Perry County Unclaimed Property and Funds

Perry County residents in New Bloomfield, Duncannon, Newport, and communities throughout this south-central Pennsylvania county may have unclaimed money held by the Pennsylvania Treasury. Perry County is a rural county west of the Susquehanna River, with the county seat located in New Bloomfield. Banks, insurance companies, utilities, and employers across the state report dormant accounts and unclaimed assets to the Treasury each year. Approximately 1 in 10 Pennsylvania residents is owed some amount of unclaimed property, and Perry County is no exception.

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Unclaimed Money in Perry County Pennsylvania

Perry County lies in the rolling ridges and valleys of south-central Pennsylvania, bordered by the Susquehanna to the east and the Blue Mountain range to the south. Its communities include New Bloomfield, Duncannon, Newport, Millerstown, and Landisburg. Many Perry County families have deep roots in the area, with property ties to regional financial institutions, agricultural cooperatives, and local employers going back decades.

The Pennsylvania Treasury holds unclaimed property for Perry County residents in the same statewide database used by all 67 counties. Official notices for Perry County appear in the Pennsylvania Bulletin and cover zip codes including 17068 for New Bloomfield and 17020 for Duncannon. These notices are published at pacodeandbulletin.gov and list the names of property owners and the institutions that reported the funds.

Perry County government information is available at perryco.org. The Perry County Courthouse is located at 2 East Main Street in New Bloomfield. County officials handle local tax administration, but all unclaimed property matters are the responsibility of the Pennsylvania Treasury in Harrisburg.

The Perry County official website provides local government resources and county information for residents of New Bloomfield and surrounding communities. The courthouse serves as the hub for county financial and administrative operations.

Perry County official website for unclaimed money and property resources

For unclaimed property questions specifically, Perry County residents should contact the Pennsylvania Treasury rather than the county courthouse. All searches, claims, and payments are handled through the state system, not at the county level.

How Perry County Residents Can Search for Unclaimed Property

The Pennsylvania Treasury's official search portal is at unclaimedproperty.patreasury.gov. No account is required. Enter your name as it would appear on old bank accounts, insurance policies, or paycheck stubs. Try maiden names and name variations. Search multiple Perry County addresses if you have moved within the county over the years.

Results show the name of the original holder, the type of property, and an approximate value. You start your claim directly from the results page. The claim process is mostly online. The Treasury may request supporting documents depending on the property type. A state-issued ID and one or two documents showing your address history are the most common requirements.

Phone support is available at 1-800-222-2046. The Treasury's staff can help Perry County residents search the database, start a claim, or check on a claim in progress. Searching and claiming are both free. There is no advantage to hiring a third party to claim on your behalf, since you can do everything yourself at no cost through the official portal.

Types of Unclaimed Property Found in Perry County

Perry County's rural character shapes the kinds of unclaimed property most often reported to the Treasury. Agricultural-related assets, farm insurance proceeds, and cooperative dividends are more common here than in urban counties. At the same time, financial institutions serving Perry County residents report the same types of dormant bank accounts and insurance policies found across Pennsylvania.

Common types of unclaimed property reported for Perry County residents include:

  • Dormant bank and savings accounts
  • Uncashed insurance checks and policy proceeds
  • Farm cooperative dividends
  • Utility security deposits
  • Uncashed payroll checks from former employers
  • Safe deposit box contents

Once property is dormant for the required period, the holder reports it to the state and transfers the funds. The state then holds everything indefinitely until the rightful owner steps forward. There is no penalty for a delayed claim in Pennsylvania.

Pennsylvania Unclaimed Property Law and Perry County

Pennsylvania's Disposition of Abandoned and Unclaimed Property Act governs how businesses and financial institutions across the state, including those serving Perry County, handle dormant accounts. The law is codified at 72 P.S. sections 1301.1 through 1301.29. After property reaches the dormancy threshold, holders must notify the owner, and if the owner cannot be located, transfer the property to the Treasury.

Two recent laws expanded access to unclaimed property for Pennsylvania residents. Act 81 of 2024 created the Money Match program, which automatically returns verified property of $500 or less without requiring a formal claim. Act 50 of 2025 raised that cap to $20,000, effective May 25, 2026. Perry County residents with property in this range may receive a direct payment from the Treasury once the expanded program is active.

Pennsylvania sets no deadline for claiming unclaimed property. The funds are yours whether you claim them today or in the future. Heirs and estate representatives can also file claims on behalf of deceased owners, provided they can document their legal authority and relationship to the original owner.

Official Notices and Resources for Perry County

State law requires that unclaimed property notices be published in the Pennsylvania Bulletin before the Treasury takes permanent custody. Perry County notices cover New Bloomfield, Duncannon, Newport, and other communities in the county. These notices list the names of property owners and the companies that reported their property.

Browse the Pennsylvania Bulletin at pacodeandbulletin.gov. Legal notices are also published through palegalads.org. If you find a notice for your name or address, that is confirmation that property has been formally reported and is available to claim through the state Treasury portal.

The NAUPA network at unclaimed.org connects to unclaimed property programs in all 50 states. Perry County residents who have worked or lived in other states may have additional property reported in those state databases. Searching NAUPA's multi-state portal is a good way to check all possibilities at once.

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Nearby Counties

Perry County borders several south-central Pennsylvania counties. Residents who have lived or worked in neighboring areas should search those records as well. Unclaimed property follows the last known address, so checking multiple counties is always worth doing.

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