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

Utah is currently holding tens of millions of dollars in unclaimed money that belongs to ordinary residents, from forgotten bank accounts to uncashed paychecks and old insurance payouts. Reported unclaimed property has surged in recent years, and Utah has a rule that makes checking worthwhile no matter how long ago the money went missing: once the state has it, your right to claim it never expires.
Information last verified on 2026-07-15. This article has not yet been reviewed by a licensed lawyer.
How Utah's Unclaimed Property Program Works
When a bank, employer, insurer, or other business loses touch with someone it owes money to, and enough time passes without any activity, Utah law requires that business to stop holding the money and turn it over to the state. This process is commonly called escheatment, though the term is a bit misleading. Utah does not take ownership of the money. It acts as a custodian, holding the property in trust so the rightful owner, or their heirs, can come forward and claim it, and Utah's statute goes further than most in spelling out that this right never runs out. The agency responsible is the Unclaimed Property Division of the Utah Office of the State Treasurer, a government office, not a private finder or collection company, and it does not charge a fee to search its records or pay back money that already belongs to you.
Common types of unclaimed property in Utah include dormant checking and savings accounts, uncashed payroll or vendor checks, forgotten utility or rental deposits, overpaid medical bills, matured but unredeemed certificates of deposit, unclaimed insurance payouts, unclaimed stock dividends, unredeemed U.S. savings bonds, and safe deposit box contents. As of late 2025, oversight of unredeemed savings bonds shifted from the U.S. Treasury's old Treasury Hunt tool to state unclaimed property offices, so an old savings bond a relative bought decades ago is now more likely to turn up in a Utah search than a separate federal one.
Reported unclaimed property in Utah has grown sharply since 2023, after running in a fairly steady range for close to a decade, a trend the state treasurer's office has cited as a reason to encourage more Utahns to search.
How to Search for Unclaimed Property in Utah
The official place to search is mycash.utah.gov, the Treasurer's own database. Enter your name and try variations, a maiden name, a nickname, or a business name you once used, since decades-old records were sometimes typed by hand and small differences in spelling can hide a match.
Utah does not participate in the multistate MissingMoney.com search portal the way many other states do. If you have lived in other states, you will need to search each of those separately, or use MissingMoney.com for states that do participate, but for property held in Utah, mycash.utah.gov is the authoritative source and the only place you will file a Utah claim.
Tip: Search under every name and address you have used in Utah, including a former last name after marriage or divorce, and check for close relatives too. Because Utah lets heirs claim in perpetuity, it is worth searching for parents or grandparents who may have lived in Utah decades ago, even if you never lived there yourself.
How to File a Claim
If a search turns up a match, Utah lets most straightforward claims be started online. You will typically need a government issued photo ID and proof of your Social Security number, such as a Social Security card or a recent tax document. Larger claims, or claims filed by an heir rather than the original owner, often require a notarized signature, a death certificate, or estate documents.

Filing a claim in Utah is free, with no fee to search and no fee to file, no matter how large the claim. Straightforward, well-documented owner claims are generally processed within a matter of weeks to a couple of months, though claims involving securities, estates, or incomplete paperwork can take longer.
How Long Before Money Becomes Unclaimed in Utah
Utah's general rule is that property becomes presumed abandoned, and reportable to the state, after about three years with no contact between the owner and the business holding it, meaning no deposits, withdrawals, or correspondence. The clock resets any time the owner has genuine contact with the holder. Once the property is turned over to the state, the timeline that matters to an owner effectively stops. Utah keeps it available indefinitely rather than setting any cutoff for when a claim must be filed.
Utah's Rule: You Can Claim "In Perpetuity"
Utah has a quirk that sets it apart from how people often assume unclaimed property works. Many residents assume that if they wait too long, the state eventually keeps the money for good. Under Utah's Unclaimed Property Act, codified in Title 67, Chapter 4a of the Utah Code, that is not how it works. Once property escheats to the state, the rightful owner, or their heirs after the owner has died, can file a claim in perpetuity, meaning there is no statute of limitations and no deadline at all.
This matters most for heirs. If a grandparent or great-grandparent lived in Utah and left behind a dormant account or an uncashed check that nobody ever tracked down, that money has likely been sitting with the Utah Unclaimed Property Division the entire time, still claimable today. Utah's own treasurer's office frames this explicitly: the state holds the property in custody, not as a windfall for the government, for as long as it takes the rightful owner or their descendants to come looking.
Watch out: "In perpetuity" describes Utah's own unclaimed-property claims, not every kind of money the state might touch. Court-ordered restitution, certain unpaid taxes, and other legal obligations can have their own separate deadlines that are not covered by this rule. If your situation involves anything beyond a straightforward unclaimed-property claim, confirm the applicable deadline with the relevant agency.
Watch Out for Scams and Unnecessary Finder Fees
Some private companies offer to search for unclaimed property and file a claim on your behalf in exchange for a cut of whatever they recover. Many of these businesses operate legally, but they are never necessary in Utah, since the state's own search and claim process is free and does not require any special expertise to use.

