New York Surplus Funds Recovery

If your property was sold at foreclosure or tax sale in New York and brought more than what was owed, that extra money — the surplus — likely belongs to you. Here's exactly how New York handles it.

Governing statute
RPAPL §1361
Deadline to claim
Per Referee's Report timing
Where to file
Court
Fee cap
15% (industry standard)

How surplus funds work in New York

New York foreclosure sales can generate surplus when the winning bid exceeds the outstanding debt, taxes, and costs. Under RPAPL §1361, that surplus is held by the court and must be released to the rightful claimant — usually the former owner or their heirs.

Supreme Court — surplus money proceedings.

Step-by-step: filing your claim

  1. Confirm there's a surplus. Request the final sale report or distribution from the court for your property.
  2. Gather proof of ownership. Recorded deed, prior tax bills, ID, and any heirship documents if the owner is deceased.
  3. Prepare the claim. Claim forms must be notarized.
  4. File before the deadline. Per Referee's Report timing. Missing this window typically forfeits the surplus to the county or state.
  5. Track the disbursement. Once approved, the court issues payment — usually within 30–90 days.

Watch out for

Deadlines are strict. New York's window is Per Referee's Report timing. After that, funds typically escheat.
Recovery-agent licensing. New York requires agents to be licensed or registered before charging a fee. Verify credentials.
No advance fees. New York prohibits demanding payment before recovery. Anyone asking for money upfront is a red flag.
Fee cap: 15%. Agreements above this are unenforceable in New York.

Free New York surplus check

We'll look up your county's records, confirm whether a surplus is being held, and walk you through the claim — no upfront fees, no obligation. Our fee is capped at 15% and only paid if you recover.

Frequently asked questions

How long do I have to claim surplus funds in New York?

Per Referee's Report timing. After that deadline the surplus typically escheats to the state or county.

Do I need a lawyer to file in New York?

Not always — many New York claims are administrative. Court-venue states often benefit from counsel or a licensed recovery service to handle motions and notarization.

What does Surplus Advisors charge?

We work on contingency, capped at the New York maximum of 15%. No recovery, no fee.

What if the former owner passed away?

Heirs can claim the surplus with proof of relationship (death certificate, will or affidavit of heirship). We handle the paperwork.

Other states

This page is informational and does not constitute legal advice. Statutes and deadlines change — confirm with the court of jurisdiction or an attorney licensed in New York.