Julia Kagan is a financial/consumer journalist and former senior editor, personal finance, of Investopedia.
Updated February 02, 2024 Reviewed by Reviewed by Lea D. UraduLea Uradu, J.D. is a Maryland State Registered Tax Preparer, State Certified Notary Public, Certified VITA Tax Preparer, IRS Annual Filing Season Program Participant, and Tax Writer.
Fact checked by Fact checked by David RubinDavid is comprehensively experienced in many facets of financial and legal research and publishing. As a Dotdash fact checker since 2020, he has validated over 1,100 articles on a wide range of financial and investment topics.
Unclaimed funds are money and other assets whose rightful owner cannot be located. Unclaimed funds are typically turned over to the government after a specific period of time has passed.
To claim the funds or assets, the designated owner or beneficiary must file a claim. If the property is part of an estate, the claimant may have to prove their right to it.
There are various reasons why funds and other assets go unclaimed:
Unclaimed property is property that has gone unclaimed beyond a dormancy period. The dormancy period is an amount of time after a financial institution reports an account or asset as inactive up to when the government deems that it's been abandoned. For most states, the dormancy period is three to five years.
When property is officially designated by the state as abandoned or unclaimed, it undergoes a process known as escheatment, where the state assumes ownership of that property until the rightful owner files a claim.
Unclaimed property is not taxed while it is unclaimed. However, when it is reclaimed, the property may be officially recognized as taxable income, resulting in a tax bill for the claimant. Some unclaimed funds such as investments in a 401(k) or an IRA can be reclaimed tax-free.
Not all unclaimed funds originate with the government. Individuals may have unused money left on gift cards, positive account balances with banks and other financial institutions, and uncollected sales commissions with previous employers.
Also, beneficiaries of life insurance policies and other investments are common claimants to unclaimed funds. Businesses that hold on to unclaimed property typically are required legally to attempt to locate the asset owner. But if they're unsuccessful, they may be required to escheat it to a state or local government.
Types of unclaimed property include uncashed payroll checks, securities in inactive brokerage accounts, court funds, dividends, checking and savings accounts, and estate proceeds.
Consider an example in which an individual pays estimated federal taxes over the course of a year, files their taxes, and requests that any refund be mailed to their home address.
Before the refund is processed, they move and fail to disclose their new address to the tax authority. The refund is later processed and mailed to their last known address.
To deter fraud, correspondence and payments from tax authorities generally cannot be forwarded. So, the refund check is returned to the issuer and becomes unclaimed funds.
The onus now lies with the taxpayer to contact the government to reissue the check and send it to the correct address.
New York state has reported $18.4 billion in unclaimed money in 2023. Data also show that 70% of New York's unclaimed accounts hold less than $100 (but there is no limit to account size).
Thus far in 2023, Texas has returned $344 million to owners of previously unclaimed property. That amount involves about 200,000 claims (for an average claim amount of around $1,700).
Few claims are likely to match the $32.8 million in stock proceeds that a Connecticut resident claimed in 2012.
Federal and state governments offer a variety of ways to check for unclaimed funds. For example, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) allows taxpayers to check the status of a federal refund online via the Where's My Refund portal and also offers a hotline that taxpayers can call.
However, because the online refund portal is easier and less expensive to maintain than phone systems, the IRS emphasizes that customers should only call if directed by the online portal.
The federal government does not yet have one specific system available for people to check for all unclaimed funds or property. It also does not maintain a centralized database to monitor unclaimed funds at a federal level, nor does it have information about unclaimed funds for each state.
Individuals and businesses looking for unclaimed funds will likely have to contact the appropriate state agencies where unclaimed funds or property may exist.
People can search various databases for funds that they may be able to reclaim, such as tax refunds, unpaid earnings, and money in bank accounts and investment accounts.
Unbeknownst to many individuals, most, if not all, government agencies are prohibited from contacting owners of unclaimed funds/assets by phone. Scammers understand this limitation and may attempt to defraud members of the public who aren't aware of it.
In some instances, such as with unclaimed pensions managed by the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC), the names of individuals owed money are publicly listed. A scam artist may contact these individuals posing as a government employee and offer to help secure the unclaimed funds for a fee.
A key indicator that someone is attempting to defraud is their request for a fee, a social security number (SSN), or banking information.
After a certain amount of time during which no one steps up to claim the money (e.g., in a bank account), it will be turned over to state authorities.
Usually, they're required to do so. If that effort fails to locate an owner, a bank will contact the relevant state government's unclaimed property office.
That depends on your state's escheatment laws and unclaimed property program. But normally, it's three to five years of inactivity.
Unclaimed funds are funds that have not been collected by their owners. They can be related to bank accounts, company pensions, wages, insurance policy funds, securities accounts, and more. After a certain number of years, unclaimed funds are turned over to the unclaimed property office in the state in which they are located.
Individuals can try to locate funds that they may be owed by contacting state offices and by searching various databases, including Missing Money and the National Association of Unclaimed Property Administrators.
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