๐Ÿ” Locate Forgotten Bank Accounts of Deceased Family Members

How to Find Deceased Relatives’ Bank Accounts

Bank account discovery is foundational to estate administration. Decedents typically maintained accounts the family didn’t fully know about โ€” checking and savings accounts at multiple institutions, accounts at former-residence banks, joint accounts with payable-on-death designations, and accounts that became dormant before death. This guide covers the systematic methods for finding deceased relatives’ bank accounts, from tax return analysis to multi-state unclaimed property searches.

๐Ÿ“… Updated โฑ๏ธ 11 min read ๐Ÿ” 20+ years of skip tracing experience
โ–ถ Watch the 2-Minute Overview
How to Find Deceased Relatives' Bank Accounts
Watch Overview

Bank account discovery is foundational to estate administration. Personal representatives must identify all accounts the decedent held โ€” checking and savings accounts at one or multiple institutions, money market accounts, certificates of deposit, joint accounts with rights of survivorship, payable-on-death (POD) accounts that pass outside probate, and dormant accounts that may have been forgotten before death. Family knowledge is often incomplete โ€” even close family members may not know all the accounts the decedent maintained, particularly for decedents who managed finances independently or maintained banking relationships from former residences. Comprehensive investigation typically surfaces accounts the family wasn’t aware of, supporting accurate estate inventory and proper distribution.

The investigation methodology combines several approaches. Tax returns are the single most valuable source โ€” Schedule B reports interest-bearing accounts at name-and-address level, surfacing accounts that may not be visible in family knowledge. State unclaimed property programs hold dormant accounts after typical 3-5 year dormancy periods, with multi-state searches needed for decedents with mobility history. Bank death claim procedures support account discovery through direct institution inquiry. POD account procedures may bypass probate but require beneficiary identification. Direct outreach to banks in the decedent’s residence area surfaces accounts that don’t appear in tax returns or unclaimed property. This guide is written for personal representatives, family members, and probate professionals investigating deceased relatives’ bank accounts, covering each investigation channel and the documentation required for account access and distribution.

๐Ÿ’ก Why this works

Bank account investigation succeeds because accounts leave traces in multiple independent record systems โ€” tax filings (interest-bearing accounts on Schedule B, premium payments and other transactions on supporting schedules), credit bureau headers (financial relationships), state unclaimed property programs (dormant accounts), and direct bank records (when accessed through proper authority). Cross-referencing these channels surfaces accounts that any single channel might miss. The principal challenges are (1) gathering required documentation for each channel, (2) navigating bank-specific death claim procedures, and (3) coordinating multi-state unclaimed property searches for decedents with mobility history.

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DIY Approach โ€” Free Methods That Work

Six Practical Ways to Search Yourself First

Before you spend a dollar, work through these six methods in order. Each one builds on the previous. By the time you’ve finished method four, most people are already found โ€” and the last two are reserved for harder cases.

1

Tax Returns: Schedule B and 1099-INT

Tax returns are the single most valuable starting point for bank account discovery. Schedule B (Form 1040) reports interest-bearing accounts producing $1,500+ annual interest at name-and-address level, listing each account by bank or financial institution name. 1099-INT forms attached to or referenced in returns document interest income from each reporting institution. Personal representatives can obtain copies of the decedent’s tax returns through IRS Form 4506. Multi-year tax return analysis (5-7 years if available) surfaces accounts that may have been opened or closed during the period โ€” accounts that exist in some years but not others indicate opening/closing activity. Lower-interest accounts (under the Schedule B reporting threshold) won’t appear on Schedule B but may appear on 1099-INT documents.

