Bristol Unclaimed Money Search

Bristol residents who want to find unclaimed money should start with the city finance department, then check the city website, and then compare the result with the Tennessee Treasury. Bristol's finance office handles a wide set of city money tasks, so an old check, refund, or utility balance can sit in more than one record path. The best search uses the current finance contact, the right account type, and the city records that show how the money moved. That is usually enough to turn a vague lead into a real claim.

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Bristol Quick Facts

801 Anderson Finance Address
2025 FY 2025 Budget
Hollie Verran Finance Director
Kristi Hensley Municipal Court Clerk

Bristol Unclaimed Money Search

The main local source is the Bristol Finance Department. The directory lists the office at 801 Anderson Street, Bristol, TN 37621-1189, with phone 423-989-5500. The research also identifies Finance Director Hollie Verran and Municipal Court Clerk Kristi Hensley. That matters because the finance office is where many city payment trails begin. If an account went stale, the same office is often the place that can still explain what happened next.

Bristol's city site at the City of Bristol website adds another important layer. The research says online payments are available through the city website, and that finance work includes utility billing and property tax clerk support. That means a claim may begin with a tax payment, a utility payment, a business license item, or another finance record. The city page is useful because it shows the broader office network, while the finance directory gives the exact contact line that should anchor the search.

The state side still matters. Tennessee Unclaimed Property is the statewide search owners should always check, and ClaimItTN is the filing path if the property is there. Bristol's local records help explain the city side of the trail, but the Treasury system shows where the money sits now. When both results point to the same owner, the claim is much easier to complete.

Bristol is a good city for record work because the finance office and the city government page both provide real details, not just a generic contact form. That gives the search enough structure to stay focused on the right office and the right kind of balance.

Use exact names, account numbers, and old addresses. Small details carry a lot of weight here.

Bristol Unclaimed Money Records

Bristol unclaimed money records are tied to the finance department's broad duties. The research says finance and administration manages accounting, accounts payable, budgeting, business licenses, debt management, information technology, surplus property auctions, payroll, and purchasing. That is a lot of city money activity in one place. It also means a claimant may need more than one record type to show why the funds belong to them. A refund might have started in accounts payable, while a business license item or utility bill could be the record that identifies the owner.

The FY 2025 proposed budget is another useful local source. The budget PDF at Bristol's FY 2025 budget shows the city manager as Kelli Bourgeois and includes the department director listing. That does not replace the finance directory, but it strengthens the local record trail because it shows the city keeps formal budget and finance documentation. For a claimant, that can help confirm that the city has an organized accounting structure behind the money.

The city finance office is also the place to think about public requests and follow-up. Because Bristol offers online payments and keeps finance support tied to the public site, the owner can usually find a clear office route instead of guessing where to start. If the record is tied to property tax support, the city finance side is still the best first stop. If it came from a utility or business matter, the same office can still point the search in the right direction.

The municipal court clerk is useful as a supporting contact when the search touches a case-related payment or a city notice. That is why the page keeps the city finance office and the court clerk in view together. It mirrors how the city actually handles public money and city records.

The finance directory page is the strongest source for the first image below, while the city homepage is the source for the second. Bristol is one of the few pages where both local images should be used, so this page does that directly.

The Bristol finance directory is the source page for the first image used on this guide.

Bristol unclaimed money finance department

That finance image fits Bristol because the finance department is the main local office for records, payments, and claim support.

The City of Bristol website is the source page for the second image used on this guide.

Bristol unclaimed money city government

That city government image works because Bristol's finance work sits inside a broader city system that includes online payments and public records access.

Bristol Unclaimed Money Claims

Bristol unclaimed money claims become easier once the owner understands how the city's finance system is organized. The finance department handles the city money side, the city site provides the online payment path, and the budget document shows the city keeps formal accounting records. That combination matters because claims often begin with a question about where a payment went. If the payment was tied to a utility bill, a property tax item, or a business license, the city finance office is the right place to start.

If the money has already been remitted to the state, the Treasury search and ClaimItTN are the next steps. If the first decision is not favorable, the Tennessee statutes still give a framework for what happens next. T.C.A. § 66-29-130 describes the statewide searchable database and notice process, and T.C.A. § 66-29-155 gives the appeal path. Those links are useful after the local trail has been lined up. They are not a shortcut around the city records.

Bristol's finance structure also supports claim work because it covers both payment and record functions. That means an owner may be able to match an old account with a current office contact, then use that contact to request a copy of the supporting record. The city website is important here because it keeps the record request route close to the finance system. That makes the search more direct and less dependent on guesswork.

One practical way to handle Bristol claims is to keep the office list short. Use the finance directory, the city website, the Treasury search, and the claim portal. That is usually enough to cover the local and state sides without adding noise.

When the records are clean, the claim file is cleaner too. Bristol gives the owner enough structure to do that well.

Search Bristol Unclaimed Money

Search Bristol unclaimed money by beginning with the finance department, then checking the city website, and then using the Tennessee Treasury search to see whether the property has already moved to state custody. Bristol's finance office and budget records give the search a real local base. That is useful when the owner is trying to connect an old payment, a refund, or a utility balance to the right office.

Bristol is especially strong for record work because the city provides both a specific finance directory and a broader city government page. Those two sources help the search stay grounded in current contact details. If the balance is tied to court work, a payment support issue, or another city notice, the municipal court clerk and finance director details can help narrow the trail. The goal is not to gather every city document. The goal is to gather the one that proves ownership.

When the state shows the property, ClaimItTN is the place to file. If the state denies the first claim, the statutes still explain the next step. But the best Bristol claim packet starts with the local finance office and the city website, because those are the pages that tell you where the money started.

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