Your Q2 2026 Unclaimed Money Recovery Checklist
A 30-minute, six-step quarterly ritual covering every major category of legally-owed unclaimed money: state databases (all 50 states + DC), gift card escheatment, IRS TY2022 refund deadline, the DOL's new lost-and-found retirement database, NAIC life insurance locator, and eight open class-action settlements closing through July 2026. Spotlight: Treasury Hunt's $39B in matured unredeemed savings bonds.
Every 90 days, set aside 30 minutes and run through these six steps. State treasuries, the IRS, the Department of Labor, insurance commissioners, and class-action settlement administrators are collectively holding billions of dollars that already belong to specific American households — they just haven't heard from those households yet. The average claim paid through state programs is $2,080, 1 though a large share of people who check will find nothing. That's fine. What matters is checking on a schedule rather than waiting for a letter that may never arrive.
Every portal in this checklist is free. If anyone charges you a fee to search for or claim this money, walk away.
Step 1: State unclaimed property — start with MissingMoney.com
What's there: Dormant bank accounts, uncashed payroll checks, utility deposits, insurance proceeds, stock dividends, and unused gift card balances that companies turned over to state governments after 3–5 years of inactivity. Nationwide, roughly $70 billion sits in state custody and about 1 in 7 Americans has something waiting. 1 The three largest pools: New York ($18.4 billion), 2 California ($15 billion), 3 and Texas ($10.5 billion+). 4
Where to go:
- Multi-state search (49 states + DC + Puerto Rico): MissingMoney.com — one search queries most state databases simultaneously
- Hawaii only: unclaimedproperty.ehawaii.gov — Hawaii does not participate in the national database
- State-by-state directory: unclaimed.org — lists every state's official portal with direct links
Search tips that increase hit rates:
- Search every state you have ever lived or worked in, not just your current one. Property follows the address on the account, not where you live today.
- Search under maiden names, former names, and common misspellings of your name.
- Search for deceased parents, grandparents, and other relatives — life insurance payouts and old bank accounts frequently sit unclaimed after a death. One Reddit user searched under a deceased parent's name and found a life insurance payout the state listed as "over $250." The actual payout was over $30,000. 5
If you find something: File a claim directly through the same portal. Most states have gone fully digital for simple claims. Expected documentation: government photo ID, Social Security number, proof of past address (voter registration records, old tax returns, or DMV history). Simple claims under $1,000 typically process in 2–8 weeks. California requires notarized signatures for claims over $1,000 6 and has a statutory 180-day processing window that in practice runs 6–9 months for complex cases. New York processed many smaller claims automatically under its fast-track program, returning $48 million in April 2026 without requiring formal submissions. 2
| Metric | Number |
|---|---|
| Total held nationwide | ~$70 billion |
| Americans with something waiting | ~1 in 7 (~33 million) |
| Average claim paid | $2,080 |
| Median claim | ~$100–$144 |
| Returned to owners in FY2024 | $4.49 billion |
Time to claim: 2 weeks to 9 months depending on state, claim size, and documentation complexity.
Step 2: Gift card balances — check the issuer's state of incorporation
What's there: Most people's expired or forgotten gift card balances are not in their own state's unclaimed property database. Because most major US retailers are incorporated in Delaware, and because gift card programs rarely record purchasers' addresses, unused balances escheat to Delaware — not to where the consumer lives. 7 Delaware's law requires issuers to remit gift card balances after five years of dormancy. 8
To put the scale in context: Amazon carries $5.3 billion in unredeemed gift card liabilities on its balance sheet (as of December 31, 2024), 9 Starbucks holds $1.84 billion, 10 and Target $1.2 billion. 11 Industry estimates peg the share of gift card balances never redeemed at 10–19%.
How to recover a forgotten gift card balance:
- Contact the issuer directly first. Many retailers will reissue an expired or lost gift card as a customer service gesture, even without a legal obligation.
- If the card is 5+ years old: Search the unclaimed property database of the issuer's state of incorporation — for most major US retailers, that's Delaware. The New York State Comptroller's Office confirmed in January 2026 that consumers can reclaim escheated gift card funds by providing the card number or a copy of the card.
- Run MissingMoney.com as a secondary sweep — some balances do appear there.
New as of Q2 2026: California SB 22 raised the mandatory cash-redemption threshold for gift cards from $10 to $15, effective April 1, 2026. 12 If you have a California gift card with $15 or less remaining, you can ask the retailer to redeem it for cash. Fifteen states and Puerto Rico have similar cash-out provisions; California now has the highest threshold.