Pro tip: Tax return analysis is particularly valuable for surfacing accounts the family wasn’t aware of. Decedents who maintained accounts at former-residence banks, accounts opened decades ago at small institutions, or accounts managed independently from family knowledge frequently appear on Schedule B even when they’re invisible to family inquiry. The IRS Form 4506 process typically takes 4-6 weeks; expedited options exist for time-sensitive estate work.
2

State Unclaimed Property Programs

State unclaimed property programs hold dormant bank accounts after typical 3-5 year dormancy periods. Investigation includes (1) NAUPA aggregator search through unclaimed.org covering most state programs, (2) individual state searches for current and former residence states, employer states, and business connection states, and (3) state-specific procedures for non-NAUPA states (Delaware, California, and a few others maintain separate or partial programs). Recovery requires personal representative authority: identification, death certificate, probate appointment documentation, and state-specific claim form. For decedents with multiple state connections, comprehensive investigation surfaces dormant accounts in unexpected jurisdictions โ€” accounts in former residence states are particularly common.

Pro tip: Multi-state unclaimed property searches should be standard practice for every decedent estate โ€” not just for decedents with known multi-state connections. Current and former residence states, employer states, and business connection states all generate potential unclaimed accounts. NAUPA’s unclaimed.org provides efficient multi-state search interface for most participating states; direct state queries cover non-participating jurisdictions.
3

Bank Death Claim Procedures

Banks have established procedures for handling deceased account holders. Standard procedures include (1) freezing the account upon notification of death, (2) requiring death certificate and personal representative documentation before any access, (3) processing account access requests through deceased estates department or specialized teams, and (4) following specific procedures for joint accounts, POD designations, and trust accounts. Account access procedures typically require certified death certificate, letters testamentary or administration appointment from probate court, identification verifying the personal representative, and bank-specific forms. Multiple-bank investigation requires repeating the procedures for each institution. For dormant accounts already escheated to state unclaimed property, the bank typically directs personal representatives to the relevant state’s unclaimed property program rather than maintaining account records.

Pro tip: Bank death claim procedures vary by institution but generally follow consistent patterns. Sophisticated personal representatives prepare standard documentation packages (death certificate copies, letters testamentary, identification) supporting efficient processing across multiple banks. Wells Fargo, Chase, Bank of America, and other major banks typically have streamlined procedures; smaller community banks may have more variable processes.
4

POD Account Procedures and Joint Account Survivorship

Payable-on-death (POD) accounts name a beneficiary who receives account funds directly upon the holder’s death โ€” typically bypassing probate. POD account procedures include (1) beneficiary identification and notification, (2) beneficiary providing death certificate and identification to the bank, (3) bank releasing funds directly to beneficiary upon documentation review, and (4) bank reporting transfer to relevant tax authorities. Joint accounts with rights of survivorship typically pass to the surviving joint owner outside probate โ€” though tax treatment and Medicaid implications may apply. Investigation challenges: POD accounts and joint accounts with survivorship don’t appear in probate inventory but should be identified for complete estate administration and tax planning.

Pro tip: POD designations are commonly used as estate planning tools but produce coordination challenges with overall estate plans. POD funds passing directly to named beneficiaries may unbalance the testamentary distribution intended by the decedent’s will. Sophisticated probate practice identifies all POD designations and coordinates with attorney for any rebalancing among heirs and beneficiaries.
5

Mail, USPS Forwarding, and Incoming Statements

Mail forwarding and incoming statements reveal banking relationships not visible in other channels. Methods include (1) USPS National Change of Address forwarding for incoming bank statements, (2) review of mail accumulating at the decedent’s address before forwarding setup, (3) systematic mail review for several months after death to capture monthly and annual statements, and (4) safe deposit box renewal notices that surface previously unknown box rentals. Mail-based discovery is particularly valuable for accounts with infrequent statement frequency (annual statements only, dormant accounts with only annual notices, retirement-related accounts with quarterly statements). The discovery channel requires multi-month review โ€” single-month review misses annual-cycle communications.

