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I just found a forgotten old IRA with $30K stashed away in my dad’s name — 30 years after he died. Can I still claim it?

It’s not uncommon for retirement savings accounts to get lost or forgotten.

In fact, 31.9 million 401(k)s were reportedly left behind or forgotten entirely as of July 2025, and these accounts have an average balance of $66,691.

Many of these forgotten accounts were likely left behind when the owners switched jobs, but 401(k)s aren’t the only type of retirement savings account that can get lost or forgotten.

Let’s say, for example, that you just discovered your deceased father’s Individual Retirement Account (IRA), which had $30,000 in it when he passed away. And now, 30 years later, you can’t help but wonder: can I still claim this money, and will all of the cash still be there three decades later?

Claiming this money depends on who was listed as the original beneficiary, how the account was titled, and whether it’s even still intact after years of required distributions and tax rules.

When someone dies owning a traditional IRA, the account is passed on to the person or entity named as the beneficiary. There are two broad categories of beneficiaries:

  • Designated beneficiaries are people named directly on the account paperwork, such as a spouse, child or another individual

  • Non-designated beneficiaries include estates, trusts and organizations like charities

A surviving spouse generally has the most flexibility if they are the named beneficiary on the account. They can roll the funds into their own IRA and delay withdrawals until they reach the required minimum distribution (RMD) age. According to the IRS, many plans require that a spouse is named as the primary beneficiary. (1)

But if no beneficiary was named, an IRA generally becomes part of the decedent’s estate and passes according to the will or state intestacy laws. In that case, the executor may need to distribute the account in line with IRS rules for non-spouse beneficiaries. (2)

Non-spouse beneficiaries are usually subject to the 10-year rule under the SECURE Act, meaning the account must be emptied within ten years of the original owner’s death. If the IRA is left to a trust or the estate, distribution timelines can be even shorter. (3)

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