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Delaware unemployment: what to file, what you will receive, and what comes next.

Delaware unemployment is run by the Delaware Department of Labor, Division of Unemployment Insurance. If you were laid off through no fault of your own, you almost certainly qualify. The benefit is funded by employer payroll taxes, not by your past paychecks — so receiving it is not 'taking' anything from anyone, and it does not reduce future Social Security or any other program. File the same week you are laid off. Delaware raised its weekly maximum modestly in recent years, but it remains on the lower end nationally, so plan accordingly when you map out the next few months. This page is for general guidance only and is not legal or financial advice.

The key numbers

The numbers you can expect.

Weekly amount
Up to roughly $450 per week, calculated from your base-period earnings — confirm current figure with the state agency
Duration
Up to 26 weeks of regular state benefits in most cases
Waiting period
One unpaid waiting week after your claim is approved

How to file

The filing order.

  1. 01

    Gather your information before you start

    You will need your driver's license or state ID, your Social Security number, your most recent employer's name and address, your last day of work, and the reason for separation (layoff, reduction in force, or position eliminated).

  2. 02

    Create an account on the Delaware UI claimant portal

    Go to ui.delawareworks.com and create a claimant account. Verify your identity and link your contact information before starting the claim itself.

  3. 03

    File your initial claim

    The claim takes about thirty minutes. Be precise on dates and reason for separation — most delays come from inconsistent dates between your application and what your former employer reports.

  4. 04

    Certify weekly

    Delaware requires a weekly certification confirming you are unemployed, able to work, and have searched for work. Miss the window and your payment pauses. Set a recurring calendar reminder.

  5. 05

    Track your work-search activities

    Delaware generally requires multiple work-search activities each week and registration with the state job-match system. Keep a simple log of applications, networking calls, and workshops — the agency can ask to see it during a review.

Official state resource

File and manage your claim at Delaware Department of Labor (labor.delaware.gov).

A note on health coverage

Before the gap opens.

Health coverage usually ends at the end of your separation month. You will be offered COBRA — the right to keep your employer plan for up to 18 months at the full premium plus a small admin fee. COBRA is often two to three times what you were paying. Before signing up, compare it to a HealthCare.gov plan with an income-based subsidy. Delaware uses the federal marketplace, and most laid-off Delawareans qualify for a real subsidy that makes a marketplace plan cheaper than COBRA. You have 60 days from the loss of coverage to enroll either way.

This page is for general guidance only and is not legal, tax, or financial advice.

Questions

Common questions

How much is unemployment in Delaware?

Delaware unemployment pays up to roughly $450 per week, calculated from your base-period earnings. Confirm your specific weekly amount in your monetary determination letter — Delaware's cap adjusts periodically. Delaware sits in the middle nationally on weekly maximum, so treat the benefit as a floor while you search rather than a full income replacement.

How long can I receive Delaware unemployment?

Up to 26 weeks of regular state benefits in most cases. During recessions, federal extensions sometimes add additional weeks, but plan based on the regular 26-week limit. If you are still searching at week 20, that is the point to recalibrate strategy — not to assume an extension will arrive.

Is COBRA worth it in Delaware?

Often not. COBRA charges the full premium plus a small admin fee, which is usually two to three times what you were paying as an employee. Most laid-off Delawareans qualify for a subsidised HealthCare.gov plan that costs less than COBRA and offers similar coverage. Compare both before enrolling — you have 60 days from loss of coverage to choose.

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