Pro tip: Personal representatives can establish mail forwarding to themselves through USPS procedures with proper documentation. Continued mail review for at least 6-12 months after death surfaces accounts and relationships not visible in other channels. Annual cycle communications (year-end statements, tax forms, annual policy notices) appear once yearly and can be missed in shorter review periods.
6

Direct Outreach to Local Banks

Direct outreach to local banks in the decedent’s residence area surfaces accounts that don’t appear in other channels. Methods include (1) systematic inquiries to all banks within reasonable distance of the decedent’s residences (current and former), (2) inquiries to banks with which the decedent had known relationships (accounts, mortgages, loans), (3) inquiries to banks at decedent’s employer locations (some employees use employer-area banks), and (4) state-by-state inquiries for decedents with multi-state residence history. Each inquiry requires proper documentation: certified death certificate, personal representative documentation, and identification. Bank responses vary โ€” some respond quickly with account confirmation or denial; others require extended processing time.

Pro tip: Direct outreach is most valuable for decedents with limited tax return history, decedents who maintained accounts at small community banks not always visible in commercial databases, or decedents whose tax returns may have understated banking relationships. Sophisticated investigation systematizes the outreach process โ€” preparing standard documentation packages supporting efficient processing across multiple inquiries.

Methodical bank account investigation through multiple channels surfaces accounts the family wasn’t fully aware of, supporting accurate estate inventory and proper distribution. For related guidance, see find deceased person’s assets, how to find deceased person’s assets, and how to locate life insurance policy of deceased.

When Free Methods Run Out

Why DIY Searches Hit a Wall โ€” and What to Do Next

Several bank account investigation situations require special attention:

  • Decedents who managed finances independently from family. When the surviving family had limited knowledge of the decedent’s finances, investigation must be more comprehensive. Tax returns become particularly important; multi-state unclaimed property searches surface accounts in unexpected jurisdictions; direct bank outreach in residence areas catches accounts at smaller institutions.
  • Multi-state residence history. Decedents who lived in multiple states during their lifetime may have accounts at banks in former residence states. Investigation should include former residence states for direct bank outreach and unclaimed property searches. Some accounts may have been forgotten by the decedent themselves and never closed when the decedent moved.
  • Accounts already escheated to unclaimed property. Accounts that became dormant during the decedent’s lifetime may already be in state unclaimed property programs at death. Investigation must include unclaimed property channels even when bank-direct inquiries return no current account information.

โš ๏ธ Donโ€™t rely on family knowledge alone

Family knowledge of the decedent’s bank accounts is often incomplete โ€” even close family members may not know all the accounts the decedent maintained. Comprehensive investigation through tax returns, unclaimed property, and direct bank outreach surfaces accounts that family inquiry alone would miss. Skipping comprehensive investigation can leave dormant accounts unclaimed (eventually escheating to state programs) and produce inventory accuracy problems if accounts surface later. The investigation cost is typically modest relative to the account values typically surfaced.

When investigation produces complete results, estate administration can proceed with accurate inventory and proper distribution. Find deceased person’s assets covers the broader investigation framework.

Side-by-Side Comparison

DIY vs. Free People Search Sites vs. Professional Skip Tracing

How bank account investigation approaches compare:

Factor DIY (Free) “Free” People Search Sites Professional Skip Tracing
Tax return Schedule B analysisForm 4506IRS accessMulti-year systematic
NAUPA unclaimed propertyunclaimed.orgFree serviceMulti-state systematic
Non-NAUPA state searchesTime-intensiveState-by-stateCoordinated
Bank death claim proceduresIf known accountsN/AMulti-bank coordinated
POD account discoveryIf known beneficiaryN/AComprehensive
Mail-based discoveryFamily accessN/AMulti-month systematic
Direct local-bank outreachTime-intensiveN/ASystematic
Documentation supporting inventorySelf-preparedN/AInvestigator affidavit

For straightforward cases with cooperative records and known starting points, DIY investigation through tax returns and unclaimed property programs often produces comprehensive results. For complex cases (multi-state history, decedents who managed finances independently, or cases requiring extensive documentation), professional investigation accelerates and supports complete discovery.

