More than 2830 Mandurah residents and organisations have unclaimed money on the Treasury database.
Treasury receives unclaimed monies from Western Australian-based organisations in accordance with the Unclaimed Money Act 1990.
The purpose of the Act is to protect the interests of people due monies that they may not be aware of or may have forgotten about.
One Mandurah resident is owed $3200 and another individual is owed $2532.60.
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In 2017-18, Treasury received more than 54,000 new unclaimed money notifications totalling almost $12.71 million.
There is no time limit on claims and anyone who can clearly establish a rightful claim will be paid their money, regardless of how long it has been held.
People interested in claiming money will require documents to help Treasury verify claims including an original, signed and witnessed statutory declaration; a form of identification (such as a driver’s licence, passport or health care card); and evidence of connection to the address in the database.
Treasurer Ben Wyatt encouraged everyone to check the register to see if they are entitled to any of the funds.
“In the past 12 months, individual unclaimed amounts as large as $154,301 and $111,708 were added to the unclaimed money database,” he said.
“This is a free service provided by Treasury and they will be only too happy to assist in re-uniting a Western Australian with their unclaimed money.”
The full register contains more than 575,000 unclaimed amounts.
To see if you have unclaimed money visit:www.treasury.wa.gov.au/unclaimedmoney.