The Federal Trade Commission has separately warned about outright phishing scams. Scammers impersonate government agencies by phone, text, or email, claim you have unclaimed funds waiting, and then ask for a processing fee, your full Social Security number, or payment by gift card or wire transfer before they will "release" the money. Utah's Treasurer's office does not operate this way, and because Utah claims never expire, it will never legitimately tell you that a claim is about to run out.
If you get a suspicious call, text, or letter claiming to be about unclaimed Utah property, do not provide payment or personal information. Verify everything yourself directly at mycash.utah.gov, and report suspected scams at the FTC's ReportFraud.ftc.gov.
Frequently asked questions
Related articles
- Unclaimed Money & Property by State
- Utah Landlord-Tenant Laws
- Utah Divorce Laws
- Utah Power of Attorney Laws
Disclaimer
This article provides general information about Utah's unclaimed property program as of the verification date above. It is not legal, financial, or tax advice, and it does not create any professional relationship between the reader and RecordingLaw.com. Unclaimed property rules and required documentation can change, and how they apply to a specific account or claim depends on the individual facts involved. For a complex claim, including one involving an estate, consider consulting a licensed attorney or contacting the Utah Office of the State Treasurer directly.

Last updated: 2026-07-15.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Utah's unclaimed property search really free?
Yes. Searching the state's database at mycash.utah.gov and filing a claim with the Utah Unclaimed Property Division are both free. You should never have to pay a fee to claim money that already belongs to you.
How do I know if Utah is holding money in my name?
Search your current and past names at mycash.utah.gov. Try variations of your name and any past Utah addresses, since old records sometimes list a maiden name, a nickname, or a different spelling. Utah does not participate in the multistate MissingMoney.com portal, so this state site is the only place to search Utah records.
Is it true I can claim Utah unclaimed property no matter how old it is?
Yes. Utah's Unclaimed Property Act allows owners or their heirs to file a claim in perpetuity, meaning there is no deadline or statute of limitations once the property is in the state's custody, even if it has been decades.
What documents do I need to file a claim?
Most claims require a government issued photo ID and proof of your Social Security number, such as a Social Security card or a tax document. Larger or more complex claims, including those filed by an heir or an estate, may also require a notarized claim form, a death certificate, or estate paperwork.
How long does it take to get paid?
Straightforward, fully documented owner claims are generally processed within a matter of weeks to a couple of months. Claims involving securities, estates, or incomplete paperwork can take longer.
Can I claim unclaimed property that belonged to a deceased relative?
Often yes, through an heir claim, especially since Utah allows claims in perpetuity. You will typically need to show your relationship to the original owner along with documentation such as a death certificate or estate paperwork.
How do I know if a call or text about unclaimed property is a scam?
Be suspicious of anyone who contacts you out of the blue asking for a fee, your full Social Security number, or payment by gift card or wire transfer to release funds, or who claims your Utah claim is about to expire. It is not, since Utah claims never expire. Verify any claim directly at mycash.utah.gov.
Sources and References
- mycash.utah.gov, Utah's official unclaimed property search and claim portal(mycash.utah.gov).gov
- Utah Office of the State Treasurer, Unclaimed Property overview(treasurer.utah.gov).gov
- Utah Office of the State Treasurer press release, record $43.4 million in unclaimed cash returned to Utahns in FY 2025(treasurer.utah.gov).gov
- Utah Code Title 67, Chapter 4a, Unclaimed Property Act (official Utah statutes)(le.utah.gov).gov
- FTC Consumer Alert, How to Handle Unexpected Calls About Unclaimed Funds(consumer.ftc.gov).gov
- SEC Investor.gov, Escheatment (Financial Institutions) glossary entry(investor.gov).gov