Nebraska Escheat and Unclaimed Property Laws

State Reporting Period Deadline Due Diligence Negative Report Voluntary Disclosure Agreement Reporting Method Remittance Method More Information
Nebraska Life Insurance: January 1 to December 31 Non Life Insurance: July 1 to June 30 Life Insurance: Before May 1 Non Life Insurance: Before November 1 $25 minimum, written notice to last known address 60 to 120 days prior to report filing Not Required but can be optionally submitted Not Available Electronic only, NAUPA II format, file extension: .txt, .hrs, or .rpt, submitted through online portal. Manual entry also available on the online portal. Funds: ACH Credit, Check Securities: DTC Nebraska Unclaimed Property

The current statutes that govern unclaimed property in Nebraska can be found here along with the Unclaimed Property Reporting Handbook. Nebraska has not enacted the 2016 Revised Uniform Unclaimed Property Act (RUUPA).

Nebraska Unclaimed Property Reporting Period

The annual reporting period for unclaimed property in Nebraska is January 1 to December 31 for Life Insurance companies and July 1 to June 30 for Non Life Insurance companies.

Nebraska Unclaimed Property Due Diligence Requirements

Holders of unclaimed property must perform due diligence to show that they attempted to find the rightful owner of unclaimed property.  For any balance greater than $25, written notice must be sent to the owners last known address 60 to 120 days days before the unclaimed property report is filed. Keep records to prove that due diligence was completed including whether mail was returned as undeliverable.

Nebraska Unclaimed Property Reporting and Remittance Deadline

Annual reports and remittances are due before May 1 for Life Insurance companies and before November 1 for Non Life Insurance companies.

Nebraska Unclaimed Property Reporting Format

Reports must be electronic only and in the NAUPA II file format.  File formats accepted are .txt, .hrs and .rpt.  These formats can be generated through the HRS Pro software.  The HRS Pro software has a limited free version that has restrictions including one user, one company and less than 100 properties per state report.    

Nebraska Unclaimed Property Reporting and Remittance Method

Reports can be submitted on on the state portal. Funds can be transferred online, through ACH Credit or Check.  Securities can be transferred through Depository Trust Company (DTC)

Nebraska Unclaimed Property Negative Reports

Negative reports refer to reports that need to be filed when there is no unclaimed property to report or remit to the state for the year.  Nebraska does not require negative reports but they can be optionally submitted.

Nebraska Unclaimed Property Voluntary Disclosure Agreement (VDA)

In some states, the unclaimed property Voluntary Disclosure Agreement (VDA) provides the opportunity for holders of unclaimed property to voluntarily report and remit past unclaimed property.  If accepted by the state, the holder is then exempt from fines and penalties that cover the VDA period.  The holder is expected to maintain strict compliance with state unclaimed property laws after the VDA period.  VDAs are usually available on a one-time basis only to holders that are not already under state audit.  Nebraska does not have a VDA program.

Nebraska Unclaimed Property Dormancy Periods

Dormancy periods for unclaimed property in the state of Nebraska is 5 years with the following exceptions: wages, payroll, salary, commissions, security deposits (1 year), dissolution/liquidation, demutualization proceeds (2 years), unredeemed gift certificates, utilities, mineral proceeds and mineral interest, court deposits and public corporation funds, government checks, credit memos, safe deposit boxes (three years), money orders (7 years), traveler’s checks (15 years).

More information from the state of Nebraska on unclaimed property reporting can be found here. Join our growing network of businesses that are using the Escheatify HolderExchange to prevent escheatment by reconciling their pre-escheat unclaimed property. Contact us to learn more.

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