Minnesota Unemployment Insurance Program gives claimants 20 calendar days from the mailing date of a determination to file an appeal. Minnesota conducts appeals hearings by telephone before an unemployment law judge (ULJ) β an independent hearing officer within the Minnesota Office of Administrative Hearings. With Minnesota's $948/week maximum over 26 weeks, a denied claim represents up to $22,282 in lost benefits. File at uimn.org or call Minnesota UIMN the day you receive a denial notice.
- 20 calendar days from the mailing date to appeal β more generous than many states. File immediately regardless.
- Telephone hearing before a Minnesota unemployment law judge (ULJ). ULJs are experienced and conduct structured hearings.
- Continue weekly uimn.org certifications throughout the appeal β retroactive payment covers all certified weeks if you win.
Always verify exact numbers, deadlines, and forms on the Minnesota Unemployment Insurance Program's official website β this page provides general guidance, not state-specific legal advice.
Filing and Preparing for the Hearing
File through uimn.org using the appeals section tied to your determination, or call Minnesota UIMN at 651-296-3644. The Office of Administrative Hearings schedules a telephone hearing before an unemployment law judge, typically within 3 to 6 weeks of filing. Prepare specific factual evidence: documents, dates, names, and your account of what happened. Both you and your employer present evidence and the ULJ asks clarifying questions before issuing a written decision.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Minnesota gives 20 days to appeal. Is there any reason to file sooner rather than waiting?
- File immediately β there is no advantage to waiting, only risk. Miscounting the 20-day window or delays in mail delivery can make you miss the deadline. The hearing is where you present your full evidence, so filing early doesn't limit what you can say. Filing the day you receive the notice ensures the appeal is on record before any ambiguity about the mailing date. The Office of Administrative Hearings will then set the hearing schedule giving you ample time to prepare.
- I won my Minnesota UI appeal before the unemployment law judge. When do I receive back payment?
- After the ULJ issues a written decision in your favor, Minnesota UIMN processes retroactive payment for all certified weeks you were eligible during the appeal period. At $948/week, a 6-week appeal period represents over $5,000 in retroactive benefits. Expect payment within 2 to 3 weeks of the decision. Continue certifying in uimn.org each week until benefits are fully reinstated β do not stop certifying during or after the appeal assuming payment will come automatically.
- My Minneapolis tech employer is claiming I was fired for "code of conduct" violations. I believe I was laid off as a pretext. How do I prove my case?
- Appeal within 20 days. In a Minnesota ULJ hearing, your employer bears the burden of proving misconduct by a preponderance of the evidence. Request all documentation your employer intends to use. Prepare your counter-evidence: was there a company-wide reduction happening at the same time? Were others with similar performance treated differently? Was the "code of conduct" allegation new and not previously disciplined? Did you receive warnings? Minnesota's misconduct standard requires deliberate willful conduct β present specific facts showing this was a business decision, not a genuine misconduct finding.
- The Minnesota ULJ ruled against me. What are my further options?
- Request reconsideration from the ULJ within 20 days of the decision β the same ULJ may reconsider if you identify a specific legal error or new evidence. If reconsideration is denied or upheld, appeal to the Minnesota Court of Appeals within 30 days. Minnesota Legal Aid and Mid-Minnesota Legal Aid assist low-income workers with further appeals. At Minnesota's benefit levels, the full appeal process is financially worth pursuing for wrongful denials.
- I was denied Minnesota UI for not making my 3 work search contacts the week before my hearing. Should I have kept certifying?
- Yes β always continue certifying throughout the appeal, even if you missed a work search contact. Minnesota requires ongoing certification to maintain your claim. Missing a certification week forfeits that week's benefits even if you ultimately win the underlying appeal. If you were disqualified for a specific week's work search, that week is handled separately from your overall claim appeal. Continue certifying all subsequent weeks on time to avoid compounding your disqualification.