Found money
Money that's already yours
Settlement checks, dormant deposits, orphaned 401(k)s, uncollected paychecks. Nobody is coming to hand them over — but every official search below is free and takes minutes. Digby points; you claim.
Class-action settlements
Checks with your name on them
Over 90% of people never claim their share (FTC study) — the notice goes to spam and the money goes back. Filing takes minutes on the administrator's site, and the check comes straight to you.
15 open now · most urgent first
- Claim by Jul 13, 2026Account or notice details asked
Robinhood
Robinhood order-flow execution settlement
Covered: you placed market orders on Robinhood between Sep 2016 and Sep 2018 that executed at prices worse than the best available quote.
$2 million fund — payout pro rataSee the official claim official administrator site - Claim by Jul 21, 2026Account or notice details asked
Willow TV
Willow TV video-privacy (VPPA) settlement
Covered: you subscribed to Willow TV and watched videos on willow.tv between Jul 20, 2021 and Sep 22, 2023.
Payout not yet publishedSee the official claim official administrator site - Claim by Jul 27, 2026Account or notice details asked
Fidelity Investments
Fidelity Investments August 2024 data-breach settlement
Covered: Fidelity notified you (letter or email) that your data was in the August 2024 breach.
- Claim by Jul 27, 2026Account or notice details asked
Amazon
FTC v. Amazon.com — Prime enrollment/cancellation refunds
Covered: you were enrolled in Prime through a challenged flow, or tried and failed to cancel online, between Jun 23, 2019 and Jun 23, 2025, and used at most 3 Prime benefits in a year.
- Claim by Aug 11, 2026No documents needed
PHH Mortgage
PHH captive mortgage reinsurance settlement (Munoz v. PHH)
Covered: your PHH residential mortgage (originated 2007–2009) carried private mortgage insurance that PHH reinsured through its captive arrangement.
- Claim by Aug 11, 2026No documents needed
Flagstar
Flagstar Bank data breach settlement (Angus v. Flagstar)
Covered: you're one of the ~2.19M consumers whose data was in Flagstar's Jan/Dec 2021 breaches (mortgage, banking, or loan customers).
Est. $60–$599See the official claim official administrator site - Claim by Aug 25, 2026No documents needed
SpotHero
SpotHero California drip-pricing settlement (Galvez v. SpotHero)
Covered: you booked a parking reservation through SpotHero's Map View while in California between Jul 1, 2024 and Mar 13, 2025.
$975,000 fund — payout pro rataSee the official claim official administrator site - Claim by Aug 27, 2026Account or notice details asked
Fanatics
Fanatics handling-fee settlement (Cavanaugh v. Fanatics)
Covered: you paid handling fees on a fanatics.com order and received the settlement email notice (Claim ID + PIN); this one pays in two $5-off fanatics.com vouchers, not cash.
Payout not yet publishedSee the official claim official administrator site - Claim by Sep 8, 2026No documents needed
Disney
Biddle v. The Walt Disney Company
Covered: you subscribed to YouTube TV or DirecTV Stream at any point between Apr 2019 and Mar 2026 — even if you've since cancelled.
$50 million fund — payout pro rataSee the official claim official administrator site - Claim by Sep 14, 2026No documents needed
Google
A.B. v. Google — Google Play children's privacy (COPPA) settlement
Covered: a US resident (often your kid) downloaded or used Google Play apps while under age 13, any time since Apr 1, 2015.
$8.25 million fund — payout pro rataSee the official claim official administrator site - Claim by Sep 14, 2026No documents needed
Comcast
Comcast (Xfinity) data breach settlement (Hasson v. Comcast)
Covered: your data was in Xfinity's Oct 2023 breach (Comcast notified affected customers; the claim site can confirm).
$117.5 million fund — payout pro rataSee the official claim official administrator site - Claim by Oct 15, 2026No documents needed
Flo
Frasco v. Flo Health — app privacy settlement
Covered: you used the Flo app and entered menstrual or pregnancy data between Nov 1, 2016 and Feb 28, 2019 (free app use counts).
$59.5 million fund — payout pro rataSee the official claim official administrator site - Claim by Oct 22, 2026No documents needed
Lands' End
Lands' End data breach settlement (Jones v. Lands' End)
Covered: you're in Lands' End's records for the Dec 2024 data incident (customers and others whose info was held).
Payout not yet publishedSee the official claim official administrator site - Claim by Mar 31, 2027Documentation asked
Hyundai/Kia
Hyundai/Kia multistate immobilizer (theft) settlement
Covered: your 2011–2022 Hyundai/Kia without a factory immobilizer was stolen or targeted on/after Apr 29, 2025, with the anti-theft software upgrade installed or scheduled.
