Search Lawrence County Unclaimed Money

Lawrence County residents searching for unclaimed money usually begin with the Tennessee Treasury, then compare the result with Lawrenceburg records that show where the trail started. The trustee can help with tax history, and the county clerk can help confirm names, filings, and older record details. That matters when a Treasury hit looks close but still needs a better paper trail. If the money came from a tax payment, a county balance, or a filing that never reached the right person, Lawrence County offices can help sort out the owner before you file a claim.

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Lawrence County Quick Facts

Lawrenceburg County Seat
David L. Powers County Trustee
Daphne S. Faulkner County Clerk
February 28 Tax Due Date

Lawrence County Unclaimed Money Search

The best first stop is ClaimItTN.gov. Tennessee says the search is free, and the state portal is built for simple lookups by last name or business name. If you have a property ID, that can narrow the result list further. The official claim site is the clean place to begin because it tells you whether the money is already in state custody and whether the owner or heirs may need to file a claim.

Lawrence County offices do not issue the payment, but they can help prove who should receive it. A tax bill, a business record, or a county file can show the right name and address. That is useful when the Treasury result is close but not final. In a county like Lawrence, a search often moves faster when you use the state portal first and the local record set second. That keeps the work focused and cuts down on guesswork.

Keep the search tight and repeat the same spelling across each record set. Then add former addresses, business names, and any family names that fit the owner. That approach fits Tennessee's claim process well because T.C.A. § 66-29-130 requires a public searchable database, while county records help fill the gaps the state system cannot see.

Records in Lawrenceburg

The county government source at lawrencecountytn.gov is the best local reference for the trustee image and the office trail behind it, and the image below comes from that county government page. It is the cleanest way to tie a county record to the place where a bill, refund, or balance may have started.

Lawrence County unclaimed money county government page

That county view is useful because it shows how the tax office fits into the claim path. Lawrenceburg is the county seat, so the main local record trail stays compact. That makes it easier to compare the state result with the county address, an older business name, or a filing that no longer matches the person who owns the money now.

The county government page also helps place the office structure in one spot. When a search needs more than one county contact, the county source makes it easier to move from the trustee to the clerk without losing the thread. That is important in Lawrence County unclaimed money searches because a tax record, a clerk filing, or a county commission note can all matter at different points in the process.

Lawrence County Unclaimed Money and Tax Bills

The Lawrence County Trustee is David L. Powers, and the office phone is 931-762-7708. The trustee office is at Lawrence County Courthouse in Lawrenceburg. Tax due date is February 28 each year, and payment options include online, mail, and in person. Those details matter because unclaimed money often begins as a payment that was not cashed, a refund that never posted, or a county balance that stayed on the books after the owner moved or the record changed.

The trustee also handles tax relief for eligible residents, annual tax sale work, county funds, and monthly financial reports. That paper trail is useful when the money started as a county tax item instead of as a bank or payroll record. If the county reports show an adjustment, a carryover, or a tax sale event, that can point the search to the right year and help explain why the state database has a match.

Lawrence County residents should also remember that the trustee office is the county's banker and tax collector. That role matters because it places the office at the center of the county money trail. When you know where the county funds moved, it becomes easier to match a Tennessee Treasury record with the local record that created it.

The county trustee page on the government site gives the office contact path if a record needs a quick check. That local source is often the fastest way to verify whether a tax item, a refund, or an old account still has a county record attached to it.

Clerk Records in Lawrence County

Daphne S. Faulkner serves as the Lawrence County Clerk, and the office phone is 931-762-7709. The clerk handles tags, titles, renewals, marriage licenses, business tax, notary applications, and county commission minutes. The office also handles records work that can help connect a person or business to an older address or a changed name. That mix matters because unclaimed money searches often depend on identity questions, not just on the money itself.

The clerk office hours are Monday through Friday from 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. That is useful if you need to line up a visit, ask about a record, or verify a filing before you submit a claim. A marriage record can explain a surname change. A business tax record can show that a company once used the same name that appears in the state database. A title or renewal record can help connect an older address to the person who should receive the money.

County commission minutes can also matter when you are tracing a local government payment or a record that moved through more than one office. Those minutes do not replace the claim itself, but they can help explain the county side of the trail. When the clerk records and trustee records point to the same person or business, the claim becomes easier to support.

Lawrence County Unclaimed Money Rules

The legal path begins with the Tennessee Treasury. The Unclaimed Property Division is the state place where the claim starts, and under T.C.A. § 66-29-130, the treasurer keeps a public searchable database and sends notice to apparent owners. That is why the search starts online instead of at a local counter. It also explains why Lawrence County residents can search for unclaimed money without paying a fee.

The reporting side matters too. Tennessee's custody system means the state holds the property until the owner or heirs claim it. That custodial setup is what makes the claim searchable years later. It is also why a county tax record, a clerk filing, or a county commission minute can be enough to make a state match much easier to support.

If a claim is denied or stalled, the appeal route is set by law as well. T.C.A. § 66-29-155 gives a one-year window to file in Davidson County Chancery Court. That deadline matters. If a claim gets stuck, keep the search result, the county record copy, and the proof of identity together so you can answer the reason for the denial quickly.

When the state and county records line up, the claim is much easier to support. That is the real value of the Lawrence County paper trail. It tells you where the money came from, who the county considered responsible, and which office can back up the owner or heir's claim.

Local Follow-Up

If the Lawrence County result still feels thin, circle back through the state portal, the trustee, and the clerk before you file. The county offices give you the local office path, while the Treasury portal gives you the actual claim path. Those pieces work better together than either one does alone, especially when the record began as a tax item, a filing, or an older account that changed hands over time.

You can also use the Lawrence County government site as a final check before submission. Start with ClaimItTN, confirm the match in Lawrenceburg, and keep every page you print or save. That is the cleanest route for Lawrence County unclaimed money when the money started as a county balance, a refund, or a record that now needs proof from more than one office.

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