Unclaimed property means personal property that has left the
possession of its owner and has not entered the legal possession of
another person. For example, perhaps you moved and left no forwarding
address, thus missing a check that was sent to your old mailing address.
Maybe you got married or divorced or in some other way changed your
name or title, causing assets that rightly belong to you to get
misplaced. Perhaps you are the legal heir of someone that has died but
the executor of that person’s estate never successfully found you. If
any of the above is true, that property is a unclaimed and is still out
there waiting for you to make good your claim to it.
By searching unclaimed property, you can find lost or forgotten assets, such as savings or checking account monies, stocks, bonds, and so on, to which you have a rightful claim. The search is totally free.
The NAUPA (National Association of Unclaimed Property Administrators) is a non-profit organization associated with state governments and treasuries created to improve the quality of unclaimed property administration in the US. The Missing Money database managed by the NAUPA collects information about all the unclaimed property that has been found by the governments of every state in the United States. This data base can be used to identify whether or not you are eligible to claim property that has so far been unclaimed in some state.
By searching unclaimed property, you can find lost or forgotten assets, such as savings or checking account monies, stocks, bonds, and so on, to which you have a rightful claim. The search is totally free.
The NAUPA (National Association of Unclaimed Property Administrators) is a non-profit organization associated with state governments and treasuries created to improve the quality of unclaimed property administration in the US. The Missing Money database managed by the NAUPA collects information about all the unclaimed property that has been found by the governments of every state in the United States. This data base can be used to identify whether or not you are eligible to claim property that has so far been unclaimed in some state.
Instruction
- To begin your search, try using the National Association of Unclaimed Property Administrators-approved national unclaimed property database at Resource below.
- Enter your first and last name as well as the two later code for a state in which you might have unclaimed assets. (Probably a state in which you have lived or worked, or held a bank account, for example.)
- Once you have your database search results, you can follow up with the unclaimed property program for that state.
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