Search Boulder Unclaimed Money

Boulder unclaimed money searches are handled by the state through the Great Colorado Payback program. This university city with over 100,000 residents has many people with unclaimed funds in the state database. The money comes from old bank accounts, insurance refunds, stock dividends, and utility deposits. Boulder does not maintain its own unclaimed property system. All residents must search the statewide database managed by the Colorado State Treasurer. No fees apply to search or file claims.

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Boulder Quick Facts

100,000+ Population
Boulder County
$2.5B State Holdings
16.5M Names Listed

Great Colorado Payback for Boulder

The Great Colorado Payback is the official unclaimed property program for all of Colorado. The program holds over $2.5 billion in assets from banks, employers, insurance companies, and other businesses. When these organizations lose contact with property owners for three to five years, they must turn the funds over to the state.

The database contains more than 16.5 million names. The state returns approximately $80 million each year through 86,000 claims. The average claim value is $1,832. Amounts range from a few dollars to tens of thousands depending on the source.

Boulder City Homepage

The City of Boulder provides local government services but refers all unclaimed property searches to the state program.

Boulder residents search the same database as everyone else in Colorado. The process takes minutes and requires only a name. You can filter results by adding Boulder as the city. The system shows all property matches. You then file claims for items that belong to you.

How to Search for Unclaimed Funds

Anyone can search the state database without cost. The system works on computers, tablets, and phones. No registration is required.

Great Colorado Payback Search

All Boulder unclaimed property records are maintained at the state level through this online search portal.

  • Go to the property search page
  • Enter your first name, last name, or both
  • Type Boulder in the city field to narrow results
  • Click the search button
  • Review all property matches
  • Select items that belong to you
  • Start the claim process online
  • Submit required documents by mail or upload

The state does not charge fees to search or claim property. Avoid companies that want to charge you to find your money. You can complete the entire process yourself at no cost.

Business owners can search using business names. The database includes unclaimed property for corporations, partnerships, and sole proprietors.

Boulder County Unclaimed Property

Boulder is both a city and the county seat of Boulder County. The county treasurer Paul Weissmann manages property tax collection at 2045 13th St, Boulder, CO 80302. The county does not handle unclaimed property from private businesses. For those searches, the county directs residents to the state program.

Boulder County provides a treasurer page with tax information and a tax payment system. These services cover property taxes only, not bank accounts or insurance proceeds.

County Boulder County
Treasurer Paul Weissmann
Address 2045 13th St, Boulder, CO 80302
Mailing PO Box 471, Boulder, CO 80306
Website bouldercounty.gov

Types of Unclaimed Property

The state holds many different types of property. Most comes from financial institutions and businesses that could not reach the owner.

Type Common Sources
Bank Accounts Checking, savings, CDs, money market accounts with no activity
Checks Payroll, refunds, rebates, vendor payments never cashed
Insurance Life insurance proceeds, annuity payments, policy refunds
Investments Stock shares, dividends, bonds, mutual fund distributions
Utilities Deposits from electric, gas, water, cable, phone companies
Safe Deposit Boxes Contents from boxes that went unclaimed
Court Funds Settlements, judgments, deposits held by courts

Property becomes unclaimed when businesses cannot contact the owner. Mail gets returned. Phone numbers change. People move without updating addresses. After three to five years of no contact, the holder must report the property to the state.

Filing a Claim in Boulder

When you find property in your name, you must file a claim to receive it. The state requires proof of ownership. The amount and type of property determine what documents you need.

Claims under $100 typically require only basic information. You verify your name, address, and Social Security number. Larger claims need more documentation. You might submit copies of a driver license, utility bill, bank statement, or tax return. The state tells you exactly what to provide.

After starting a claim online, the state sends forms by mail or email. You complete the form and attach required documents. Mail everything to 200 E. Colfax Ave., Room 141, Denver, CO 80203-1722. You can also upload documents online through the secure portal.

Most claims process in 90 to 120 days. Simple claims move faster. Estate claims or properties with multiple owners take longer. The state contacts you if additional information is needed. Once approved, they mail a check to your address on file.

Note: Colorado has no statute of limitations on unclaimed property claims, so you can file at any time.

Contact Information for Boulder Residents

All unclaimed property inquiries for Boulder residents go to the State Treasurer office in Denver.

Program Great Colorado Payback
Office Colorado State Treasurer - Unclaimed Property Division
Address 200 E. Colfax Ave., Room 141, Denver, CO 80203-1722
Denver Phone 303-866-6070
Toll Free 800-825-2111
Hours Monday-Thursday, 9:00 AM - 3:00 PM MST
Email GreatCOPayback@state.co.us
Website colorado.findyourunclaimedproperty.com

The City of Boulder at 1777 Broadway can assist with city services. Call 303-441-3000 for city matters. For unclaimed property from banks or businesses, contact the state office.

Additional Resources

The state website provides many helpful pages. The FAQ section answers common questions. The How to Claim page provides detailed instructions. The What is UCP page explains the program. The UCP Law page summarizes relevant Colorado statutes. Use the claim status tool to check on pending claims.

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