๐ŸŽฏ Professional Bank Account Discovery for Decedent Estates

Multi-year tax return analysis, comprehensive multi-state unclaimed property searches, bank death claim coordination, POD account discovery, and direct local-bank outreach. We support personal representatives, family members, and probate attorneys with comprehensive bank account investigation.

If You Order a Skip Trace

What Happens After You Submit a Search

Typical bank account investigation workflow:

Tax return retrieval and analysis

Submit IRS Form 4506 for multi-year tax return retrieval. Analyze returns for Schedule B reporting and 1099-INT documentation showing interest-bearing accounts at name-and-address level. Multi-year analysis surfaces accounts opened or closed during the period.

Multi-state unclaimed property search

NAUPA aggregator search across participating states. Direct queries to non-participating state programs (Delaware, California, others). Comprehensive coverage of current and former residence states, employer states, and business connection states.

Bank death claim coordination

Direct outreach to banks identified through tax returns, family knowledge, and other channels. Standard documentation packages (certified death certificate, letters testamentary, identification) supporting efficient processing across multiple institutions.

POD and joint account discovery

Systematic identification of payable-on-death designations and joint account arrangements. Coordination with named beneficiaries for POD account procedures. Documentation supporting accurate estate inventory and any tax planning implications.

Mail review and direct local-bank outreach

Multi-month mail review surfacing accounts not visible in other channels. Direct outreach to local banks in current and former residence areas for decedents with limited tax return history or multi-state residence patterns.

Common Reasons People Search

Who Reaches Out About This

Bank account investigation comes up in distinct contexts:

โš–๏ธ Standard Probate Estate Administration

Most common context. Personal representative needs comprehensive bank account inventory for court filings, tax returns, creditor claim resolution, and beneficiary distribution.

๐Ÿ‘จโ€๐Ÿ‘ฉโ€๐Ÿ‘ง Family Personal Representative Support

Family members serving as executor or administrator often have limited financial knowledge of the decedent’s banking relationships. Professional investigation supplements family knowledge.

๐Ÿ“‹ Suspected Hidden or Forgotten Accounts

When family members believe the decedent had accounts beyond what’s been disclosed, investigation surfaces forgotten or unknown accounts. Tax return analysis is particularly valuable.

๐ŸŒ Multi-State Residence History

Decedents with multi-state residence history may have accounts at former-state banks. Investigation in former residence states supports discovery of accounts the decedent may have forgotten.

๐Ÿ’ฐ Estate Tax Filing Preparation

Federal estate tax (Form 706) requires comprehensive asset reporting including all bank accounts at fair market value. Investigation supports accurate tax filing and avoids underreporting penalty exposure.

๐Ÿฆ Corporate Fiduciary Engagements

Bank trust departments and trust companies need consistent investigation process across their estate portfolio. Standardized investigation supporting reliable inventory and risk management.

Need help finding a deceased relative’s bank accounts?

Send us the decedent’s information and any known starting points (residence history, employer relationships, suspected accounts). We’ll scope comprehensive bank account investigation appropriate to your case.

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Practical Tips

Things to Watch Out For (and Make Easier on Yourself)

โœ… Always start with tax returns

Tax returns are the single most valuable document for bank account discovery. Schedule B reports interest-bearing accounts at name-and-address level. The personal representative has authority to obtain copies through IRS Form 4506. Multi-year analysis (5-7 years if available) surfaces accounts opened or closed during the period โ€” providing comprehensive picture of banking relationships.

๐Ÿ” Search unclaimed property in multiple states

Decedents frequently have unclaimed bank accounts in multiple states from prior residences, employer relationships, and forgotten accounts. NAUPA’s unclaimed.org provides efficient multi-state search; direct state queries cover non-participating jurisdictions. Search current and former residence states, employer states, and business connection states for complete coverage.

โš ๏ธ Donโ€™t rely on family knowledge alone

Family knowledge is often incomplete โ€” even close family members may not know all the accounts the decedent maintained. Comprehensive investigation through tax returns, unclaimed property, and direct bank outreach surfaces accounts that family inquiry alone would miss. Particularly important for decedents who managed finances independently.

