State guide New Hampshire

Self-Employed & Gig Workers in New Hampshire: The Early Moves That Protect Your Claim

Clear, state-level self-employed & gig workers guidance for New Hampshire readers who need the first moves and documentation laid out cleanly.

Reviewed June 2026 6 min read Official-source linked Ver en Espanol
Quick Facts New Hampshire Employment Security
File online NH Works β†’
Max weekly benefit $427/week
Max duration 26 weeks
Waiting week Yes β€” 1 unpaid week
Work search required 3 contacts/week
Phone hours Mon–Fri 8:00 a.m.–4:30 p.m.
Office address 45 South Fruit Street, Concord, NH 03301

Verify current amounts and deadlines at the official agency site β€” numbers change when state legislatures update UI statutes.

Key Takeaways
  • In New Hampshire, the strongest early move is usually to slow down long enough to get the timeline, documents, and weekly routine under control.
  • Independent contractors and gig workers usually want to know whether they can qualify at all, since standard unemployment insurance is built around W-2 wage history rather than 1099 income.
  • Contacting the state agency directly is most useful when normal processing delays, identity verification, and the need to keep a complete work-history record could change the outcome.

New Hampshire Employment Security generally does not cover traditional self-employed workers and 1099 independent contractors under the standard NH Works UI program β€” but significant exceptions exist, including Pandemic Unemployment Assistance legacy provisions, covered corporate officers, and workers misclassified as contractors who were actually employees. If you received a 1099 in New Hampshire, your first step is determining whether you were genuinely self-employed or actually functioned as an employee under New Hampshire's coverage tests.

Key Takeaways
  • Standard NH Employment Security coverage excludes self-employed and 1099 workers. Misclassification cases are the key exception.
  • NH uses a multi-factor control test for worker classification β€” tech and gig workers in southern NH frequently dispute contractor status.
  • Corporate officers of NH S-corps and LLCs with payroll wages may qualify for NH Works benefits on those wages.
Official Resources

Always verify exact numbers, deadlines, and forms on New Hampshire Employment Security's official website – this page provides general guidance, not state-specific legal advice.

  • Find your state's unemployment office (CareerOneStop, U.S. Dept. of Labor): source
  • Federal unemployment insurance overview (U.S. Dept. of Labor): source
  • New Hampshire state agency: New Hampshire Employment Security: source

New Hampshire's Worker Classification Test

NH Employment Security applies a multi-factor test to determine whether a worker is an employee eligible for UI coverage or a genuinely independent contractor excluded from coverage. Key factors: Did the company control how and when you worked? Did you use the company's equipment and software? Were you prohibited from working for competitors? Did you work exclusively or primarily for one company? Were your services performed within the company's usual course of business? The more of these factors point toward company control, the stronger your misclassification claim. Tech contractors in New Hampshire's southern corridor β€” particularly in Nashua's tech cluster β€” frequently succeed in misclassification claims because their work arrangements closely resemble employment in practice.

Self-Employed NH Workers Who May Still Qualify

If you operated an S-corp, LLC, or partnership in New Hampshire and paid yourself W-2 wages through the entity, those wages are covered by New Hampshire UI β€” file through NH Works based on those payroll wages. NH Employment Security's base period uses your W-2 wages from the entity, not your business revenue or 1099 income. NH gig workers whose platforms paid them as employees (W-2 gig work, some marketplace arrangements) may also be covered. Freelancers who transitioned from W-2 to 1099 at the same company should also challenge their classification with NH Employment Security.

Frequently Asked Questions

I'm a software consultant in Bedford, NH paid on 1099 by one tech company for the past 18 months. I just lost the contract. Can I file NH UI?
This is a strong misclassification case worth pursuing with NH Employment Security. Key facts in your favor: working exclusively or primarily for one company, sustained 18-month engagement suggesting ongoing integration into the company's operations, and the tech industry's frequent pattern of using 1099 status to avoid UI contributions for workers who function as de facto employees. File through NH Works and describe your working arrangement honestly β€” use the word "misclassification" and detail how the company directed your work, what tools and systems you used, whether you could work for other clients, and whether you were integrated into their team. NH Employment Security will investigate and adjudicate. Even if denied, appeal β€” NH's ABΠ‘-style test often benefits workers in sustained single-company engagements.
I owned a single-member LLC in NH and paid myself via draws, not W-2 payroll. My LLC is now inactive. Do I qualify for NH Employment Security?
No β€” New Hampshire's UI coverage requires wages reported on W-2 and paid into the NH UI trust fund via employer payroll taxes. Single-member LLC owners who paid themselves via owner's draws (not W-2 wages) never generated covered wages, so there is no NH Works UI entitlement based on those draws. If you had other covered NH employment (W-2 work at any employer) during the 18-month base period alongside your LLC operations, those W-2 wages count toward your NH Employment Security eligibility. Consider that separately: did you have any W-2 employment while running the LLC? If so, file through NH Works and let NH Employment Security calculate your benefit based solely on the W-2 wage quarters.
I was an NH Uber driver classified as an independent contractor. Are there NH-specific options for gig workers?
Standard NH Employment Security UI coverage does not cover Uber's 1099-classified drivers. New Hampshire did not enact permanent gig worker UI coverage legislation after the PUA program expired. NH gig drivers can challenge Uber's classification with NH Employment Security β€” arguing that Uber's algorithmic control over rates, routes, and deactivation constitutes the kind of control that makes drivers de facto employees β€” but this is a difficult and contested claim that Uber actively disputes. The more realistic path for NH Uber drivers: if you also hold W-2 employment in New Hampshire (a part-time job, etc.), you may qualify for NH UI based on those W-2 wages while the Uber income is excluded from the benefit calculation. Track NH legislative developments on gig worker coverage.
I run a small construction company in Manchester, NH and have been paying myself W-2 wages. If work dries up, can I collect NH Employment Security?
If you have been paying yourself through a covered NH employer (your LLC or S-corp that files quarterly NH UI tax returns with NH Employment Security), your W-2 wages count toward the NH Works base period. The key is whether your company is registered as a covered employer with NH Employment Security and has been remitting quarterly UI taxes on your wages. If yes, you may be eligible for NH Works benefits based on your W-2 wages from the entity β€” a genuine involuntary separation (company closing or suspension of operations) is required. NH Employment Security may scrutinize owner-officer claims to confirm the separation was genuine and involuntary. If the company is still operating at reduced capacity, partial separation rules may apply.
I had a mix of W-2 and 1099 income from different NH employers during the base period. How does NH Employment Security handle this?
NH Employment Security counts only your W-2 wages for NH UI eligibility and benefit calculation β€” the 1099 income is excluded from the base period wage computation. Your quarterly wage statements from NH Employment Security show only covered wages reported by your W-2 employers. If your W-2 wages alone meet New Hampshire's minimum base period requirements (wages in at least two quarters meeting the minimum threshold), you're eligible based on those wages only. The 1099 income is irrelevant to the monetary determination. When you certify weekly in NH Works, report ongoing 1099 self-employment income as earnings that may reduce your weekly benefit β€” self-employment income earned during your NH Works claim period must be disclosed.