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Savannah Guthrie's family put forward $1,000,000 of their money as reward for Nancy Guthrie's return
The family of 84‑year‑old Nancy Guthrie, mother of Today show co‑anchor Savannah Guthrie, has publicly pledged $1 million of their own funds toward a reward for information that would lead to Nancy’s safe return — a staggering escalation in a case that has gripped national attention.
In a video posted on social media by Savannah Guthrie, the family pleaded with anyone who may know something pivotal to come forward.
“Someone knows how to find our mom and bring her home,” Guthrie said, reiterating that the reward would be paid only for information consistent with investigative criteria and leading directly to recovery.
At the time of that announcement, the Federal Bureau of Investigation and local authorities also still maintain their own $100,000 reward, meaning the total incentive has now reached upward of $1.1 million for credible tips that directly lead to Nancy’s return.
Nancy Guthrie's kidnapping remains the biggest US mystery
Nancy Guthrie was last seen at her Tucson, Arizona home on January 31, and after failing to appear at a planned engagement the next day, her disappearance was reported to authorities.
Law enforcement quickly determined they had a crime scene, not a missing‑person case, after finding drops of her blood on the porch and her smart 'Nest' doorbell camera disabled.
Video released by the FBI shows a masked, armed individual tampering with that doorbell camera.
The suspect, described as a male between approximately 5’9″ and 5’10″ tall with a medium build and carrying a distinctive black Ozark Trail Hiker Pack backpack, remains unidentified.
Federal and local investigators have been analyzing thousands of hours of surveillance footage from around Guthrie’s neighborhood - and even spanning dates before the night she vanished - to understand movement patterns and establish timelines.
Some images suggest the same suspect may have been at her property on days prior to January 31.
The investigation has also seen high‑tech efforts, including aerial searches for pacemaker signals and extensive forensic analysis of evidence collected around the home.
A glove found near the scene bore male DNA, but so far that profile has not matched any known suspects in the FBI’s national database.
The case is littered with theories as to where Nancy is
The Guthrie family’s decision to put up $1 million of their own money reflects deep frustration with the lack of actionable leads.
Until recently, the total reward offered - combining FBI, anonymous donors, and Crime Stoppers - hovered just above $200,000.
The new family commitment dwarfs that and sends a clear message: time is running out.
That urgency is mirrored in commentary from former law enforcement professionals.
Some analysts have pushed alternate theories ranging from a personal grievance against Nancy Guthrie to unexpected behavioral patterns seen in the suspect footage - theories that authorities themselves have not confirmed, but that keep the public discourse active.
Yet law enforcement continues to urge restraint and focus: the tip line is for serious, verifiable information only - no well‑wishes, no speculation, and certainly no uncorroborated theories.
Investigators say non‑actionable noise can actually delay real progress.
How close is Nancy Guthrie's return?
As the search advances into its fourth week with no arrest, investigators and the Guthrie family are left waiting - for that one credible phone call, that one piece of information that finally breaks the case open.
The family’s $1 million reward is both an emotional appeal and a strategic one: if someone out there knows something, they now have an enormous incentive to come forward.
Authorities continue to operate with the FBI tip line (1‑800‑CALL‑FBI) as the central gateway for actionable leads.
For now, the central question remains: will that one tip ever arrive — and will it finally bring Nancy Guthrie home?