forward to claim it. States don’t keep the money; they’re legally required to return it on request, and searching is always free through the official government database.

Good to know: Unclaimed property is filed under the state tied to your address, employer, or bank at the time — not necessarily where you live now. If you’ve ever moved, changed your name, worked in another state, or inherited from a relative who lived elsewhere, it’s worth searching every state on your history, not just your current one.

How to claim your unclaimed money

  1. Search every state you’ve had ties to

    Start with your current state, then work through anywhere you’ve lived, worked, banked, or had a relative pass away. Use the directory below to jump straight to each state’s official search.

  2. Search every name you’ve used

    Try your current legal name, maiden name, nicknames, and past spellings. Property is often filed exactly as it was originally reported, sometimes decades ago.

  3. 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 filing a claim.

  4. File the claim through the official site

    Submit your claim with a government-issued ID and documentation connecting you to the property. Most states now process simple individual claims online with direct deposit.

  5. Wait for review and payment

    Straightforward individual claims tend to move fastest. Claims involving estates, businesses, trusts, or safe deposit box contents can take longer while ownership is verified.

Before you search: No state charges a fee to search its database or to release money that’s already yours. Be cautious of third-party “finder” or “locator” services that reach out offering to track down property for a cut — you can always do the same search yourself, for free, on the official site linked below.

State-by-state unclaimed property directory

Search or scroll to find your state. Amounts are approximate, drawn from each state’s most recent public reporting, and change monthly as new property is turned over — use the official link to see the current total and search your name.

51 states
State Money held Typical dormancy Official search
No state matches that search — try a different name.

Amounts held are approximate, compiled from state treasury and comptroller reports; each state’s total grows as new property is reported every year, so figures shift often. Always confirm the current amount and search your name directly on the official site linked in the last column.

Ready to dig deeper? Each state above links to that state’s official government search tool. For a full step-by-step walkthrough — including documentation tips and what to expect at each stage — see our Unclaimed Money Finder hub, or browse individual state-by-state guides.

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