Lebanon County Unclaimed Money and Funds

Lebanon County residents have unclaimed money waiting in the Pennsylvania Treasury system. Located in central Pennsylvania with Lebanon as its county seat, the county includes communities such as Annville, Cornwall, Palmyra, Myerstown, Jonestown, and Fredericksburg. The Lebanon County Legal Journal publishes official notices confirming that unclaimed property from across the county is held by the state. The search is free, and there is no deadline to file a valid claim.

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Lebanon County Legal Journal and Official Notices

The Lebanon County Legal Journal is the official legal publication for Lebanon County. It publishes notices required by Pennsylvania law, including annual unclaimed property advertisements from the Pennsylvania Treasury. These published notices identify property holders by ZIP code and include a direct statement that Lebanon County has unclaimed property waiting to be claimed. Property owners are directed to contact the Treasury at www.patreasury.gov or 1-800-222-2046.

Lebanon County Legal Journal official publication for unclaimed money notices

Notices published in the Legal Journal cover ZIP codes throughout Lebanon County. Areas listed include 17003 in Annville, 17010 in Campbelltown, 17016 in Cornwall, 17026 in Fredericksburg, 17038 in Jonestown, 17042 and 17046 in Lebanon city, 17067 in Myerstown, and 17078 in Palmyra. If you or a family member ever lived or worked in any of these communities, there is a real possibility that unclaimed property exists under your name in the state system.

Finding your name in a Legal Journal notice is a clear signal to file a claim promptly. The property belongs to you regardless of how long ago it was listed.

How the Pennsylvania Treasury Holds Lebanon County Property

The Pennsylvania Treasury Bureau of Unclaimed Property receives abandoned property from banks, credit unions, insurance companies, brokerages, utilities, courts, and other holders throughout Lebanon County. The Treasury holds more than $5 billion statewide and keeps those funds until a rightful owner or heir files a successful claim. Lebanon County residents contribute to those holdings each year as dormant accounts and uncollected balances are reported to the state.

The free search portal at unclaimedproperty.patreasury.gov lets you search by name, former address, or business name. It is available around the clock and reflects the most current data. For direct help, call 1-800-222-2046. Treasury staff can explain claim requirements and help you understand what documents you will need based on the type of property you are trying to recover.

The state holds your property with no time limit. An unclaimed balance from a dormant account opened decades ago is just as claimable today as something that became abandoned recently. Heirs and estates can also file claims for deceased relatives' unclaimed funds, provided they can document the relationship.

Types of Unclaimed Property Found in Lebanon County

Many kinds of financial assets become abandoned property over time. The variety may surprise you. People often focus on old bank accounts, but unclaimed property records also cover a much broader range of assets.

Common types of unclaimed funds held for Lebanon County residents include dormant checking and savings accounts, forgotten certificates of deposit, uncashed dividend or interest checks, uncollected insurance policy proceeds, unreturned utility deposits, and uncashed payroll checks. Brokerage and retirement accounts that go uncontacted also become reportable after a dormancy period. Safe deposit box contents are transferred to the state when box rentals lapse and the holder cannot locate the owner.

Estates generate unclaimed property too. When a decedent's assets cannot be fully distributed because an heir's whereabouts are unknown, those funds may eventually reach the Treasury under the heir's last known Lebanon County address. Checking under a deceased parent's or grandparent's name is worth doing, especially for families with long roots in Lebanon County communities like Cornwall, Palmyra, or Jonestown.

Pennsylvania Bulletin Listings for Lebanon County

In addition to the Legal Journal, unclaimed property notices covering Lebanon County appear in the Pennsylvania Bulletin. The Bulletin is the Commonwealth's official publication for legal and regulatory notices. It is searchable at pacodeandbulletin.gov and covers all counties statewide. Lebanon County listings in the Bulletin identify abandoned property holders by name and ZIP code across all municipalities in the county.

Searching the Bulletin by name or ZIP code can help you confirm that specific property exists in the state system before you visit the Treasury portal. Both resources should be used together for the most thorough search. The Bulletin provides historical notices while the Treasury portal reflects current holdings and allows you to initiate a claim.

Lebanon County Government and Public Records

The Lebanon County Courthouse is located at 400 South 8th Street in Lebanon, PA 17042. The county Treasurer's Office handles local tax collection and maintains financial records for Lebanon County. These records can be useful when you are building a claim file, particularly for documenting a former address or verifying property ownership connected to a Lebanon County estate.

Lebanon County public records may also include deed transfers, estate filings, and historical tax data. These documents can help you trace the history of an account or asset that has since become unclaimed property. If you need help accessing Lebanon County court or property records, the courthouse is open to the public on weekdays during regular business hours.

The Lebanon Daily News has published legal notices for Lebanon County over many years. Those printed notices represent a secondary record of unclaimed property that was advertised before transfer to the state.

Recent Changes to Pennsylvania Unclaimed Property Law

Two recent laws have expanded the ways Lebanon County residents can recover unclaimed funds without filing a formal claim.

Act 81 of 2024 established the Money Match program. The Treasury cross-references unclaimed property records with Pennsylvania personal income tax returns to identify verified matches of $500 or less. Eligible Lebanon County residents who file a state tax return may receive a direct payment without any action on their part. The program does not eliminate the need to search for larger amounts, but it automates recovery for smaller balances where the owner's identity can be confirmed from tax data.

Act 50 of 2025 raised the Money Match threshold to $20,000, effective May 25, 2026. This is a major change that could benefit Lebanon County residents with larger dormant balances. When the program expands, the Treasury will proactively return those funds to verified owners. Even so, searching now and filing a formal claim remains the safest approach for any amount above a few hundred dollars. The governing statute is the Disposition of Abandoned and Unclaimed Property Act, found at 72 P.S. sections 1301.1 through 1301.29.

Filing a Claim from Lebanon County

Begin at the Treasury portal and search using your full name. Try all name variations, including married names, maiden names, and business names if applicable. Write down the property IDs for any matches before you click through to start a claim.

Each claim requires identity verification and proof of your connection to the property. For most Lebanon County residents, this means a government-issued photo ID and one or two documents showing your name and the relevant address, such as a utility bill, bank statement, or tax record. If the property belongs to a deceased relative, you will also need the death certificate and documentation of your relationship to the decedent. Letters testamentary or an affidavit of heirship may be required for estate claims.

The Treasury reviews submitted claims and may contact you for additional information. Most straightforward claims are resolved without significant back-and-forth. More complex estate claims or those involving older accounts may take longer. You can track your claim status through the portal after submission.

If you have lived in states other than Pennsylvania, use the multi-state search tool at unclaimed.org to check for abandoned property in other states at the same time.

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Cities in Lebanon County

Lebanon County communities span the central Pennsylvania corridor between Harrisburg and Reading. Residents across all municipalities should search the Treasury portal for unclaimed funds.

Lebanon city is the county seat and the most populous community in the county. Residents from Annville, Cornwall, Palmyra, Myerstown, and other townships should also search under their specific addresses and ZIP codes.

Nearby Counties

Lebanon County borders Dauphin, Schuylkill, Berks, and Lancaster counties. If you have lived or worked across county lines, searching neighboring counties' records may uncover additional unclaimed property tied to former addresses.

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