Cashpert in Ohio

Find unclaimed money
in Ohio.

The Ohio Department of Commerce, Division of Unclaimed Funds holds $3.4 billion in unclaimed property for Ohio's 11.8 million residents. Cashpert finds your share - including class action settlements, government rebates, and manufacturer rebates - and files the claims automatically.

State Unclaimed
$3.4 billion
Ohio Population
11.8 million
Cities Served
All
Coverage
Statewide

Money Cashpert Finds in Ohio

Class Action Settlements

Active settlements covering Ohio residents. Most pay $25-150 per claim with no proof needed. Examples include Amazon Prime FTC, Capital One 360, and 100+ more.

Government Rebates

Federal IRA rebates (up to $14,000), state energy programs, and utility incentives. Ohio residents can stack federal + state + utility rebates for major savings.

Manufacturer Rebates

Trane, Carrier, Lennox, GE, LG and other manufacturers run rebate programs available to Ohio residents. Average value: $200-1,500 per appliance or HVAC unit.

Unclaimed Property

$3.4 billion held by the Ohio Department of Commerce, Division of Unclaimed Funds. Includes forgotten deposits, dormant accounts, uncashed checks, life insurance, and matured bonds.

Why Ohio residents choose Cashpert

Ohio's industrial appliance manufacturing base (GE, Whirlpool, Bosch all have Ohio operations) means residents access exclusive rebate programs not available elsewhere - often $150-600 above standard manufacturer offers.

Top Ohio cities Cashpert serves

Coverage extends to every city, town, and zip code in Ohio. These are our top metropolitan markets:

Columbus
Cleveland
Cincinnati
Toledo
Akron
Dayton
Parma
Canton
Youngstown
Lorain
Top zip codes: 43215, 44101, 45201, 43601, 44301, 45402, 44129, 44701, 44501, 44052 and 1,000+ more across Ohio.

Ohio unclaimed money FAQ

How much unclaimed money is in Ohio?

The Ohio Department of Commerce, Division of Unclaimed Funds currently holds $3.4 billion in unclaimed property for Ohio residents. This includes forgotten utility deposits, dormant bank accounts, uncashed paychecks, life insurance benefits, and matured savings bonds. Cashpert checks Ohio's unclaimed property database along with class action settlements, government rebates, and manufacturer rebates that apply to Ohio residents.

How do I find unclaimed money in Ohio?

The fastest way to find unclaimed money in Ohio is to sign up at cashpert.com - we automatically search the Ohio Department of Commerce, Division of Unclaimed Funds's database, federal programs, manufacturer rebates, and active class action settlements that apply to Ohio. You can also search the Ohio Department of Commerce, Division of Unclaimed Funds website directly, but that only covers state-held property (about 30% of what you may be owed).

What cities does Cashpert serve in Ohio?

Cashpert serves all Ohio residents, with active claim coverage in Columbus, Cleveland, Cincinnati, Toledo, Akron, Dayton, and every other city, town, and zip code in the state. Top zip codes searched include 43215, 44101, 45201, 43601, 44301 and 1,000+ more across Ohio.

Are there class action settlements specific to Ohio?

Yes. Many class action settlements are state-specific or have higher payouts for Ohio residents. For example, the Joint Juice false advertising settlement applies specifically to consumers in CA, CT, FL, IL, MD, MA, MI, and PA. Cashpert tracks every state-specific settlement and matches them to Ohio residents automatically.

What government rebates can Ohio residents claim?

Ohio residents can claim federal Inflation Reduction Act rebates (up to $14,000 per household for home energy upgrades), federal energy tax credits (up to $1,200 per year), and state-specific utility and energy programs. Ohio's industrial appliance manufacturing base (GE, Whirlpool, Bosch all have Ohio operations) means residents access exclusive rebate programs not available elsewhere - often $150-600 above standard manufacturer offers.

Find Your Ohio Money

Free to start. No credit card. We only get paid when you do. Average Ohio resident is owed $2,000+ across state, federal, and corporate sources.

Start My Ohio Search