Unclaimed Money in Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania Treasury currently holds approximately $4+ billion in unclaimed property — forgotten bank accounts, uncashed payroll checks, life insurance proceeds, utility deposits, and stock dividends owed to Pennsylvania residents and their families. Roughly 1 in 7 Americans has unclaimed money sitting with a state. Here's how to find yours.
Pennsylvania unclaimed property — quick facts
- Administering agency
- Pennsylvania Treasury
- Finder fee cap
- 15% of recovery
- Small-estate threshold
- $50,000
- Waiting period after escheatment
- No waiting period
- Typical processing time
- ~90 days
- Online claim filing
- Supported
- Online status tracking
- Available
How to claim unclaimed money in Pennsylvania
1. Search Pennsylvania's database
Start by searching Pennsylvania Treasury's database under the owner's full name. Include maiden names, common nicknames (Bob for Robert), and prior legal names. State databases are not fuzzy — a single-letter mismatch will hide a valid match. HeirClaim automatically tries common variations and also searches the other 49 states so you don't miss property in a state the owner once lived in.
2. Gather identity and address proof
Pennsylvania requires proof the claimant is the person (or authorized heir) named on the property. Expect to provide a government-issued photo ID, proof of your current address, and documents tying you to the address on the original record (tax returns, old utility bills, or a driver's license history). Heir claims additionally require a certified death certificate and proof of relationship.
3. Decide: probate or small-estate affidavit
For a deceased relative, the claim route depends on estate size. If the total estate is under Pennsylvania's small-estate threshold ($50,000), a notarized small-estate affidavit signed by all heirs is usually sufficient — no probate court required. Above the threshold, you'll need letters testamentary or letters of administration from the probate court.
4. File the claim
Submit the signed claim form and documentation to Pennsylvania Treasury via the official claim portal. HeirClaim generates state-specific filing packets with every form pre-filled and every signature field flagged — just notarize and mail (or we mail on your behalf for Full Service claims).
5. Receive payment
Pennsylvania pays approved claims by check or ACH, typically within 90 daysof approval. Status is visible via the state portal (online). HeirClaim's dashboard also surfaces status on claims we filed for you and forwards any state correspondence.
Pennsylvania unclaimed property — frequently asked questions
How do I search for unclaimed money in Pennsylvania?
You can search directly on Pennsylvania Treasury's official portal at https://www.patreasury.gov/unclaimed-property, or use HeirClaim to search Pennsylvania alongside all 49 other states at once. Our search is free — you only pay if we prepare and file the claim for you.
Is it free to search Pennsylvania's unclaimed property database?
Yes. Searching Pennsylvania's unclaimed property records is always free on both the state's official site and on HeirClaim. States never charge to search or to release your own money — any "release fee" or upfront charge is a scam.
How long does Pennsylvania take to pay out an unclaimed property claim?
Pennsylvania typically processes straightforward owner claims in about 90 days. Heir claims involving estates, probate, or multi-state documentation can take longer — plan on 3–6 months if the deceased person's documentation isn't already in hand.
Does Pennsylvania cap finder fees?
Yes. Pennsylvania caps finder fees at 15% of the recovered amount. HeirClaim's Full Service tier stays at or below the state cap; our Document Preparation tier is a flat fee with no percentage.
What documents do I need to claim unclaimed money in Pennsylvania for a deceased relative?
Plan on a certified death certificate, your government ID, proof of your relationship (birth or marriage certificate), proof that the deceased lived at addresses tied to the claim, and — if the total estate exceeds Pennsylvania's small-estate threshold of $50,000 — a probate court order. For smaller estates, a notarized small-estate affidavit usually replaces probate.
Can I file a Pennsylvania unclaimed property claim online?
Yes. Pennsylvania accepts online claim submissions via the state portal (https://www.patreasury.gov/unclaimed-property). Online filings generally process 30–60 days faster than paper submissions.
How much unclaimed property is sitting in Pennsylvania?
