How to claim unclaimed money in Oregon
Oregon State Treasury holds more than $1 billion in unclaimed funds in trust — old bank accounts, uncashed checks, tax refunds, and insurance payouts, all sitting 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. In Oregon, most types of property — including bank accounts, certificates of deposit, and investment accounts — are reportable after three years of no owner contact, while other property types can turn over in as little as one year. Once that period passes, the holder must report and remit the property to the Oregon State Treasury’s Unclaimed Property Program, which holds the funds in the state’s Common School Fund — with interest earnings benefiting K-12 public schools — until you come forward. There’s no deadline; the treasury is obligated to hold it forever.
Search the official Oregon Unclaimed Property database with your current and past names.
Open Oregon search guide →Common ways people end up owed money in Oregon
You don’t need to still live in Oregon 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, insurance payout, or matured CD
- Moved and forgot to alert a bank or stockbroker of a new address
- Inherited from a relative who held an account or safe deposit box in Oregon
- Owned stock, dividends, or mutual funds tied to an Oregon-based company
- Were the beneficiary of a life insurance policy from someone you didn’t know named you
- Left a rental security deposit or unused rebate card behind
Step-by-step: claiming your money in Oregon
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Search every name you’ve used
Try your current legal name, maiden name, nicknames, and past spellings on the official Oregon Unclaimed Property search. 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
Submit your claim with a government-issued photo ID, proof of Social Security number, and proof of your current mailing address. Including your SSN and uploading documents electronically can speed up verification. Claims over $2,500 require a notarized signature.
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Wait for review and payment
Processing typically takes 30 to 120 days depending on complexity. Larger or more complex claims, including estates, can take longer while ownership is verified.
Unclaimed property is filed under your address at the time — not where you live now. If you’ve ever moved to or from Oregon, 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 Oregon?
Yes. Searching the Oregon State Treasury’s Unclaimed Property database at unclaimed.oregon.gov is free, and the office never charges a fee to file a claim for money that is rightfully yours.
How much unclaimed property does Oregon hold?
Oregon State Treasury holds more than $1 billion in unclaimed funds in trust for their rightful owners, spanning old bank accounts, uncashed checks, tax refunds, and insurance payouts.
Is Oregon unclaimed money a scam?
No — unclaimed property programs are run directly by state government, in Oregon’s case the State Treasury’s Unclaimed Property Program. The only real risk is unlicensed 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?
Oregon holds unclaimed funds for the rightful owner or their heirs with no deadline or expiration date, so there’s no rush to search — you can check at any point, even years later.
Ready to check? Start with the Oregon unclaimed money search guide, then use the full 50-state checklist to cover every place you’ve ever lived.