Est. $375–$4,500See the official claim official administrator site - Claim by Dec 11, 2028Account or notice details asked
Toyota
In re ZF-TRW Airbag Control Units — Toyota settlement
Covered: you own(ed) or lease(d) a 2011–2019 Toyota Corolla, Corolla Matrix, Avalon, Tacoma, Tundra, or Sequoia — the site's VIN lookup confirms.
$78.5 million fund — payout pro rataSee the official claim official administrator site
Deadlines are the administrators' own; every link above was verified against the official site on Jul 7, 2026. Filing is always free — never pay a “settlement finder” or claims service to do it for you. Digby lists; you decide and file.
These payouts go straight to you — Digby never touches your money.
State unclaimed property
Money your states are holding
Old deposits, forgotten refunds, closed accounts — states are holding money that belongs to people, and some of it may be yours.
The official search is free. Never pay a finder.
1. Pick every state you've ever lived in
Anywhere you held a job, a lease, a bank account, or a utility bill counts.
2. Search every version of your name
- Maiden and hyphenated names
- Middle initials in and out
- Nicknames — Bob and Robert are different records
- Common misspellings: holders report names exactly as they had them, typos included
3. Run the official searches
Pick your states above and the exact official searches line up here. Start with the multi-state sweep either way:
One sweep across most states at once
MissingMoney.com is the NAUPA-endorsed multi-state search — it covers most participating states in one go.
Search MissingMoney.com official multi-state searchLived in a state that isn't listed above?
Every state has an official office — find any of them through NAUPA, the association of the state programs themselves.
Find your state at Unclaimed.org official NAUPA directoryFile each claim with the state office
Claims usually need identity verification and proof of the old address. The state mails or deposits the money to you directly.
- Check for deceased relatives too — heirs can claim, and estates are a common source of unclaimed funds.
- Repeat the search once a year; new property is reported to states continuously.
- An email offering to recover funds “for a percentage” is the paid-finder trap — same search, minus your cut.
The official search is free. Never pay a finder.
These payouts go straight to you — Digby never touches your money.
Lost 401(k)s
Retirement money you left behind
Changed jobs and lost track of a retirement account? The Department of Labor now runs an official Retirement Savings Lost and Found database.
Only you can run this search
Federal law ties the lookup to your SSN through Login.gov identity verification — no third party, Digby included, can search on your behalf. Anyone offering to is charging you for a door only you can open.
What you'll need
- A Login.gov account
- Social Security number
- Date of birth
- Photo ID (driver's license, state ID, or passport)
Your employer-history worksheet
The search is only as good as the list you walk in with. Build it from:
- Every job where you may have contributed to a 401(k) or pension — start from your resume or LinkedIn
- Old W-2s — box 12 codes D or E confirm which employers you contributed with
- Your Social Security earnings statement (ssa.gov) for the complete employer list
- Old plan statements — they name the plan administrator to contact
1. Search the DOL Retirement Savings Lost and Found
Sign in with Login.gov and complete identity verification. The database matches benefits owed to YOUR SSN — which is exactly why only you can run it.
lostandfound.dol.gov official DOL site2. Chase each hit to its plan administrator
For each match — and each old employer that is not in the database yet — contact the company's HR or the administrator named on your old statements and ask where the account was moved. Balances under $7,000 are often force-rolled into IRAs at providers you've never heard of.
3. Decide what to do with what you find
Rolling over, cashing out, or leaving it put has tax consequences — that decision is yours (and, for meaningful balances, a licensed advisor's). Digby provides information, not financial or legal advice.
The DOL database and every step below are FREE. Never pay a service to 'locate' your retirement money.
These payouts go straight to you — Digby never touches your money.
Back wages
Paychecks the Labor Department is holding
When the Department of Labor catches an employer shorting workers, it collects the back wages — then has to find the workers. Some of that money has your coworkers' names on it. Maybe yours.
The clock is real on this one
By law, back wages the DOL can't deliver within 3 years are transferred to the U.S. Treasury — after that, the window to collect them is gone. Search now, not someday.
1. Search by employer name
Enter each employer you've worked for — no account required to search. Start with roughly the last 3 years, then work backward.
Workers Owed Wages search official DOL site2. Try variants of each name
The legal name, the brand name, and whatever your direct deposit said. Franchise locations are often listed under the franchisee's company name. Changed your own name since that job? Search the name your employer had on file.
3. Claim right inside the tool
If your name comes up, the site walks you through verifying your identity and filing the claim right there. The check comes from the DOL to you.
Searching and claiming on the DOL's Workers Owed Wages site is FREE — no account needed to search, and the claim is filed right in the tool.
These payouts go straight to you — Digby never touches your money.