Frisco Unclaimed Money

Frisco residents can search for unclaimed money held by the Texas Comptroller for free at ClaimItTexas.gov. Frisco is one of the fastest-growing cities in the country, and the rapid pace of business formation, employee turnover, and corporate relocations means a steady flow of unclaimed payroll checks, dormant accounts, and forgotten deposits reaches the state program each year. Technology companies, sports and entertainment organizations, and a large school district all contribute to the unclaimed property pool in Frisco. Searching is free and takes only minutes.

Search Public Records

Sponsored Results

Frisco Overview

Collin County County
~200,000 Population
Frisco ISD / Tech Corps Key Local Source
Free To Search & Claim

Searching Frisco Unclaimed Funds

The Texas Comptroller's ClaimItTexas.gov portal lets you search for unclaimed property at no cost. Enter a name, and the system returns any matching records showing property type, the reporting company, and an estimated value range. No account or login is needed. You can search your own name, a business name, or the name of a deceased family member.

Frisco hosts the corporate headquarters or major campuses of numerous technology and business services companies. These firms hire and lose employees at a high rate, especially during the city's rapid growth years. Uncashed final paychecks, unused benefit balances, and forgotten employee stock options all end up in the state program when the holder cannot locate the person. Under Texas Property Code § 72.101, most property is presumed abandoned after three years without owner activity. Wages specifically become abandoned after just one year under § 72.1015 of the same code.

The PGA of America moved its headquarters to Frisco, and the Dallas Cowboys operate their practice facility at The Star in Frisco. Both organizations employ staff and vendors, and both are sources of potential payroll or vendor-related unclaimed property just like any other employer. If you ever worked at or contracted with any large Frisco employer, search your name and your business name.

The Collin County official site at collincountytx.gov has county office contact information for property-related records and local resources.

Collin County official website for Frisco unclaimed money resources and local records

Collin County offices serve Frisco residents on property and record matters, and the county site provides contact details for the clerk and other offices relevant to unclaimed money research.

Frisco Local Resources

The City of Frisco Finance Department at friscotexas.gov/208/Finance manages the city's financial operations. Frisco is a growing municipal employer, and city workers or vendors who moved on without collecting final payments may find those balances in the state system. Utility deposits paid to the city are another item worth checking if you previously had service at a Frisco address.

Frisco ISD is one of the most watched school districts in the state due to the city's rapid growth. The district employs thousands of teachers, administrators, and support staff. Employees who left or retired without claiming all owed amounts may have payroll or benefit items in the unclaimed property program. Former students who received financial aid through Collin College's Frisco campus may also have unclaimed refunds on file.

The high concentration of technology and financial services companies in Frisco adds corporate stock dividends, brokerage accounts, and corporate bond interest to the local unclaimed property pool. If you held equity in a company that had Frisco operations and stopped receiving dividend notices, search the database under your name and the company name. Business-related property goes through the same state process as personal property.

Note: The Collin County page at Collin County covers the broader county-level picture, including county office contacts and resources for residents researching property-related records across the county.

Types of Unclaimed Property in Frisco

The most common types reported from Frisco include dormant bank accounts, uncashed payroll checks, and refundable deposits. But the city's corporate makeup adds some categories more common here than in many Texas cities. Stock dividends and investment account balances from tech and financial services companies show up in the Frisco results more often than in cities without that corporate base.

Life insurance proceeds are a major category statewide, including in Frisco. Insurers report policy benefits they cannot deliver after a death. If a family member lived or worked in Frisco and you are unsure about their coverage, search the database under their name. The Comptroller holds these proceeds with no expiration date on the claim right.

Safe deposit box contents, mutual fund shares, and court deposits also end up in the program. A $0 value in a ClaimItTexas result means the Comptroller holds a physical asset, not that the property is worthless. The alternative databases page on ClaimItTexas.gov lists separate programs for pension contributions, federal savings bonds, and other types outside the main state database.

Filing a Frisco Unclaimed Money Claim

Start at ClaimItTexas.gov. Select the matching property from your search results and follow the steps. You will receive a Claim ID to track progress. Most claims resolve in 90 days or less.

Documentation depends on the claim type and amount. Small personal claims usually need a photo ID and proof of current address. Larger or more complex claims, including those for corporate stock or estate property, need more. The documentation requirements page explains what each type needs. Review it before uploading anything to save time.

For estate claims, you may need an Affidavit of Heirship or probate order. For corporate claims, successor-in-interest or business formation documents may be required. The Comptroller's team handles all of these. Call 800-321-2274 or email unclaimed.property@cpa.texas.gov with questions. Use the claim status tool to track your case and the FAQ page for guidance on specific property types.

Texas Comptroller ClaimItTexas portal for Frisco unclaimed money search and filing claims

The ClaimItTexas portal is the official state resource for searching and claiming unclaimed property for all Frisco and Collin County residents.

National Search Resources for Frisco Residents

Frisco is a city of transplants from across the country. If you relocated here from another state, you may have unclaimed funds left behind there. The free national search at unclaimed.org covers multiple states at once and is run by the National Association of Unclaimed Property Administrators. It costs nothing.

MissingMoney.com is another free tool that searches most participating states in one query. For tech workers who had stock or investment accounts at companies in other states before moving to Frisco, these national tools can surface funds you may have forgotten about. The Texas data portal at data.texas.gov also has the full Texas unclaimed property listing available for download.

Search Records Now

Sponsored Results

Nearby Cities

Frisco is part of the Collin County corridor north of Dallas. Residents with ties to other nearby cities can search those areas through the same statewide ClaimItTexas database.