Unemployment insurance benefitsFor the first time in history, gig workers and the self-employed are eligible for unemployment benefits under the CARES Act. Even if you still have some consulting business, you may be eligible since the act also covers those who are partly unemployed. It also covers people who must self-quarantine, although I don’t know how this is verified. Basically, the expanded program is intended to help people who lose work as a direct result of the public health emergency. For the self-employed, the qualifications and amounts are determined by the Disaster Unemployment Assistance Program, which is complicated but here’s gist of it. Eligible people will receive a $600 weekly payment plus unemployment benefits based on your state’s rates and formulas. Your payment amount will be based on your average weekly pay rate, calculated using the net profit from Schedule C of your most recently filed tax return. (If you’re newly self-employed and haven’t ever filed a Schedule C as part of your federal 1040 tax return, you’ll have to provide additional documentation.) Different states calculate this weekly pay rate differently, as well as the duration of benefits. Under the CARES Act, the maximum benefit a self-employed worker will receive is the $600 per week plus half the average benefit available in your state, not half the maximum benefit. To give you an idea, maximum weekly benefits range from $235 per week in Mississippi to $823 per week in Massachusetts. Find your maximum state payment amount here. If you are still working part-time or continuing to make some money (say, one of your clients is still active but the other two have stopped), your benefits will be adjusted accordingly. But you don’t have to be completely unemployed or without clients to file a claim. The duration of the weekly payments will vary by state with 26 weeks the most common but 9 states provide fewer weeks and 1 provides more. (Click here for a duration map.) The CARES Act provides for up to 13 additional weeks of federally funded benefits once regular state benefits have been exhausted. It’s unlikely you will have to prove that the pandemic caused your unemployment status so file a claim and see what happens. The only cost to apply is time, and doing so won’t affect your credit score. To file a claim, contact your local unemployment office. Do an internet search on “file an unemployment insurance claim in <your state>.” Note, most websites warn of delays because of the surge in new claims. Unemployment benefits are taxable. |