Pennsylvania currently holds approximately $4+ billion in unclaimed property, making it one of the larger pools in the country.
How do I contact Pennsylvania's unclaimed property office?
Pennsylvania Treasury can be reached at (800) 222-2046 and maintains a claim portal at https://www.patreasury.gov/unclaimed-property. For general questions about filing, the fastest path is the state portal's status tracker or a call during weekday business hours. HeirClaim includes the state's direct contact details on every claim packet we prepare so you can follow up yourself if the state asks for additional documentation.
Does Pennsylvania accept remote online notarization (RON) for claim documents?
Yes. Pennsylvania accepts notarizations from any US state's licensed RON provider, which means you can have affidavits and claim forms notarized by video call without ever leaving home. This typically saves 1–2 weeks over mailing documents to an in-person notary.
What types of unclaimed property does Pennsylvania hold?
Pennsylvania holds the same categories as every state: dormant checking and savings accounts, uncashed payroll and vendor checks, matured CDs, life insurance proceeds, stock and dividend payments, utility deposits, safe deposit box contents, gift card balances, and refunds from businesses that lost contact with the customer. The largest categories by dollar value are typically life insurance, stocks, and matured CDs.
Can I claim Pennsylvania unclaimed property if I live in another state now?
Yes. Where the claim is filed depends on where the property was last known to be held — not where you live today. If you ever lived in Pennsylvania, or if a deceased relative did, you can claim Pennsylvania unclaimed property from anywhere in the US (or abroad). The state will mail your check or direct-deposit to your current address after the claim is approved. Pennsylvania also appears in the multi-state MissingMoney.com search, so claimants who no longer remember which state held the account can find it there.
Will I owe taxes on money I recover from Pennsylvania?
It depends on the asset type. Cash from a dormant bank account is usually not taxable because it's your own after-tax money being returned. Recovered stock dividends, interest earned while the state held the property (Pennsylvania and most states don't pay interest), 401(k) balances, or life insurance proceeds tied to the decedent may be taxable as income. Consult a tax professional for anything over a few hundred dollars, and see our tax guide for a plain-English overview.
About Pennsylvania Treasury
The Pennsylvania Treasury holds over $4 billion in unclaimed property across about 4 million owner records. The program, administered under Pennsylvania's Disposition of Abandoned and Unclaimed Property Act (72 P.S. §1301.1 et seq.), returns approximately $200 million annually through the patreasury.gov portal and direct outreach.
Pennsylvania's unclaimed-property rules at a glance
Pennsylvania caps finder fees at 15% (statutory cap from 72 P.S. §1301.28a). Pennsylvania participates in MissingMoney.com, so most claimants can search via the multi-state portal. Pennsylvania is unusual in requiring holders to notify owners by certified mail at least 60 days before escheatment — a more rigorous due-diligence standard than many states, which tends to reduce the dormant-property population over time.
Filing tips specific to Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania allows online filing for claims under $25,000; larger claims require a paper packet submitted to the Harrisburg office. Processing times run 60-90 days in typical cases. For claims involving deceased Pennsylvania residents, consider whether the estate qualifies for Pennsylvania's Small Estate Act (Title 20 §3102) — the $50,000 threshold is lower than many states but still covers a majority of modest family estates.
Common mistakes on Pennsylvania claims
Pennsylvania rejects claims with missing signatures on the affidavit page more than any other reason. The claim form has multiple signature blocks and claimants often sign only the first. Second common rejection: outdated or wrong Social Security number on the claim form. Pennsylvania cross-references SSN against holder records and will reject on even small discrepancies.
Learn more about unclaimed property
Also check nearby states
If Pennsylvaniadoesn't show a match, the money may be filed in a state you (or your relative) lived in earlier. Unclaimed property is reported to whichever state holds the last known address on the holder's records.
Ready to check if Pennsylvania has money owed to you?
HeirClaim searches Pennsylvania and all 50 other states at once. The search is free. You only pay if we file a claim for you — and only after the state pays out on full-service claims.