Crawford County Unclaimed Property and Abandoned Funds

Crawford County residents in Meadville, Titusville, Conneaut Lake, Cambridge Springs, and surrounding communities may have unclaimed money waiting at the Pennsylvania Treasury. The Crawford County Bar Association Legal Journal publishes required PA Treasury unclaimed property advertisements each year, making it one of the county's key resources for tracking local property listings. Pennsylvania holds more than $5 billion statewide, all free to search and claim with no expiration deadline.

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Crawford County Unclaimed Property Facts

$5B+ PA Treasury Holds
1 in 10 PA Residents Owed
Free To Claim
No Limit Claim Deadline

Unclaimed Property in Crawford County, Pennsylvania

Crawford County occupies the northwestern corner of Pennsylvania, bordered by Ohio to the west and Lake Erie County to the north. Meadville serves as the county seat, with additional population centers in Titusville, Conneaut Lake, and Cambridge Springs. Residents from all of these communities and the county's many rural townships appear in Pennsylvania's unclaimed property database.

Pennsylvania's Disposition of Abandoned and Unclaimed Property Act requires financial institutions, insurance companies, utilities, and other holders to report dormant property to the state after three years of inactivity in most cases. Wages go dormant after two years. Once the state receives the funds, they remain available indefinitely until the rightful owner files a claim.

One in ten Pennsylvania residents has unclaimed money in the state system. Crawford County's population of roughly 85,000 people means thousands of current and former residents almost certainly have funds waiting to be claimed. The amounts can range from a few dollars to tens of thousands.

Note: Pennsylvania's unclaimed property law, 72 P.S. sections 1301.1 through 1301.29, applies uniformly across all counties including Crawford. Holders must report on schedule or face penalties, which helps ensure the database stays current.

Crawford County Bar Association Legal Journal

The Crawford County Bar Association Legal Journal is the official legal publication for Crawford County. It publishes sheriff's sales, estate notices, incorporation filings, court decisions, and the annual Pennsylvania Treasury unclaimed property advertisements. This last category is particularly important for residents tracking local unclaimed property.

Volume 30, No. 512, dated April 8, 2022, contained the 2022 PA Treasury Unclaimed Property Ad. The journal published this notice twice, on April 6, 2022, and April 13, 2022. The 2024 edition, Volume 30, No. 620, dated May 8, 2024, contained the 2024 PA Treasury Unclaimed Property Ad, with publications on May 1 and May 8, 2024.

The 2024 journal also published estate notices for several Crawford County residents. These included the Estate of Mary Ann Dalessio of Centerville, the Estate of John H. Frey Jr. of Meadville, the Estate of Michael W. Gravatt of Vernon Township, the Estate of Jane O'Malley of Cambridge Springs, the Estate of Vera M. Sickles of Conneaut Lake, and the Estate of Mark John Snyder of Rockdale Township. Estate proceedings can produce unclaimed funds when heirs or creditors cannot be located.

Access current and archived journal issues at crawfordcountylegal.com. Historical archives going back through Volume 30 are available online, allowing Crawford County residents to review years of unclaimed property listings.

Pennsylvania Bulletin Listings for Crawford County

The Pennsylvania Bulletin at pacodeandbulletin.gov publishes unclaimed property holder notices from across all Pennsylvania counties. Crawford County listings appear under several zip codes, including 16335 and 16388 for Meadville, 16316 for Conneaut Lake, and 16354 for Titusville.

One sample listing from the Bulletin reads: "Coursey Richard And Susan M Coursey 368 Benson Avenue Meadville Pa 16335." When individual owner names appear in the Bulletin, it means that specific account was reported with identifying information. Residents who see their name in such a listing should contact the Bureau of Unclaimed Property immediately at 1-800-222-2046.

Most Bulletin entries name the holder institution rather than individual account holders. To learn whether your funds are included in a listed institution's report, contact the Treasury directly. Staff can search by Social Security number or other identifiers not published in the Bulletin.

The Meadville Tribune, serving Crawford County from Meadville, covers local news and publishes legal notices. Find the Tribune online at meadvilletribune.com. Legal notice archives in local publications provide a secondary record of unclaimed property advertisements beyond the official Bulletin.

Pennsylvania Treasury Unclaimed Property Program

The image below is sourced from the PA Treasury unclaimed property program page, which is the central resource for Crawford County residents looking to search for and claim abandoned property.

