Oregon
Oregon Unclaimed Property: How to Search & Claim Your Money (2026)

Oregon is holding more than $1 billion in unclaimed property belonging to current and former residents, and unlike most states, Oregon Treasury doesn't just wait for people to come looking for it. Every year the state proactively mails checks to verified owners it can already identify, with no claim form required. Here is how Oregon's program works, how to search for your name for free, and how that automatic payout program works.
Information last verified on 2026-07-15. This article has not yet been reviewed by a licensed lawyer.
How Oregon's Unclaimed Property Program Works
Oregon's program is run by the Unclaimed Property Program within Oregon State Treasury. When a bank, employer, insurer, or other business (a holder) loses contact with someone it owes money to and can't locate them after a set period of inactivity, state law requires the holder to report that property and turn it over to Treasury rather than keep it. That handoff is called escheatment.
As in nearly every other state, Oregon's escheatment is custodial, not permanent. Treasury holds the property in trust, not as state revenue, and you or your heirs can file a claim to recover it at essentially any time. The program moved from the Oregon Department of State Lands to Oregon State Treasury on July 1, 2021, under 2019's Senate Bill 454. The same team kept running it, and the search portal address, unclaimed.oregon.gov, didn't change, but if you find older references online pointing to the Department of State Lands, that's outdated.
How to Search for Your Unclaimed Property in Oregon
Start at the state's official database, unclaimed.oregon.gov, and search using your name, including any past names or old addresses. If you've lived, worked, or banked outside Oregon, it's also worth checking MissingMoney.com, the free multi-state search tool sponsored by NAUPA, since Oregon participates in that network too. Either way, unclaimed.oregon.gov remains the authoritative source for anything Oregon itself is holding, and claims can be filed there online at any time.
Oregon's Checks Without Claims Program
Oregon takes a more proactive approach than most states. Through an initiative called Checks Without Claims, Treasury periodically cross-references its unclaimed property records against other verified data to confirm who owns a given account, then mails a check directly to that person, without requiring them to search or file a claim first. It's essentially Oregon's own version of the automatic small-claim payouts other states have started rolling out.

The program has grown into an annual event. In 2023, Treasury's push returned more than $10 million to over 18,000 people. In 2024, it distributed roughly another $10 million to a similar number of recipients. In 2025, Oregon State Treasury announced it was proactively returning about $11 million to more than 20,000 people, with individual checks ranging from $50 to $10,000.
Checks Without Claims only covers property Treasury can already match to a verified current owner. If your name doesn't come up in one of these mailings, that doesn't mean you have nothing waiting. It's still worth searching unclaimed.oregon.gov directly, since the program doesn't cover every account the state holds.
Tip: If you receive a letter or check from Oregon State Treasury referencing Checks Without Claims, it's not a scam. You can verify it directly by calling Treasury's Unclaimed Property Program or visiting unclaimed.oregon.gov before cashing anything you're unsure about.
How to File a Claim in Oregon
For property Checks Without Claims doesn't already cover, filing directly with Treasury is free. The general process:
- Search unclaimed.oregon.gov and confirm a match under your name.
- Start a claim through the online portal, available 24/7.
- Verify your identity, typically with a government-issued photo ID and your Social Security number.
- Provide documentation connecting you to the property if requested, such as an old bank statement or address history.
- Submit the claim and wait for Treasury to review it and issue payment.
Oregon doesn't publish a single guaranteed turnaround time, and the program notes there's no deadline to file, so you can search and claim whenever it's convenient. Claims tied to a deceased owner's estate, a business entity, or securities typically take longer because more documentation is required.
Dormancy Period in Oregon
Oregon's default dormancy period is 3 years of owner inactivity for most tangible and intangible property. A number of property types run on different schedules under Oregon's unclaimed property rules: utility deposits and property distributable during a business dissolution are presumed abandoned after 1 year; safe deposit box contents, court-held or government-held funds, life and endowment insurance policies, and property held in a fiduciary capacity after 2 years; money orders after 7 years; and traveler's checks after 15 years. Once the applicable period passes and the holder can't locate the owner, the property gets reported and turned over to the state.
Avoiding Unclaimed Property Scams
Two different things get grouped together under unclaimed money scams, and it helps to tell them apart. Paid finder or asset recovery services, which search for and file a claim on your behalf for a cut of the money, are generally legal businesses. They're never necessary in Oregon, since the state's own search and claim process at unclaimed.oregon.gov is completely free, and Treasury sometimes mails checks proactively with no claim required at all.

