$1.4 Billion: The Amount of Unclaimed Money Held by the State of New York Alone Making It the Largest Holder in the Nation

New York's actual unclaimed funds holdings exceed $6 billion—far more than the commonly cited $1.4 billion figure.

New York's actual unclaimed funds holdings exceed $6 billion—far more than the commonly cited $1.4 billion figure.

Most states require claim finders to get your written permission first—but illegal operators still exist.

The widely-cited 76% first-submission approval rate for unclaimed property claims lacks verifiable sources in official data.

Unclaimed dividends from multiple brokerages can total thousands of dollars in inherited estates when accounts fall dormant or forwarding addresses lapse.

Billions in unclaimed federal tax refunds sit in government accounts, with the poorest workers owed the most.

Estate attorneys' unclaimed asset recoveries vary widely; the "$7,400 average" cannot be verified, but $7+ billion returns annually nationally show the real opportunity.

Millions of renters have lost security deposits they never recovered, yet billions sit waiting in state treasuries for those who know where to look.

Over 80,000 Americans haven't claimed earned federal pensions totaling hundreds of millions in lost retirement income.

The Treasury has $26–39 billion in unclaimed savings bonds, but a viral 38% statistic about reassigned Social Security numbers cannot be verified.

Six-month processing delays are real in multiple states, though nationwide funding claims lack comprehensive verification.