Pennsylvania Treasury unclaimed property program page for Pennsylvania unclaimed money including Crawford County

The PA Treasury's unclaimed property program page explains how property becomes unclaimed, who is eligible to claim it, and what documents are needed. Crawford County residents can use this as a starting point before searching the database.

How to Search for Crawford County Unclaimed Money

The fastest method is the free PA Treasury search portal at unclaimedproperty.patreasury.gov. Enter your full legal name and review all results. The search covers all 67 Pennsylvania counties, so a single search with your name retrieves records from Meadville, Titusville, Conneaut Lake, and any other Pennsylvania addresses you have used.

Try every form of your name. Middle names, nicknames, maiden names, and names used during a different period of life may all be attached to different accounts. Searching under names of deceased spouses or parents can surface inheritable unclaimed property. Crawford County businesses and organizations should search under every registered or trade name.

Phone support is available at 1-800-222-2046. Email inquiries go to TUPmail@patreasury.gov. The PA Treasury home page at patreasury.gov provides complete guides on searching, claim documentation, and processing timelines.

Estates and Unclaimed Property in Crawford County

Estate proceedings frequently generate unclaimed property. When a person dies leaving assets that were not distributed to heirs, those assets can eventually end up in the Pennsylvania Treasury database. The 2024 Crawford County Legal Journal listings for estates in Centerville, Meadville, Vernon Township, Cambridge Springs, Conneaut Lake, and Rockdale Township illustrate how active estate activity can be in a county.

Heirs who were unaware of an estate or whose contact information changed after a relative's death may not have received their distribution. Those distributions can sit in the state system for years. An heir has no deadline to come forward and claim inherited unclaimed property in Pennsylvania.

Starting May 25, 2026, Act 50 of 2025 allows heirs to use a Relationship Affidavit to claim up to $20,000 from a deceased family member's unclaimed property without going through full probate. This is a significant benefit for Crawford County families dealing with smaller estates or situations where the cost of probate would exceed the value of what is being recovered.

Note: For estates exceeding $20,000 in unclaimed property or where ownership is disputed, a full estate proceeding may still be required. The PA Treasury can advise on specific circumstances when you call 1-800-222-2046.

Money Match and Automatic Returns for Crawford County

Act 81 of 2024 established the Money Match program. This allows the PA Treasury to automatically return single-owner unclaimed property worth $500 or less without requiring a claim form from the owner. The Treasury matches its unclaimed property records against state income tax filings to find your current address. If a match is found, a check arrives in the mail.

Crawford County residents who have filed recent Pennsylvania tax returns and have small unclaimed accounts in their name may already qualify. However, many accounts do not qualify. Larger amounts, jointly owned property, and accounts where address verification failed still require an active claim.

The best approach is to search regardless. Even if you receive a Money Match check for one account, other accounts may require separate claims. The online portal at unclaimedproperty.patreasury.gov shows all accounts in your name, including those not eligible for automatic return.

Filing a Claim for Crawford County Unclaimed Funds

After finding a match in the PA Treasury database, click the claim button to begin. The system will ask you to create or log into an account and then submit your claim with supporting documentation. The Treasury verifies your identity before releasing funds.

Standard documentation requests include a government-issued photo ID, your Social Security number, and proof of address connecting you to the listed account. Specific property types may require additional materials. Insurance claims may need a policy number or proof of beneficiary status. Estate claims need a death certificate and proof of your relationship to the deceased.

Processing times vary by claim complexity. Straightforward claims with complete documentation can be resolved in weeks. More complex situations take longer. You can check claim status at any time using the PA Treasury's online status tool. For questions during the process, call 1-800-222-2046 or email TUPmail@patreasury.gov.

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Cities and Communities in Crawford County

Crawford County includes Meadville as the county seat along with Titusville, Conneaut Lake, Cambridge Springs, Centerville, Saegertown, and many townships including Vernon, Rockdale, West Mead, and North Shenango. Search any address you have held in Crawford County when using the PA Treasury portal.

Crawford County zip codes including 16335 and 16388 (Meadville), 16316 (Conneaut Lake), and 16354 (Titusville) all appear in PA Treasury unclaimed property listings. Search your name rather than filtering by zip code to capture every possible result.

Nearby Counties

Crawford County borders Mercer County to the south, Venango County to the southeast, Erie County to the north, and Forest County to the east. Residents who have lived near these borders should also check neighboring counties. The statewide PA Treasury search returns results from all Pennsylvania counties at once.

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