Unclaimed Retirement Accounts in New Hampshire
Forgotten 401(k)s, IRAs, pension benefits, and profit-sharing balances from former employers. New Hampshire Treasury Department — Abandoned Property Division holds retirement accounts reported by banks, employers, insurers, and businesses operating in New Hampshire. Here's how the lifecycle works and how to recover yours.
How retirement accounts become unclaimed property
Retirement accounts are an increasingly large category of unclaimed property, driven by job mobility. The pattern: a worker contributes to a 401(k), 403(b), profit-sharing plan, or pension at an employer; leaves the job; never rolls the balance into an IRA or new employer's plan; loses track of the old plan administrator; and after years of inactivity, the plan escheats the small-balance accounts. Some states have specific 'inactive participant' rules for retirement assets; others fold retirement balances into the standard escheatment timeline. The federal Department of Labor maintains a separate retirement-savings lost-and-found database for ERISA-covered plans, but plan-by-plan reporting is inconsistent — many small balances end up in state databases anyway. Pension benefits from companies that went bankrupt are sometimes held by the PBGC (Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation), which is searchable separately at pbgc.gov.
New Hampshire unclaimed-property quick facts
- Administering agency
- New Hampshire Treasury Department — Abandoned Property Division
- Finder fee cap
- 10% of recovery
- Small-estate threshold
- $10,000
- Typical processing time
- ~90 days
- Online claim filing
- Supported
- Online status tracking
- Available
See the full New Hampshire unclaimed-property guide for additional state-specific rules and history.
Examples of unclaimed retirement accounts you might recover
- A 401(k) balance from a job you held for 18 months in your 20s
- A pension benefit from an employer that froze the plan years before you retired
- A profit-sharing distribution from a company that was acquired
- An IRA at a brokerage that lost contact with you after a move
- PBGC-administered pension benefits from a company that went bankrupt
- A 403(b) balance from a teaching job decades ago
Documents required to claim retirement accounts in New Hampshire
Plan to gather these before you file. New Hampshire may request additional documentation depending on the specific claim and estate situation.
- Government-issued photo ID
- Proof of address history during the period of employment
- Old W-2s, pay stubs, or summary plan descriptions identifying the plan
- For deceased-owner claims: death certificate, proof of relationship or beneficiary status
- If you have it: the plan name, plan administrator, or original account number
How to claim unclaimed retirement accounts in New Hampshire
1. Inventory every employer you've worked for
List every full-time employer of 1+ year, every union job, every teaching position. Each could have an unclaimed plan balance. Match against your Social Security Earnings Statement (free at ssa.gov) to confirm employers and dates.
2. Search both state databases and federal sources in parallel
State unclaimed-property databases hold escheated retirement balances; the DOL's Retirement Savings Lost and Found Database holds active-but-unconnected plan accounts; the PBGC search holds pension benefits from failed plans. Search all three.
3. Establish identity and employment history
The state and the original plan administrator both need to verify you are the same person who participated in the plan. Pay stubs, W-2s, or Social Security statements bridge the connection between you-now and the plan-then.
4. Decide rollover vs. cash distribution
Recovering a retirement-account balance triggers tax consequences if taken as cash (income tax + possibly the 10% early-withdrawal penalty if under 59½). Direct rollover to an IRA avoids this — coordinate with the plan administrator and your IRA custodian before requesting distribution.
5. Plan for tax reporting
Distributions from retirement plans are reported on a 1099-R; the form's coding determines whether the amount is taxable. Direct rollovers are non-taxable but still reported. Get the 1099-R right — it's the most error-prone tax form for unclaimed retirement recoveries.
Retirement Accounts in New Hampshire — frequently asked questions
How do I find unclaimed retirement accounts in New Hampshire?
Search New Hampshire Treasury Department — Abandoned Property Division's unclaimed-property database at https://www.nh.gov/treasury/unclaimed-property/ under your name (or a deceased relative's name), or use HeirClaim to search New Hampshire alongside all 49 other states at once. The search is free; you only pay if we prepare and file the claim.
How long does it take New Hampshire to pay out an unclaimed retirement accounts claim?
New Hampshire typically processes retirement accounts claims in about 90 days for owners. Heir claims with probate or multi-state documentation can take 3–6 months.
Does New Hampshire cap finder fees on retirement accounts recoveries?
Yes. New Hampshire caps finder fees at 10% of recovery (Per N.H. Rev. Stat. § 471-C:35 — 10% cap on finder fee agreements.). HeirClaim's Full Service tier stays at or below the cap; Document Preparation is a flat fee with no percentage.
Can I file a New Hampshire retirement accounts claim online?
Yes. New Hampshire accepts online claim submissions via https://www.nh.gov/treasury/unclaimed-property/. Online claims typically process 30–60 days faster than paper.
Does New Hampshire accept remote online notarization for retirement accounts claims?
Yes. New Hampshire accepts notarizations from any US state's licensed RON provider, so you can have affidavits and claim forms notarized by video call without leaving home.
What's the typical recovery range for New Hampshire retirement accounts claims?
$200–$50,000+ per account. Smaller claims process faster; larger claims (especially heir claims) require more documentation and take longer. New Hampshire currently holds approximately $100+ million in unclaimed property across all categories.
Can I claim New Hampshire retirement accounts if I no longer live in New Hampshire?
Yes. The right to claim follows the original property record, not your current residence. If you (or a deceased relative) ever lived in New Hampshire and there's matching retirement accounts property in the state's database, you can claim it from anywhere in the US. Payment is mailed to your current address.
What's the difference between state unclaimed-property and the federal retirement databases?
State databases hold balances that have already been escheated — usually small accounts from plans that gave up trying to find the participant. Federal databases (DOL's Retirement Savings Lost and Found, PBGC for failed pensions) hold active accounts and benefits that are still administered by the plan or PBGC. Search both: balances move between them over time.
Can I roll an unclaimed retirement balance directly into an IRA?
Often yes, depending on how the funds are held. If the state holds the balance as cash (most common for escheated retirement assets), recovery is a cash distribution and rolling into an IRA requires depositing the cash into the IRA within 60 days. If the original plan still administers the account (DOL Lost and Found cases), a direct trustee-to-trustee rollover is usually possible.
Will I owe the 10% early-withdrawal penalty on a recovered 401(k)?
If you're under 59½ and take the recovered balance as cash, yes — the 10% penalty applies in addition to ordinary income tax. The penalty is avoided by rolling into an IRA within 60 days. This is the single most expensive mistake people make on retirement-account recoveries.
What about pensions from companies that went bankrupt?
Defined-benefit pensions from failed companies are often taken over by the PBGC and continue to pay benefits up to federal limits. Search the PBGC's missing participants database (pbgc.gov) — it's separate from state unclaimed-property databases and handles a different lifecycle.
Other unclaimed property in New Hampshire
New Hampshire holds many categories of unclaimed property — search broadly, since people often have claims in multiple types.
Retirement Accounts in other states
Retirement Accountscan be held by any state where the original holder (bank, employer, insurer, or business) operated. If you've lived in multiple states, check each one.
Ready to check New Hampshire for unclaimed retirement accounts?
HeirClaim searches New Hampshire and all 50 other states at once. The search is free. You only pay if we file a claim — and only after the state pays out on Full Service claims.