Idaho Department of Labor pays up to $624 per week β among the higher maximum weekly benefits in the Mountain West β for up to 26 weeks through Idaho Labor iUS at labor.idaho.gov. Idaho has a one-week waiting period: your first week is unpaid, and your second week is your first payable certification. Agricultural and construction seasonal workers make up a significant portion of Idaho's UI claimants, and Idaho Department of Labor's iUS portal is designed for a relatively straightforward filing experience. File through Idaho Labor iUS immediately when you separate from work β delays cost you weeks within your benefit year.
- File at labor.idaho.gov through Idaho Labor iUS. Among the higher Mountain West benefit caps at $624/week.
- Maximum $624/week for up to 26 weeks β total maximum potential $11,648.
- Week one is the unpaid waiting week. Seasonal workers in agriculture and construction file regularly β Idaho DOL is familiar with these patterns.
Always verify exact numbers, deadlines, and forms on Idaho Department of Labor's official website β this page provides general guidance, not state-specific legal advice.
Filing Through Idaho Labor iUS
Create your Idaho Labor iUS account at labor.idaho.gov with your Social Security number and contact information. Complete the initial claim interview with your full employment history for the past 18 months β all employers, addresses, dates, and separation reasons. For agricultural workers with multiple seasonal employers, list each one accurately. Idaho Department of Labor also accepts phone filing for workers who cannot access Idaho Labor iUS online. Set up direct deposit in iUS for the fastest payment. Idaho's processing timeline for standard claims is approximately 2-3 weeks before your first payment arrives. Seasonal Idaho workers should file the week their seasonal employment ends β the sooner you file, the sooner your benefit year begins.
Frequently Asked Questions
- I work agricultural jobs in Idaho every spring and summer and then need UI in fall and winter. How does the seasonal pattern affect my Idaho iUS claim?
- Idaho Department of Labor processes seasonal agricultural separations regularly and is familiar with harvest and planting cycle separations. Your seasonal wages from Idaho agricultural employers (those meeting Idaho's coverage thresholds β typically 10+ workers in 20 weeks or $20,000 in quarterly wages) count toward your base period. File through Idaho Labor iUS when your seasonal work ends. If your employer provides a definite recall date for next season, Idaho DOL may grant you a work search waiver during the period before recall. Without a definite recall date, complete your 3 weekly work search contacts in iUS throughout your claim. Many Idaho agricultural workers receive the full 26-week benefit cycle, often exhausting benefits right before the next season begins.
- Idaho's $624/week cap is higher than neighboring states. Why the difference?
- Idaho sets its maximum weekly benefit through a statutory formula linked to the average weekly wage in Idaho's covered employment β as Idaho's wages have risen (driven partly by technology sector growth in the Boise metro area), the cap has increased. Idaho's $624 cap is notably higher than Montana ($767 maximum but that's higher), Wyoming ($651), or Nevada ($631 maximum in some calculations. For claimants, the $624 cap means workers earning up to about $40,000 annually in Idaho receive a benefit roughly proportional to their wages without hitting the cap β making Idaho's UI relatively effective for moderate-wage workers compared to low-cap states like Mississippi ($235) or Tennessee ($325).
- I was laid off from an Idaho construction company in November at the end of the outdoor construction season. Does that qualify for Idaho UI?
- Yes β seasonal construction layoffs in Idaho qualify for standard UI. File through Idaho Labor iUS with your separation reason as "end of seasonal work" or "lack of work." If your Idaho construction employer has a pattern of seasonal recall, they may provide documentation of a spring recall date β in that case, ask Idaho Department of Labor about a work search waiver for the winter months. If no recall date is guaranteed, complete your 3 weekly work search contacts in iUS throughout the winter benefit period. Indoor construction work and related trades continue year-round in Idaho β some seasonal construction workers find winter employment in these areas while also meeting their iUS work search requirements.
- I moved to Idaho recently and was laid off before I had Idaho wages. Can I claim Idaho UI?
- Idaho UI eligibility is based on Idaho base period wages β wages earned from covered Idaho employers during the base period quarters. If you recently moved to Idaho and have not yet established Idaho wages, you likely don't qualify for Idaho UI. However, if you had wages from your prior state within the past 18 months, file with your prior state for those wages. Idaho is part of the interstate claim system β if you previously lived and worked in another state and that state is where your wages are, file with that state (or file in Idaho as your resident state and designate the other state's wages). Contact Idaho Department of Labor for guidance on which approach best captures your specific wage history.
- Idaho Labor iUS shows my claim is approved. How long until I receive my first direct deposit?
- After your claim is approved and you certify for your first payable week (week two, since week one is the waiting week), direct deposit typically arrives within 3-5 business days. Set up direct deposit in Idaho Labor iUS when you file rather than waiting until approval β having your banking information already on file means payment releases immediately when approved. If you receive your week two certification approval on a Monday, your direct deposit should arrive by Thursday or Friday of that week in most cases. Paper checks take 7-10 additional days. Idaho Department of Labor's processing is generally straightforward for standard claims β delays beyond 2 weeks on a first payment warrant a follow-up call to Idaho DOL.