Income that reduces or delays payment
Certain types of income may delay or reduce weekly benefits. However, the maximum amount of benefits available is not reduced. If you have applied for, or are receiving, any of the following types of income, you must report it to the Minnesota Unemployment Insurance (UI) Program.
Severance pay, wages in lieu of notice, retention pay, or any other payments made because of separation from employment
After separation from employment, you are not eligible for unemployment benefits for the number of weeks of your regular pay the severance payment represents.
50 percent is deducted from the weekly benefit payment during the week of the holiday.
Vacation / Sick / Personal Time Off (PTO) pay
Permanent separations: Vacation pay is not deducted from your weekly benefit payment.
Temporary layoffs: 100 percent is deducted from your weekly benefit payment.
If you retire from your base period employer, your monthly pension payments will reduce your unemployment benefits dollar for dollar. Example: A pension of $433 per month = $100 per week, so UI benefits would be reduced $100 per week.
If you retire from your base period employer, a lump-sum pension payment will be treated similarly to severance pay.
Payments from a 401K or other pension plan, will not affect your unemployment benefits if any of these conditions apply:
- You received the payment in a lump sum and you are subject to a penalty for early withdrawal
- You received the payment in a lump sum and you roll all of it into another retirement fund without taking a payment
- The payment is from a fund that none of your base period employers paid into (in other words, it is a pension from a former employer that has not paid you any wages in the past 15-18 months).
Workers' Compensation or other insurance for loss of wages
100 percent is deducted. If there is a loss of wage claim pending, unemployment benefits may be paid if you are seeking some type of available work and able to do that work. However, if you later receive loss of wage benefits for weeks you received unemployment benefits, you must repay the unemployment benefits.
Note: If you are not seeking or able to accept suitable employment, you are not eligible for unemployment benefits.
100% deductible if the back pay is for a period of time you received unemployment benefits.
The following types of income will NOT reduce benefit payments:
- Earnings for service calls as a volunteer firefighter or volunteer ambulance service personnel (on-call or standby pay does reduce your benefits)
- Earnings from service in the National Guard or a U.S. military reserve unit
- Jury duty or election judge pay
- Supplemental Social Security income (SSI) and survivor's or dependent Social Security benefits
- Investment income (including personal IRAs)
- Rental income from property you own, unless such rental is your primary occupation
- Spousal or child support payments paid to you*
- Income tax and property tax refunds
*Child support you are required to pay may be deducted from your benefit payments.