Time to claim: Days if you contact the issuer directly; 4–6 weeks through the state unclaimed property route.
Step 3: IRS unclaimed tax refunds — extension filers still have until October 15
What's there: The IRS estimates $1.2 billion in unclaimed refunds for tax year 2022, spread across 1.3 million+ taxpayers who never filed a 2022 return. The median refund is $686 — and that figure excludes additional refundable credits like the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC), which added up to $6,935 in 2022 for qualifying filers. 13
The standard three-year deadline for TY2022 refunds was April 15, 2026 — already passed for most filers. But taxpayers who obtained a filing extension for 2022 have until October 15, 2026 to file and claim. Under IRC §6511, the three-year clock runs from when the return was due (including extensions). 14 After that date, unclaimed TY2022 refunds become property of the U.S. Treasury permanently with no appeal.
Two additional windows still open:
- TY2023: Deadline April 15, 2027
- TY2024: Deadline April 15, 2028
Kwong v. United States — COVID-era penalty refunds, deadline July 10, 2026: A federal case challenges IRS assessments of penalties and interest during the COVID-19 federal disaster period (January 20, 2020 – May 11, 2023). The Taxpayer Advocate Service has stated that tens of millions of taxpayers may be eligible for refunds or abatement of late-filing and estimated-tax penalties from that window. 15 This relief is not automatic. Taxpayers must file Form 843 (Claim for Refund and Request for Abatement) by July 10, 2026. The IRS does not currently accept the court's ruling and the case remains in litigation. The Taxpayer Advocate recommends filing a protective claim anyway: write "Protective Refund Claim under Kwong" at the top of Form 843, provide as much detail as possible about the penalties involved, and send it via certified mail with return receipt. Form 843 cannot be e-filed — paper only.
How to file if you never filed your 2022 return (extension filers only):
- Submit a late original Form 1040 for 2022. There is no penalty for filing late when a refund is owed. 16 You'll need W-2s and 1099s; if those are lost, request a Wage and Income Transcript via IRS.gov/account.
- If you filed but missed a credit: submit Form 1040-X (amended return). E-filing is available for the current and two prior years. Processing takes 8–16 weeks.
One important caveat: If 2023 or 2024 returns are also unfiled, the IRS may hold your 2022 refund until those are filed. Refunds can also be offset against outstanding federal debts, child support arrears, or defaulted federal student loans.
Estimated payout range: $686 median for unfiled 2022 returns; significantly higher for filers who missed refundable credits.
Time to claim: E-filed original returns typically in 21 days; amended returns 8–16 weeks.
Step 4: Orphaned 401(k)s — the DOL's lost-and-found database is live
What's there: A September 2025 study by Capitalize and Boston College found 31.9 million forgotten 401(k) accounts holding $2.1 trillion in assets — an average balance of $66,691 per forgotten account, up nearly 30% from the 2023 estimate. 17 Every job change is a potential orphaned account. If you've changed employers at any point in the past 15 years, run this search.
The three free tools:
| Tool | What it finds | URL |
|---|---|---|
| DOL Retirement Savings Lost and Found | Private-sector DC and DB plans; launched December 2024 per SECURE 2.0 Act; requires Login.gov identity verification | lostandfound.dol.gov |
| National Registry of Unclaimed Retirement Benefits | Private non-profit database; SSN-based search across DC and DB plans | unclaimedretirementbenefits.com |
| PBGC (pension plans only) | Terminated defined-benefit plans absorbed by the federal guarantee corporation | pbgc.gov/workers-retirees/find-unclaimed-retirement-benefits |
The DOL database went live in late December 2024 and had 236,269 unique users by early February 2026. 18 Data submission remains voluntary, so coverage is incomplete — a miss here does not mean an account doesn't exist.
If the databases miss it — the EIN / Form 5500 method:
- Find your old W-2 from that employer. Box b shows the Employer Identification Number (EIN).
- No W-2? Request a Wage and Income Transcript at IRS.gov/account — it lists every EIN that reported wages in your name.
- Search efast.dol.gov/5500Search by employer name or EIN.
- Form 5500 filings list the plan administrator's name and phone number.
- Call the administrator, confirm your account, and initiate a rollover to your current IRA or a new IRA.
A SECURE 2.0 detail worth knowing: Since January 2024, if your old account balance was between $1,000 and $7,000 and you left without giving rollover instructions, your former employer was permitted to automatically roll it into a default IRA — likely a low-yield money-market account. 19 Balances under $1,000 could have been cashed out by check to your last known address (with 20% withheld for taxes). If you received an unexpected check years ago from an old plan administrator and didn't cash it, that may have been your retirement balance.
