Forgotten bank accounts, uncashed paychecks, old deposits, insurance payouts — when companies lose track of you, your money gets kept by state treasuries. About 1 in 7 Americans has some. Most never check.
Early members get a free multi-state search — every state you've ever lived in, run for you, before public launch.
No spam, no selling your data — that would be off-brand, to put it mildly. And notice what we didn't ask for: searching never requires your Social Security number.
One search covers every state database under every name you've used — including the states that don't appear on national search sites.
Each state has its own forms, evidence rules, and quirks. We assemble the complete packet correctly the first time — rejections usually come from paperwork errors, not bad claims.
File online where the state allows it, or with a ready-to-send packet where it doesn't. Then watch its status until the money is in your hands. The state pays you — 100% of it.
Here's the uncomfortable truth about the old way: states require your Social Security number to release your money, and the standard process puts it on a paper form in the mail. We built the opposite — and we show you exactly what we hold, at every step.
Coming soon: Watch — year-round monitoring of all 50 states for you and your family, with alerts the moment new money appears under your names.
Healthy instinct. Three things to verify us against: searching is free and you can cross-check every result yourself on your state's official website; the state pays you directly — we never take custody of your money; and we never ask for your SSN to search. The letters you get in the mail fail all three tests.
Yes — and we'll never hide that. Every state runs a free claims process, and for a simple claim in one state, you may not need us. We earn the fee when you've lived in six states, the forms want notarized signatures and evidence you're not sure how to find, or the claim involves a deceased relative. You're paying for correctness, speed, and never mailing your identity documents to a PO box.
The state requires it — it's how they verify the money's owner before releasing funds. That part isn't optional for anyone. What's optional is how it's handled in between: paper forms in the mail, or encrypted once and released only into your official claim.
When a company owes you money but loses contact — an old bank account, a final paycheck, a utility deposit, a refund, an insurance payout — laws require them to hand it to your state's treasury after a few dormant years. It sits there, in your name, until you claim it. There's no deadline in most states.
We're running claims with early members now. Join the waitlist and we'll run your free multi-state search before public launch.
Join the waitlist and get your free multi-state search before we open to the public.