Missouri Unclaimed Money · Updated May 6, 2026

Missouri's Holding $1.4B in Unclaimed Money. Here's How I Help Readers Find Theirs.

Missouri's unclaimed property database holds $1.4B in forgotten money, run by Missouri State Treasurer Unclaimed Property Division. Roughly 1 in 7 Americans has something in one of these state databases. I've walked plenty of readers through the search and claim process. This guide is what I tell every one of them.

$1.4B
Held by Missouri
1 in 7
Americans Owed Money
$0
Cost to Search or Claim

How to check for unclaimed money in Missouri

Takes about 30 seconds. The state runs a free search tool at treasurer.mo.gov. That's the only place you need to look first.

Here's the order I tell readers to run their searches in:

  1. Full legal name first. Exactly as it appears on your driver's license.
  2. Drop the middle initial. The database is finicky about middle initials and sometimes hides matches if it doesn't match exactly.
  3. Try your maiden name. A lot of older records were filed under maiden names that never got updated.
  4. Try variations. Common nicknames, hyphens removed, accent marks dropped.

Each search takes 10 seconds. Worst case you find nothing. Best case there's $200 sitting under your old apartment address.

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How to find unclaimed money in Missouri (and beyond)

The state database covers state-held property only. If you've moved around, lived multiple places, or had a deceased relative in another state, you'll miss money that's sitting elsewhere. Here are the other places I check:

If you're going to check more than one or two of these, Strata's homepage runs all of them at once. Saves the back-and-forth.

One more angle worth checking (not unclaimed money, but related): there's a little-known debt relief program available to Missouri residents with $10,000 or more in unsecured debt (credit cards, personal loans, medical bills). It can lower your monthly payments and reduce the total amount you owe. Free analysis, no upfront cost, no obligation. See if you qualify for free →

How to claim unclaimed money in Missouri once you find it

Found a match? Good. Here's what comes next.

  1. Click "Claim This Property" on the result row.
  2. Fill out the claim form with your full legal name, current mailing address, and Social Security number. Yes, the state needs the SSN to verify identity. It's not stored long-term.
  3. Submit proof of identity. A copy of your driver's license or state ID handles most cases. The state may also ask for:
    • Old utility bill or lease (if the property was filed under a different address)
    • Marriage certificate (if your name has changed since the property was reported)
    • Death certificate plus probate documents (claiming on behalf of a deceased relative)
  4. Wait 30 to 90 days. Most claims process faster, but securities and large inheritances take longer.
  5. Get your check. Mailed to the address on the claim form.

Watch out for percentage-based "finder" services. Some companies offer to claim unclaimed money on your behalf in exchange for 30-40% of the recovery. The state never takes a cut, so any percentage-based fee is going straight to a middleman. If you find a match, claim it yourself. The state's free database is the same one those services use.

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Do I have unclaimed money in Missouri?

Maybe. Here's how to know if it's likely.

You're more likely to have unclaimed Missouri money if any of this applies:

📝 Brian's Notes on Missouri

Missouri State Treasurer Vivek Malek's office holds over $1.5 billion in unclaimed assets, with a record-setting $57.8 million returned in fiscal 2025, the third consecutive record year under his administration. One in 10 Missourians has unclaimed property in the database, which is consistent with the national average.

What makes Missouri's program work better than some peer states: Malek's office maintains an actively updated database with rapid name-matching tooling. Searches at treasurer.mo.gov pull current results. The unclaimed property portal is the single source. Avoid third-party sites that charge fees, which Missouri specifically warns about because there's been a history of locator scams targeting residents.

The Missouri pattern I see most: agricultural and small-business escheats. Missouri's grain belt and the Bootheel cotton/rice country generate steady streams of escheated agricultural payments. If you've worked seasonal in Missouri agriculture or have family in Stoddard, Pemiscot, or Mississippi counties, search the entity names along with personal names. The Kansas City and St. Louis metros have the corporate escheat pattern (Anheuser-Busch was a major escheat-generator before the InBev merger, and post-merger severance escheats still surface). University of Missouri-Columbia and Missouri State system schools generate the standard student-related escheats. Same playbook everywhere: forgotten apartment deposits, unused meal plan balances, parking refunds. Five minutes for a search you can do every couple years.

Lived somewhere besides Missouri?
Search all 50 states + IRS + Treasury + FDIC at once on Strata's multi-state search.
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What counts as unclaimed property in Missouri

The categories are broader than most people expect:

The most common single category I see in reader claims is utility deposits. They're small (usually $50–200), but most people forget they ever paid them.

Common questions I get about Missouri unclaimed money

How do I check for unclaimed money in Missouri?
Search the free database at treasurer.mo.gov. Type your full name, try variations (maiden name, with and without middle initial), and the search returns matches in seconds. No fee, no deadline.
How do I claim it once I find a match?
Click "Claim This Property" on the match. Fill out the claim form, submit a copy of your driver's license or state ID. The state takes 30–90 days to verify and mail your check.
Do I actually have unclaimed money in Missouri?
There's about a 1-in-7 chance you do. Missouri holds $1.4B in unclaimed property. Forgotten security deposits, old bank accounts, and uncashed checks are the most common categories.
Can I claim for a deceased Missouri relative?
Yes, if you're the legal heir or estate representative. You'll need a death certificate, proof of relationship, and probate documents if the estate is over $184,500. Search the database with the deceased person's name first to confirm there's something to claim.
Is there a fee to claim unclaimed money in Missouri?
No. The state charges nothing. Skip the "finder" services that charge a percentage. They're using the same free database you can use directly.
What happens to safe deposit box contents after 7 years?
States that hold safe deposit boxes typically auction the contents after 5-10 years (the exact dormancy period varies by state). Cash and securities are held indefinitely. Check Missouri's rules at treasurer.mo.gov.
What if I moved out of Missouri?
Doesn't matter. The state mails checks anywhere in the US. If you've lived in multiple states, search those too. Strata's homepage runs all 50 at once.

Nearby States to Check

Lived in or near Missouri? Most readers find money in 2-3 states. Check the unclaimed property database for each:

Lived in more than just Missouri?
Most people who find money in one state find it in another. I've seen readers pull money in Missouri and then find another $1,200 in a state they only lived in for a year. Strata's premium search runs all 50 states + IRS + Treasury at once. Takes about a minute.
Search All 50 States (Free) →
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