Wyoming Department of Workforce Services evaluates four eligibility criteria for Wyoming UI Claims: you worked for a Wyoming-covered employer during the base period, your wages meet the minimum threshold, you lost your job through no fault of your own, and you are currently available for and actively seeking work.
- Wyoming uses the first four of the last five completed calendar quarters as the standard base period for measuring your wage eligibility.
- Energy sector layoffs β coal mine shutdowns, gas field production cuts, oil field RIF reductions β are recognized qualifying separations under Wyoming law. Wyoming Department of Workforce Services processes these routinely.
- Voluntarily quitting disqualifies you unless Wyoming Department of Workforce Services finds you quit for good cause attributable to the employer β unsafe conditions, unpaid wages, or substantial unilateral changes to your job terms.
Always verify exact numbers, deadlines, and forms on Wyoming Department of Workforce Services's official website β this page provides general guidance, not state-specific legal advice.
Base Period and Wage Requirements
Wyoming Department of Workforce Services uses the standard base period β the first four of the last five completed calendar quarters β to calculate base period wages. If you don't qualify under the standard period, Wyoming Department of Workforce Services may apply an alternate base period using the four most recently completed quarters, benefiting workers who recently increased their income. You must have wages in at least two quarters and meet Wyoming's total wage threshold. Energy industry workers who had consistent quarterly earnings over the standard base period typically have no difficulty meeting the threshold, even at Wyoming's $30/week minimum floor.
Energy Industry Separations
Coal mining, natural gas extraction, oil drilling, and related energy services are Wyoming's dominant private industry employers. Layoffs driven by commodity price drops, mine closures, production slowdowns, and rig count reductions are among the most common involuntary separations Wyoming Department of Workforce Services sees. Powder River Basin coal miners, Pinedale Anticline gas field workers, and Green River Basin energy services employees are all frequent Wyoming UI Claims filers. Document your separation: termination notice, reduction-in-force letter, or email from the employer is ideal, but Wyoming Department of Workforce Services can also verify separations through employer quarterly reports and direct employer contact.
Availability for Work
You must be available for suitable employment in your area. For rural Wyoming workers in small energy communities β Gillette, Rock Springs, Evanston, Pinedale β Wyoming Department of Workforce Services evaluates availability in the context of your local labor market. If you're willing to take energy services work, trade work, or other positions in your area, and your 3 weekly work search contacts reflect genuine outreach, you meet Wyoming's availability standard. Remote job applications count for workers in areas with limited local opportunities.
Frequently Asked Questions
- I was laid off from a Campbell County coal mine when they cut production. My wages were $75,000/year. Am I eligible for Wyoming UI?
- Yes β a production-cut layoff from a Campbell County coal mine is a classic qualifying involuntary separation under Wyoming law. At $75,000/year β roughly $18,750/quarter β your base period wages almost certainly exceed Wyoming's threshold, and your weekly benefit will likely approach Wyoming's $651/week cap. File through Wyoming UI Claims immediately. Wyoming Department of Workforce Services processes coal industry layoffs routinely and your employer's quarterly wage reports will be in Wyoming's system. At $651/week for up to 26 weeks, your maximum Wyoming UI benefit would be $13,208 β meaningful income while you search for your next mining or energy services opportunity.
- I quit my Cheyenne state government job because they cut my pay by 20% without notice. Does Wyoming Department of Workforce Services consider that good cause?
- A unilateral 20% pay cut without notice is among the clearest "good cause quit attributable to the employer" situations under Wyoming law. A substantial reduction in compensation β particularly without advance notice or agreement β is a material change in your employment conditions that no reasonable employee would be expected to accept indefinitely. File through Wyoming UI Claims and document the pay cut specifically: what your prior wage was, when the reduction took effect, how you learned about it, whether you raised the issue with management before leaving, and what response you received. Wyoming Department of Workforce Services will contact your former employer and evaluate both accounts. A 20% sudden pay cut is a compelling good-cause argument β file and let Wyoming Department of Workforce Services decide.
- I worked two energy sector jobs in Wyoming β one at a Jonah gas company and one doing weekend deliveries for a Pinedale supplier. Both have reduced my hours. Am I eligible for partial Wyoming UI?
- Wyoming UI covers partial unemployment for workers whose combined hours and earnings fall below a threshold even if they're still working some hours. File through Wyoming UI Claims and report both employers and your current reduced earnings. Wyoming Department of Workforce Services will calculate whether your current total income makes you eligible for partial benefits. You'll certify weekly and report all earnings from both employers each week β Wyoming Department of Workforce Services calculates your partial weekly benefit after applying Wyoming's formula. Wyoming has experience with multi-employer energy industry situations where hours fluctuate based on production schedules.
- I worked at a Rock Springs trona mine for 6 months before the mine reduced my hours to near zero. My base period only has 6 months of wages. Do I qualify for Wyoming UI?
- You may qualify, but it depends on whether your 6 months of Rock Springs mining wages across 2 quarters meet Wyoming Department of Workforce Services's minimum base period wage threshold. Wyoming requires wages in at least 2 quarters and a total that meets the minimum. Six months of trona mining wages (often substantial given the physical demanding nature of the work) may well meet the threshold. File through Wyoming UI Claims and Wyoming Department of Workforce Services will calculate both the standard base period and the alternate base period β your 6 months of recent wages are likely most favorable under the alternate period. Let Wyoming Department of Workforce Services run the calculation rather than assuming you don't qualify.
- I'm a retired energy worker who took a part-time consulting role that just ended. Am I eligible for Wyoming UI on those part-time wages?
- Wyoming UI eligibility is based on wages from covered employment during the base period, not on whether you consider yourself "retired." If your part-time consulting role was as a W-2 employee of a Wyoming-covered employer and those wages appear in your base period β not 1099 consulting income β you may be eligible for Wyoming UI based on those wages. The weekly benefit would reflect your part-time earning level, likely toward the lower end of Wyoming's $30β$651 range. You must also be available for and seeking work to claim benefits β if you're genuinely retired and not seeking employment, that availability requirement creates an issue. File through Wyoming UI Claims if you have covered wages and you're actually willing to work again; Wyoming Department of Workforce Services will evaluate your specific facts.