The real danger is outright fraud: unsolicited calls, texts, or emails claiming to be from a government agency, saying you have unclaimed funds waiting, and asking you to pay an upfront processing or release fee, or hand over sensitive personal information before they'll send it. The Federal Trade Commission warns this is a common scam pattern and that no legitimate government agency demands payment before releasing money it already owes you. If you receive a message like this, don't click any link. Go directly to unclaimed.oregon.gov and, if you believe you've been targeted, report it at ReportFraud.ftc.gov.
Frequently asked questions
Related articles
- Unclaimed Money & Property by State
- Oregon Landlord-Tenant Laws
- Oregon Divorce Laws
- Oregon Power of Attorney Laws
Disclaimer
This article provides general information about how Oregon's unclaimed property program works as of the verification date above. It is not legal advice and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Program rules, dormancy periods, and processing times can change; verify current details directly with Oregon State Treasury's Unclaimed Property Program before relying on any figure here.

Last updated: 2026-07-15.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is it really free to search for unclaimed property in Oregon?
Yes. Searching unclaimed.oregon.gov and filing a claim directly with Oregon State Treasury costs nothing. You should never need to pay anyone to search for or release money that's already legally yours.
What is Checks Without Claims?
It's an Oregon State Treasury program that proactively mails checks to verified property owners without requiring them to file a claim. In 2025, it returned about $11 million to more than 20,000 people.
How much unclaimed property is Oregon currently holding?
Oregon State Treasury has reported holding more than $1 billion in unclaimed property belonging to current and former residents.
Is there a deadline to claim my property once Oregon has it?
No. Oregon's unclaimed property program is custodial, meaning Treasury holds property in trust indefinitely. You or your heirs can generally file a claim at any time.
What is the dormancy period in Oregon?
It depends on the property type. Most property defaults to 3 years of inactivity, but utility deposits and business-dissolution property are 1 year, safe deposit boxes and several other categories are 2 years, money orders are 7 years, and traveler's checks are 15 years.
Why do some sources say Oregon's unclaimed property program is run by the Department of State Lands?
That's outdated. The program moved from the Department of State Lands to Oregon State Treasury on July 1, 2021, under Senate Bill 454. The search portal, unclaimed.oregon.gov, stayed the same.
Is paying a company to find my unclaimed money in Oregon a scam?
Not necessarily. Licensed finder services are legal, but they're never required, since Oregon's own process is free. It becomes a scam if you're asked to pay an upfront fee before any money is found, or if the contact impersonates a government agency and pressures you with a fake deadline.
What documents do I need to file a claim in Oregon?
At minimum, expect to verify your identity with a government-issued photo ID and your Social Security number. Larger or more complex claims, including those involving a deceased owner's estate, commonly require additional documents such as a death certificate or estate paperwork.
Sources and References
- Oregon Unclaimed Property, official State Treasury search and claim portal(unclaimed.oregon.gov).gov
- Oregon State Treasury, Unclaimed Property program page(oregon.gov).gov
- Oregon State Treasury newsroom, Treasury Proactively Returning $11 Million in Unclaimed Funds to Oregonians (2025)(apps.oregon.gov).gov
- Oregon Revised Statutes Chapter 98, Uniform Disposition of Unclaimed Property Act(oregonlegislature.gov).gov
- NAUPA / unclaimed.org, official multi-state unclaimed property consumer information site(unclaimed.org)
- FTC Consumer Advice, How to handle unexpected calls about unclaimed funds(consumer.ftc.gov).gov