Rhode Island Department of Labor and Training does not cover traditional self-employed workers and 1099 independent contractors under the standard RI UI Online program. Rhode Island's small state labor market β concentrated in Providence metro and heavily weighted toward healthcare, higher education, and services β generates significant worker classification questions, particularly for healthcare contractors, hospitality workers, and gig economy workers. Rhode Island's ABC test for worker classification gives Rhode Island DLT authority to reclassify misclassified workers as employees entitled to UI coverage.
- Standard RI UI Online excludes self-employed and 1099 workers. Misclassification via Rhode Island's ABC test is the key exception.
- Rhode Island has a strong ABC test β all three conditions must be met by the employer to establish independent contractor status.
- W-2 wages from any Rhode Island covered employer count toward RI UI Online β including your own incorporated Rhode Island entity.
Always verify exact numbers, deadlines, and forms on Rhode Island Department of Labor and Training's official website β this page provides general guidance, not state-specific legal advice.
Rhode Island's ABC Test
Rhode Island's ABC test presumes all workers are employees unless the employer proves all three: (A) the worker is free from the company's direction and control in performing services; (B) the services are performed outside the usual course of the company's business; and (C) the worker is customarily engaged in an independently established trade or occupation. Rhode Island's ABC test is one of the stronger worker-protection frameworks in New England. Many Rhode Island workers classified as 1099 contractors β particularly those working primarily for one company in the company's core line of business β fail to satisfy condition (B) and are employees for UI purposes.
Frequently Asked Questions
- I was a home health aide in Providence paid on 1099 by one agency for 2 years. They just ended my contract. Can I get Rhode Island UI?
- This is an excellent Rhode Island misclassification case. Home health aides are exactly the type of worker Rhode Island's ABC test is designed to protect. Under condition (B), home health care is the usual course of the agency's business β you were performing the agency's core service. Under condition (A), the agency directed which patients you served, what services you provided, and likely set your schedule. Under condition (C), you worked primarily or exclusively for this one agency rather than independently marketing your services to multiple clients. File through RI UI Online and describe your working relationship. Rhode Island DLT has adjudicated numerous home health aide classification cases and frequently finds in the worker's favor when a single agency controlled the work. Your 2-year exclusive relationship with one agency is particularly strong evidence of employment.
- I was a restaurant server in Providence classified as a 1099 tipped worker. My restaurant closed. Any Rhode Island UI options?
- Restaurant servers classified as 1099 tipped workers are almost certainly misclassified under Rhode Island's ABC test. Restaurant servers perform services within the restaurant's usual course of business (condition B fails), are subject to the restaurant's direction and control over which tables to serve and how (condition A fails), and typically work exclusively for one restaurant (condition C fails). Rhode Island DLT consistently finds restaurant service workers to be employees β the 1099 classification in the restaurant industry is widely recognized as inappropriate under Rhode Island and New England employment law. File through RI UI Online immediately. Your restaurant's closure is an involuntary layoff. Rhode Island DLT will adjudicate your classification, and with all three ABC conditions failing, your employer's burden to prove contractor status is very difficult to meet.
- I own an S-corp in Providence and paid myself W-2 wages of $65,000 for 3 years. My corporation has no more clients. Can I collect Rhode Island UI?
- If your S-corp was a registered Rhode Island covered employer that has been filing quarterly UI tax reports with Rhode Island DLT on your $65,000 W-2 wages, those wages count in the RI UI Online base period. At $65,000 annually, your best quarter is approximately $16,250. Rhode Island's 3.85% formula: $16,250 Γ 3.85% = $625/week β below Rhode Island's $745 cap, so you'd receive $625/week for up to 26 weeks, totaling $16,250. The separation must be genuinely involuntary β an S-corp with no clients is an acceptable involuntary reason. Rhode Island DLT may scrutinize officer-owner claims to confirm the separation was legitimate and the corporation is genuinely ceasing operations. If your S-corp had Rhode Island UI coverage in good standing (quarterly filings and tax payments), your claim is strong and Rhode Island's no-waiting-week policy means benefits start immediately.
- I drive for Rhode Island-based ride-share and delivery platforms on 1099. Any options when demand drops?
- Standard Rhode Island UI doesn't cover 1099 gig work. Rhode Island has been active in gig worker policy discussions but hasn't enacted permanent gig worker UI coverage. Rhode Island's Temporary Disability Insurance (TDI) program covers some workers in wage-based employment β but gig platform contractors who pay only federal self-employment tax and no Rhode Island UI or TDI contributions are excluded from both programs. If you also have any W-2 employment alongside your platform work β part-time retail, event work, catering β those wages count toward RI UI Online eligibility separately. Monitor Rhode Island legislative developments; Rhode Island has been among the more progressive New England states on labor issues and gig worker coverage has been introduced in the Rhode Island General Assembly. Also consult a Rhode Island employment attorney if you believe your platform arrangement meets the ABC test's employment criteria.
- I worked as a freelance web developer in Providence for 4 clients. One major client (80% of my income) ended their contract. Can I get Rhode Island UI for that lost income?
- Rhode Island UI is designed for workers, not businesses β and a freelancer with multiple clients operating an independent business does not typically qualify for standard UI coverage. However, if your primary client (80% of income) exercised sufficient control over your work β directing your hours, methods, tools, and restricting you from other clients β that specific relationship may qualify as employment under Rhode Island's ABC test. The other 20% client income demonstrates some independent business activity (condition C), which complicates the analysis. File through RI UI Online focused on your primary client relationship specifically and let Rhode Island DLT adjudicate the classification. If that 80% client is found to have been an employer, Rhode Island DLT may find you were an employee of that client β which then generates the covered wages that support a UI claim based on that employment relationship's end.