โœ… Coordinate POD account procedures with overall estate plan

POD accounts pass directly to named beneficiaries outside probate, but should be identified for complete estate administration and tax planning. POD funds passing directly may unbalance testamentary distribution intended by the will. Sophisticated practice identifies all POD designations and coordinates with attorney for any rebalancing.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common Questions

How do I find a deceased relative’s bank accounts?

Methodical investigation through (1) tax returns showing Schedule B interest-bearing accounts and 1099-INT reporting (obtain through IRS Form 4506), (2) state unclaimed property programs (NAUPA’s unclaimed.org plus direct state queries for non-participating states), (3) bank death claim procedures (direct contact with known and suspected institutions), (4) POD and joint account discovery, (5) mail review for incoming statements, and (6) direct outreach to local banks in residence areas.

What documentation do I need to access a deceased person’s bank account?

Standard documentation includes (1) certified death certificate, (2) letters testamentary or letters of administration from probate court (showing personal representative appointment), (3) identification verifying the personal representative, (4) bank-specific forms or applications, and (5) sometimes additional documentation depending on account type (POD beneficiary identification, joint account survivor identification, etc.).

How do POD (payable-on-death) accounts work?

POD accounts name a beneficiary who receives account funds directly upon the holder’s death โ€” typically bypassing probate. The beneficiary provides death certificate and identification to the bank, and the bank releases funds directly to the beneficiary upon documentation review. POD accounts don’t pass through the probate estate but should be identified for complete estate administration and any tax planning implications.

What happens to dormant accounts after a relative dies?

Accounts that have been dormant during the decedent’s lifetime may already be in state unclaimed property programs at death (typical 3-5 year dormancy period). Recovery requires personal representative authority and state-specific claim procedures. Active accounts at death are handled through the bank’s deceased estates department under standard death claim procedures.

Should I search unclaimed property in multiple states?

Yes. Decedents frequently have unclaimed accounts in multiple states from prior residences, employer relationships, and forgotten accounts. NAUPA’s unclaimed.org provides efficient multi-state search through participating states. Some states (Delaware, California, and a few others) maintain separate or partial programs requiring direct queries. Comprehensive multi-state search should be standard practice.

How long does bank account investigation typically take?

IRS Form 4506 tax return retrieval typically takes 4-6 weeks (expedited options available). Bank death claim processing typically takes 1-4 weeks per institution after documentation submission. State unclaimed property claims typically take 60-120 days for processing. Comprehensive investigation across all channels typically takes 60-180 days for complete account discovery and access.

Can I access accounts before formal personal representative appointment?

Generally no for full account access โ€” most banks require formal probate appointment (letters testamentary or letters of administration) before granting account access. Some states permit limited pre-appointment activities (small estate procedures, joint account survivorship for surviving joint owners, POD beneficiary procedures for named beneficiaries). Specific procedures vary by state and account type.

What if I don’t know which banks the deceased used?

Tax returns are the primary discovery tool โ€” Schedule B and 1099-INT reporting identify interest-bearing relationships at name-and-address level. Additional methods: family member inquiry (other relatives may have information), employer records (direct deposit relationships), local bank outreach in current and former residence areas, and commercial people-search databases that aggregate financial-relationship data. Comprehensive investigation surfaces accounts even when family knowledge is incomplete.

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Bank Account Discovery, Done Methodically

Methodical bank account investigation through tax return analysis, multi-state unclaimed property searches, bank death claim coordination, POD account discovery, and direct outreach surfaces accounts the family wasn’t fully aware of, supporting accurate estate inventory and proper distribution. We support personal representatives, family members, and probate professionals with comprehensive account discovery. Twenty years of professional support for estate work nationwide.

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Legal Disclaimer: People Locator Skip Tracing provides investigative services for lawful purposes only. All searches must comply with applicable privacy laws including the FCRA, GLBA, and DPPA. We do not perform searches intended to facilitate harassment, stalking, or any unlawful contact. Last updated .