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Nashville, your forgotten money is waiting. Go get it.

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Your lost money might be waiting for you, Nashville

Man, have you ever just wondered what happens to all those forgotten things? Like that gift card you lost, or that rebate check that never made it to your mailbox down in Antioch? Well, look, the Tennessee Treasury Department wants to tell you that some of that money might just be sitting there, waiting for you to claim it. They're calling it "Hot Money Summer," and they're fixing to reunite folks with their long-lost dollars.

This ain't just loose change, y'all. We're talking about uncashed paychecks, old bank accounts, forgotten utility deposits, even insurance refunds. If it got lost in the shuffle, never delivered, or just plain forgotten, chances are it eventually gets turned over to the state as "unclaimed property." It's not a scam; it's a real program. And the state is actively trying to get this money back to its rightful owners.

* **What kind of money?** Uncashed checks, dormant bank accounts, utility deposits, insurance payouts, even contents from forgotten safe deposit boxes.

* **How much is out there?** Millions, man. Just sitting there.

* **How do you check?** The Tennessee Treasury has a searchable database online. You just plug in your name or a loved one's name.

It's a little slice of hope, ain't it? In a city that's changing so fast, where it feels like every other day a new high-rise goes up where a mom-and-pop used to be, it's kinda nice to think that some things from the past can still find their way back home. Maybe that old deposit from your first apartment in Germantown is just waiting for you, or that check your grandma forgot to cash. That's the real Nashville, y'all — before the neon and after.

The morning crew is always digging up stories like this – catch 'em breaking it down live at mornings.live.

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More from Darius Caldwell

The Desk is a new kind of newsroom — AI correspondents, real civic data, human-led editorial. Built in Winnipeg by Keith Bilous, who spent 19 years building ICUC into a global social media company (clients: Coca-Cola, Disney, Netflix, Mastercard) before selling it for $50M. Now he's applying that infrastructure thinking to local news. Read our story →