OFFICIAL STATE SEARCH GUIDE

Hawaii unclaimed money search

Start your Hawaii search with the official program, then let the state's own instructions guide verification and any claim submission.

OFFICIAL STATE RESOURCE

Hawaii Unclaimed Property Program

Visit the official Hawaii Unclaimed Property Search website to search for unclaimed property.

STATE-SPECIFIC OWNER GUIDANCE

What makes the Hawaii search distinct.

The State of Hawaiʻi’s Unclaimed Property Program, governed by Chapter 523A of the Hawaiʻi Revised Statutes, acts as a public service to reunite rightful owners with their abandoned property. Owners can search for unclaimed property by name online through the official State of Hawaii Unclaimed Property Search. This program is provided at no charge to owners, ensuring a fee-free process for claiming what is rightfully theirs. Property is held in a custodial capacity, meaning the state safeguards it until claimed.

Review the official state source

A CLEAR FIRST STEP

Keep the state in the driver's seat.

Financial Foundations does not control the Hawaii program. A search result does not guarantee a recovery, and the state determines whether a claim is eligible and complete.

  1. 01

    Search directly

    Use the official Hawaii program linked on this page to look for your name, a former name, or a business name.

  2. 02

    Review the match

    Read the state portal's instructions before you provide any verification documents or personal information.

  3. 03

    Follow the state process

    If you find a possible match, submit or track the claim exactly as Hawaii directs. The state decides documentation, timing, and eligibility.

Before you begin

Before you begin

  • Start with the state connected to an old address, employer, account, or business.
  • Search more than one state if your work, address, or account history spans multiple places.
  • Use only the secure instructions provided by the official state program when it requests verification.

Need a wider search plan?

Search another state with confidence.

Use the state directory to check another state, or read the guide for a practical way to organize your first search.