South Dakota Department of Labor and Regulation does not cover traditional self-employed workers and 1099 independent contractors under the standard South Dakota UI program. South Dakota's agricultural economy and meat-processing industry generate specific classification questions for farm workers and processing contractors. South Dakota's no-state-income-tax environment makes it an attractive state for business owners who pay themselves W-2 wages through covered South Dakota entities β those wages count toward South Dakota UI eligibility if the entity was properly registered as a covered South Dakota employer.
- Standard South Dakota UI excludes self-employed and 1099 workers. Misclassification challenges are the key exception.
- South Dakota agricultural employer coverage has minimum thresholds β not all farm workers are covered by South Dakota UI.
- W-2 wages from covered South Dakota entities (including your own S-corp or LLC) count toward South Dakota UI eligibility.
Always verify exact numbers, deadlines, and forms on South Dakota Department of Labor and Regulation's official website β this page provides general guidance, not state-specific legal advice.
South Dakota's Worker Classification Analysis
South Dakota Department of Labor and Regulation evaluates worker classification using a multi-factor control test: the degree of direction and control the company exercised over the worker; whether the worker was economically dependent on one company; whether the worker was integrated into the company's regular business operations; and whether the work was performed for the worker's own independent business. Workers who worked exclusively or primarily for one South Dakota company, following its direction, using its equipment, and performing its core business functions are typically employees under South Dakota's analysis.
Frequently Asked Questions
- I worked at a Sioux Falls construction company for 2 years on 1099, always on their jobs using their tools. Can I claim South Dakota UI?
- File through South Dakota UI and challenge your classification. A 2-year exclusive work relationship at one construction company, using their equipment, working under their supervision, with no independent clients β these facts strongly suggest employment under South Dakota's multi-factor test. Key factors in your favor: you worked exclusively for this company (economic dependence), they provided equipment (their control), and 2 years of engagement suggests integration, not independent project work. Document who assigned projects, whose equipment you used, whether you could decline jobs, and whether you had other construction clients. South Dakota Department of Labor and Regulation adjudicates these cases β the 1099 label doesn't determine the legal analysis.
- I'm a solo farmer in eastern South Dakota. My crops failed this year. Am I eligible for South Dakota UI?
- Independent farm operators β sole proprietors growing crops on their own land β are not covered by South Dakota UI's standard program. South Dakota UI requires wages from a covered employer; independent farming generates Schedule F income, not W-2 wages. USDA Farm Service Agency drought assistance and the Noninsured Crop Disaster Assistance Program may be more relevant for crop failure situations. If you also have any W-2 employment alongside your farming β driving trucks, working at a co-op, any covered employment during the base period β those wages could support a separate South Dakota UI claim.
- I drove delivery trucks for a Sioux Falls distribution company on 1099. The company shut down. Can I get South Dakota UI?
- This is a strong classification challenge. Delivery truck drivers who drove for one company, used that company's trucks, followed that company's routes and schedules, and had no other clients are typically employees under South Dakota's control test. File through South Dakota UI at dlr.sd.gov/ra. South Dakota Department of Labor and Regulation will investigate the classification. Be prepared to describe: who assigned your daily routes, whose trucks you drove, what hours you were expected to work, whether you could decline deliveries, and whether you had other delivery clients. A sole driver for one distribution company using that company's vehicles is very difficult to classify as an independent contractor under South Dakota's test.
- I owned a small LLC in Sioux Falls and paid myself W-2 wages of $40,000. The LLC is closing. Can I collect South Dakota UI?
- If your LLC was a registered South Dakota covered employer that filed quarterly SD UI tax reports on your $40,000 W-2 wages, those wages count in your base period. At $40,000 annually, your high quarter is approximately $10,000. South Dakota's 1/26 formula: $10,000 Γ· 26 = $385/week. You'd receive $385/week for up to 26 weeks, totaling $10,010. The separation must be genuinely involuntary β the LLC closing due to loss of business is acceptable. Confirm the LLC's coverage status with South Dakota Department of Revenue before filing β if the LLC didn't pay South Dakota UI taxes on your wages, the W-2 wages may not count.
- I'm a South Dakota gig worker driving for a rideshare platform. Platform work is down. Any South Dakota UI options?
- Standard South Dakota UI doesn't cover 1099 rideshare work. South Dakota hasn't enacted permanent gig worker UI coverage. If you also have any W-2 employment alongside rideshare work β part-time retail, event work, any covered employment β those wages count toward South Dakota UI eligibility if you lose that W-2 job. If you believe your specific platform relationship meets South Dakota's employment test (exclusive work, platform controls your acceptance rates and methods), file and let South Dakota Department of Labor and Regulation adjudicate. South Dakota Workforce Centers can also connect you with W-2 employment opportunities.