What Is Unclaimed Money — and Could You Have Some?
An estimated $125 billion in unclaimed money is sitting in government-held accounts across the United States, Australia, the United Kingdom, and Canada alone. Most of the rightful owners simply don't know it exists.
How does money become "unclaimed"?
Money becomes unclaimed — technically called dormant or escheat property — when a financial institution or government body loses contact with the account holder. After a legally defined dormancy period (usually 3–7 years depending on the country), the institution is required to hand the balance over to the state or a central authority for safekeeping. The money doesn't disappear; it waits in trust until the rightful owner (or their heir) comes to claim it.
Common sources include forgotten bank accounts, uncashed cheques, security deposits, insurance payouts, wages from old jobs, overpaid taxes, court settlements, and shares from companies that have since merged or changed name.
💡 Quick fact: In the US, roughly 1 in 7 Americans has unclaimed money waiting to be returned. The average claim amount is approximately $2,080 according to NAUPA — but claims ranging from a few dollars to over $1 million are found every day.
Who holds the money?
In the United States, each state runs its own unclaimed property programme. MissingMoney.com (operated by NAUPA) searches all 50 states simultaneously. In Australia, the ATO holds lost superannuation (retirement savings), while ASIC holds dormant accounts from managed funds and shares. In the UK, NS&I holds unclaimed Premium Bond prizes, and MyLostAccount covers most dormant bank and building society accounts. Canada's Bank of Canada holds unclaimed balances from federally regulated banks.
In Europe, national central banks and regulators (Ciclade in France, Consap in Italy, DNB in the Netherlands) each maintain their own registries. We search all of them in a single click.
What about crypto?
The collapse of several major crypto exchanges between 2022 and 2024 left billions of dollars in limbo. FTX's bankruptcy estate recovered over $16 billion in assets and has distributed $10B+ to creditors so far, but many eligible claimants never registered. Mt. Gox — the Tokyo exchange that collapsed in 2014 — began repaying approximately 142,000 BTC to creditors in 2024, with ~34,500 BTC still to be distributed and the process ongoing through 2026. Checking your wallet address against our crypto scanners takes under five seconds and costs nothing.
How do I claim once I find a match?
Click the result card — you'll be taken directly to the official government or regulatory website. The claim process varies, but most are straightforward: verify your identity online (passport or driver's licence), confirm your address history, and submit. Most US state claims are processed within 90 days. Australian ASIC claims are typically processed within 60 days.
Important: always claim through the official government website, never through a third-party "recovery" service that charges a fee. In virtually every country, claiming directly is free.
How often should I search?
Financial advisors typically recommend searching once a year, and again after any major life event — moving house, changing jobs, getting married or divorced, or the death of a family member. Also search your parents' and grandparents' names: unclaimed estate assets are surprisingly common and can sit dormant for decades.