Time to claim: Minutes to hours if records are in order; days to weeks if documentation needs reconstruction. Once found, direct rollover transfers typically close in 2–3 business days.
Step 5: Life insurance and pension benefits — two paths, one form
What's there: Unclaimed life insurance proceeds accumulate when beneficiaries don't know a policy existed, the insured moved without updating the insurer, or a parent or grandparent bought a policy decades ago that no one in the family knew about. The NAIC Life Insurance Policy Locator has matched $13.18 billion in benefits since its November 2016 launch — across 611,000+ verified matches out of 1.17 million search requests submitted. 20 Pennsylvania's insurance department alone helped nearly 4,700 residents recover more than $133 million in 2025. 21
Path 1 — NAIC Life Insurance Policy Locator (free):
Submit a request at eapps.naic.org/life-policy-locator with the deceased's full legal name, date of birth, date of death, and Social Security number. Participating insurers search their records and contact you directly if they find a match and confirm you have legal authority as a named beneficiary or authorized representative. If no match is found, or if you don't have legal authority, you receive no response. Response time: approximately 90 business days.
Path 2 — PBGC (defined-benefit pension plans):
For pension plans from former employers, search the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation at pbgc.gov. The PBGC absorbs terminated defined-benefit plans and may hold benefits for you or a deceased relative.
Path 3 — State unclaimed property sweep:
Life insurance death benefits unclaimed for 3–5 years typically flow into the state's general unclaimed property fund. Run a MissingMoney.com search under the deceased's name — these proceeds regularly appear there.
Worth checking separately — demutualization proceeds:
Between 1998 and 2001, several major mutual life insurance companies converted to stock corporations and distributed shares or cash to eligible policyholders. Many policyholders never collected their distributions. Companies that demutualized include MetLife (2000), Prudential (2001), John Hancock (2000), and Principal Financial (2001). 22 If a family member held a whole-life or universal-life policy with any of these companies before their demutualization year, contact the company's shareholder services department or transfer agent (Computershare or EQ Shareowner Services). Unclaimed shares may still be recoverable directly, or may have escheated to a state database searchable via MissingMoney.com.
What you'll need to file a claim:
A certified death certificate (takes 2–4 weeks to obtain from the relevant vital records office), the insurer's claim form, and proof of your identity. Life insurance proceeds paid to a named beneficiary are generally not included in gross income for federal tax purposes. 23
Estimated payout range: Individual policies typically $2,000–$50,000; group employer policies often 1–2× the insured's annual salary.
Time to claim: ~90 business days to locate via NAIC; additional weeks to process a confirmed claim and receive funds.
Step 6: Class action settlements — deadlines closing this quarter
These are open settlements where you may qualify without having taken any legal action. The key is filing before the deadline; after that, unclaimed funds return to the defendants or designated cy-pres recipients.
| Settlement | Who qualifies | Deadline | Estimated payout | Claim portal |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Capital One $425M (360 Savings rate gap) | Held a Capital One 360 Savings account Sept 18, 2019 – June 16, 2025 | Auto — payments ~July 21, 2026 | Based on your interest differential | capitalone360savingsaccountlitigation.com |
| Beef price-fixing $87.5M (Tyson + Cargill) | Bought beef in US for personal/family use, Aug 1, 2014 – Dec 31, 2019; excludes prime, organic, Wagyu | June 30, 2026 | Up to ~$50 with no proof required | overchargedforbeef.com |
| Trader Joe's FACTA $7.4M | Credit/debit card used at Trader Joe's between March 5 – July 19, 2019 | June 9, 2026 | ~$102 per valid claim | veritaconnect.com/tj-factasettlement |
| Bank of America 7-Eleven ATM $2.25M | BofA checking account holders charged double ATM fees at 7-Eleven, May 2018 – Nov 2021 | June 29, 2026 (closed accts) / automatic for active accounts | Pro rata share | claimhub24.com/bank-of-america-7-eleven-atm-fee-settlement |
| Google Android $135M (cellular data) | Android device + cellular plan since Nov 12, 2017 — CA residents excluded | May 29, 2026 (select payment method) | Capped at $100; likely much less | federalcellularclassaction.com |
| Fidelity data breach $2.5M | Notified individuals from Fidelity's August 2024 breach (~77,000 affected) | July 27, 2026 | Up to $5,000 documented losses, or ~$100 flat | fidelitydatasettlement.com |
| Toyota Camry HVAC | California residents only: 2012–2015 Camry XV50 owners/lessees as of May 31, 2024 | May 31, 2026 | $100+ | Search "Toyota Camry HVAC settlement" |
| GSK Boostrix vaccine | New York residents only | June 8, 2026 | Up to $50, no proof needed | Search "GSK Boostrix settlement claim form" |
Where to prioritize your time: The beef settlement is the most accessible this quarter — no proof required, June 30 deadline, and the qualifying window (2014–2019) covers nearly every US household. The Fidelity settlement can reach $5,000 for those who can document monetary losses from the August 2024 breach; if you were among the ~77,000 notified, that one warrants a close look. The Capital One settlement requires nothing — if you held that account during the eligible window, the check arrives automatically.
