Why Governments Hold Your Money
Every state in the US has an unclaimed property program. By law, when a business cannot locate the owner of funds it holds — bank accounts, insurance payouts, utility deposits, payroll checks, stock dividends — it must turn those funds over to the state after a dormancy period (usually 3–5 years).
The state then holds that money indefinitely, publishing the name of the owner and waiting for a claim. Most people never check. Most people don't know the database exists.
The Scale of Unclaimed Property
As of 2024:
- $70+ billion in unclaimed property held by US states
- 1 in 10 Americans has unclaimed property in at least one state
- The average unclaimed property amount is $1,780
- California alone holds $9.3 billion in unclaimed funds
Where does this money come from?
- Forgotten bank accounts (checking, savings, CDs)
- Uncashed insurance settlement checks
- Utility deposits from old addresses
- Forgotten stocks, bonds, and mutual funds
- Payroll checks that were never cashed
- Safe deposit box contents
- Tax refunds from state returns
Why It's Hard to Find
There is no single national database. Each state operates its own system, with its own search interface and claim process. There are 56 separate databases to check (50 states plus DC, Puerto Rico, US Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, and Northern Mariana Islands).
MissingMoney.com aggregates some — but not all — state databases. For a complete search, you need to check each state where you've ever lived, worked, or held financial accounts. The guide covers how to do this in a single afternoon.