How To Search For Savings Bonds By Name?

Our internet search engine for matured, uncashed savings bonds is Treasury Hunt (over 30 years old and no longer earning interest). Missing payments can also be seen on other securities. Your search may turn up the following results:

TreasuryHunt may be able to reconnect you with lost or missing money that you can use for whatever purpose you want, such as:

TreasuryHunt requires you to fill out an encrypted form with a few bits of information.

If any of the results are prospective matches, you’ll receive more instructions. Please try again later if your search is unsuccessful. Every month, Treasury Hunt adds additional securities that have matured and undeliverable payments.

Is it possible to look for savings bonds by name?

The TreasuryDirect service maintained by the federal government can help you discover any outstanding or unclaimed savings bonds in your name.

How do I find out whether I have any bonds in my name?

A: Because the Treasury Hunt website is arranged by social security number, it only includes savings bonds purchased from 1974 to the present. That is when social security numbers were first required. If you feel you may be owed money from an older bond, fill out this form or contact 1-800-553-2663 to request a manual search.

A: You will be encouraged to file a preliminary claim if you find a bond for yourself or your family on the Treasury Hunt website.

(Make sure you don’t skip this step.) Since its launch, the Treasury Hunt website has received 350,000 hits based on social security numbers, but only 100,000 people have provided their contact information to collect their bonds.)

A Treasury Department “finder” will then contact you to obtain additional information and investigate your claim. If you are a match, the finder will either mail you claim forms or you can download them from the internet.

A certified signature is required on savings bond claim forms. This procedure entails visiting a bank, credit union, or other financial institution, presenting identification, and signing paperwork in the presence of a bank officer or notary who validates your signature as valid.

Q: Is there anything else I can do if I believe there should be savings bonds in my name but can’t discover any?

A:Yes.

The Treasury Department adds a half million bonds to the database every month when they mature, so check back often.

Q: I suspect I may possess bonds that have not yet matured but which I have lost track of. What is the best way for me to look for those?

A:You can request a bond search by filling out this form or calling 1-800-553-2663. Treasury officials will look into your request depending on the information you’ve provided, such as your social security number.

A: Over the years, the Treasury has issued a variety of savings bond series, each of which is slightly different.

However, the Treasury Hunt search system’s basic series “EE” savings bond worked as follows:

1. You paid half the face value for the bond.

A $50 bond, for example, would cost $25.

2.After 20 years, that EE bond was guaranteed to increase to its face value. As a result, a $25 savings bond would have increased to $50.

3. After that, the EE bond would continue to receive income for another ten years.

4.The EE bond had fully matured after 30 years and was no longer earning income.

As a result, it’s ideal to cash it in or reinvest it so that your money can begin to work for you again.

Q: I purchased savings bonds several years ago but never received them.

How do I go about getting my money?

These are referred classified as “undeliverable” bonds by the Treasury Department.

The answer is to request a manual search once more. You can fill out a request form or call 1-800-553-2663 to do so.

Q: I have a record of the dates and types of savings bonds that I possess.

How can I tell if they’re no longer earning interest?

A: The Treasury Department’s website has charts that will show you.

Still undecided?

The Treasury’s “Bond Wizard” is a good place to start.

The Series H bonds, which were issued from June 1952 to January 1957, pay interest for 29 years and 8 months.

What is the best way to look up a bond?

The Bureau of the Fiscal Service manages the TreasuryDirect.gov website, which contains information on the purchase, redemption, replacement, forms, and valuation of Treasury savings bonds and securities.

How do I locate misplaced savings bonds?

Complete a Claim for Lost, Stolen, or Destroyed United States Savings Bonds to register a claim for a savings bond that has been lost, stolen, or destroyed (FS Form 1048). Please sign the form in the presence of a certifying officer who is authorized to do so (available at a bank, trust company, or credit union).

How do I get money out of savings bonds that aren’t in my name?

If you are not identified as the owner or co-owner on the bond, you must produce legal evidence or other documentation to establish you are entitled to cash the bond, regardless of where you cash it. (Legal evidence is not returned.)

It is important to note that savings bonds cannot be transferred. You can’t cash a bond that belongs to someone else or that you bought on an internet auction site. (See Death of a Savings Bond Owner if you inherit a bond through the death of the bond owner.)

What happens to savings bonds that aren’t claimed?

The majority of savings bonds have a 20- to 40-year original maturity. The Bureau does not notify bondholders when savings bonds reach their final maturity and stop earning interest. The Bureau has no active program to find bondholders and pay them the proceeds to which they are due for fully matured notes that have not been redeemed. The registered owner has traditionally been responsible for remembering to redeem the matured bond decades after the initial purchase. As a result, the US Treasury holds around $26 billion in matured savings bonds that have gone unclaimed.

Is it possible to replace misplaced savings bonds?

You can obtain a replacement electronic savings bond if your paper bond is lost, stolen, destroyed, disfigured, or you never received it. Individual savings bonds are not splittable and must be reissued in their entirety. You can request that your bond be redeemed instead of replacing it electronically.

What is the value of a $100 US savings bond?

You will be required to pay half of the bond’s face value. For example, a $100 bond will cost you $50. Once you have the bond, you may decide how long you want to keep it for—anywhere from one to thirty years. You’ll have to wait until the bond matures to earn the full return of twice your initial investment (plus interest). While you can cash in a bond earlier, your return will be determined by the bond’s maturation schedule, which will increase over time.

The Treasury guarantees that Series EE savings bonds will achieve face value in 20 years, but Series I savings bonds have no such guarantee. Keep in mind that both attain their full potential value after 30 years.

What is the best way to see if I have a savings bond?

To look for uncashed savings bonds in your name, go to the Treasury Department’s TreasuryDirect website. To see results, enter your social security number or Employee Identification Number (EIN) into the Treasury Hunt page’s search area and click the “Search” button.