Most overlooked this quarter: Treasury Hunt — $39 billion in forgotten savings bonds
Go to treasurydirect.gov/savings-bonds/treasury-hunt and enter a Social Security number. The tool returns any matured, unredeemed U.S. savings bonds registered under that SSN. 29
Approximately $39 billion in matured savings bonds remain unredeemed. Most are Series E and EE paper bonds purchased between the 1950s and 1990s — bought at banks, through employer payroll-savings programs, or given as gifts for birthdays and graduations — and simply never cashed. The Treasury has issued more than 6.8 billion paper bonds since 1935, and roughly 1% of all matured bonds remain uncashed.
This tool is especially worth running for older family members. If a bond is lost, stolen, or destroyed, FS Form 1048 (available at TreasuryDirect.gov) can be filed to request a replacement. The government maintains records going back decades and will still pay on a matured bond regardless of when the owner comes forward.
Tell three family members
Most of the money on this list belongs to older relatives — parents, grandparents, aunts and uncles — who don't know these databases exist and wouldn't know where to begin. A brief conversation explaining these six steps, or walking through MissingMoney.com together on a phone call, takes about ten minutes and could surface a check they didn't know was coming.
Three things specifically worth forwarding to family members:
- State unclaimed property: Search their full name (and maiden name) at MissingMoney.com.
- Life insurance demutualization: If they held a whole-life or universal-life policy with MetLife, Prudential, John Hancock, or Principal Financial before 2001, it's worth a call to shareholder services.
- Treasury Hunt: Enter their SSN at treasuryhunt.gov. Paper savings bonds from that generation are exactly what the tool was built to find.
This checklist runs every 90 days. New property is reported to state programs annually, so something absent last October may appear in July. Set a calendar reminder for the first week of the next quarter — and run it again.
参考ソース
- 1How to check if you're owed a share of $70 billion in unclaimed assets
- 2DiNapoli: Fast-Track Payment Program Returns $48 Million in Unclaimed Funds
- 3More than $15B sits unclaimed in California
- 4States hold billions in unclaimed funds: Are you owed any?
- 5Always check your state's unclaimed property websites
- 6Contact the Unclaimed Property Division — California State Controller
- 76 Keys to Understanding Gift Card Escheatment
- 8Delaware Code Title 12, Chapter 11 — Unclaimed Property
- 9Amazon.com, Inc. 2024 Form 10-K
- 10Starbucks Reports Q4 and Full Fiscal Year 2025 Results
- 11Target Corporation Annual Report 2025 Form 10-K
- 12California Raises Gift Card Cash-Out Threshold to $15
- 13Time is running out to claim $1.2 billion in refunds for tax year 2022 (IR-2026-37)
- 14Refund Statute Expiration Date (RSED)
- 15Tens of Millions of Taxpayers May Be Eligible for Refunds
- 16Help clients claim $1.2 billion in unclaimed refunds
- 17The True Cost of Forgotten 401(k) Accounts (2025)
- 18Retirement savings 'lost and found' helps locate old 401(k)s, pensions
- 19SECURE Act 2.0 Update — Involuntary Cash-Out Limit to $7,000
- 20NAIC Life Insurance Policy Locator Tool Helps Consumers Connect with More Than $13 Billion in Benefits
- 21PID Returns nearly $133 Million to Pennsylvania Families and Consumers in 2025
- 22Claim Life Insurance Demutualization Compensation
- 23How to Find Out If Someone Had Life Insurance
- 24Judge approves $425 million Capital One settlement
- 25Google Owes Android Users $135M
- 26Class action settlements closing in May and June 2026
- 27$7.4M Trader Joe's FACTA class action settlement
- 28Bank of America agrees to $2.25M settlement in 7-Eleven ATM lawsuit
- 29Treasury Hunt — TreasuryDirect
このコンテンツについて、さらに観点や背景を補足しましょう。