Unemployment Benefits and Taxes
The IRS counts unemployment compensation as taxable income under IRC §85. Knowing this in week one — not April — is the difference between a routine tax season and an unexpected bill you cannot afford.
The Federal Rule: IRC §85
The Internal Revenue Code has taxed unemployment compensation since 1979. Section 85 is short and explicit: "Gross income includes unemployment compensation." There is no exclusion, no threshold below which benefits become tax-free, and no special reduced rate. Benefits are added to your other income for the year — wages, interest, freelance — and taxed at whatever ordinary rate applies to your total.
This matters most to people who collected for a full year and had no other income. A person receiving the federal maximum benefit in a high-benefit state for 26 weeks can receive $15,000 to $20,000 in UI income — enough to push them solidly into the 12% bracket. At 12%, the tax on $18,000 of UI income (minus standard deduction) is often zero or near-zero because the standard deduction ($14,600 for single filers in 2024, $29,200 for married filing jointly) wipes out a significant portion. But that math changes the moment you have wage income from a new job later in the year.
Form 1099-G: What to Expect and What to Do
By January 31 each year, your state unemployment agency mails or electronically delivers Form 1099-G ("Certain Government Payments"). The key boxes:
| Box | What it shows | Where it goes on your return |
|---|---|---|
| Box 1 | Total unemployment compensation paid to you during the calendar year | Schedule 1, Part I, Line 7 of Form 1040 |
| Box 4 | Federal income tax withheld (only if you elected 10% withholding via W-4V) | Form 1040, Line 25b (Other federal income tax withheld) |
| Box 10a/10b | State and local tax withheld, if any | Schedule A if you itemize; used by state return |
The IRS receives a copy from your state. They match every 1099-G to your return. If you fail to report Box 1, you will receive an IRS CP2000 notice proposing additional tax. Responding to a CP2000 is time-consuming even when you ultimately owe nothing — do not omit this income hoping it goes unnoticed.
Wrong amount on your 1099-G?
Identity theft involving unemployment fraud exploded during 2020-2021 and remains common. If your 1099-G shows benefits you did not receive, contact your state agency immediately and request a corrected 1099-G. File your own return reporting only what you actually received, and follow IRS guidance on identity theft (IRS Form 14039, Identity Theft Affidavit). Do not delay your return waiting for the correction — file with the accurate amount and attach an explanation.
Form W-4V: Elect 10% Federal Withholding Now
Under 26 U.S.C. §3402(p), you can ask your state to withhold 10% federal income tax from each weekly benefit payment. The form is W-4V, "Voluntary Withholding Request."
Federal Tax Estimate Calculator
Estimate the federal tax impact of your unemployment benefits. State taxes vary — see the state section below.
Estimate only. Assumes 2024 brackets and standard deduction. Does not include credits, FICA, or state taxes. Consult a tax professional for your specific situation.
State Income Tax on Unemployment Benefits
Federal taxability under IRC §85 is separate from state income tax. Nine states have no income tax at all, making UI automatically exempt. California is the most significant exception — the state has income tax but expressly excludes UI benefits.
States Where UI Benefits Are Not Subject to State Income Tax
| State | Reason |
|---|---|
| Alaska | No state income tax |
| Florida | No state income tax |
| Nevada | No state income tax |
| New Hampshire | No income tax on wages or UI benefits |
| South Dakota | No state income tax |
| Tennessee | No income tax on wages or UI benefits (Hall Tax eliminated 2021) |
| Texas | No state income tax |
| Washington | No state income tax |
| Wyoming | No state income tax |
| California | CA does not tax UI benefits despite having a state income tax (RTC §17083) |
In all other states that have an income tax, unemployment compensation is generally treated as ordinary income subject to state tax. Rates vary from under 2% to over 9%. Check with your state Department of Revenue or the instructions for your state income tax return to confirm the current rule — states occasionally change the treatment of UI benefits, particularly during or after high-unemployment periods.
Quarterly Estimated Taxes: When You Need Them
If you did not elect W-4V withholding and your expected tax liability exceeds $1,000 for the year, the IRS may assess an underpayment penalty under IRC §6654. To avoid it, pay quarterly estimated taxes via IRS Direct Pay or by mailing Form 1040-ES. The 2024 due dates are:
If your only income for the year is UI benefits and the total is below the standard deduction ($14,600 single, $29,200 MFJ in 2024), your federal tax liability is likely zero regardless of whether you withheld. In that case, no estimated payments are needed.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Are unemployment benefits taxable income?
- Yes, at the federal level. Under IRC §85, unemployment compensation is included in gross income and taxed as ordinary income. The federal rate depends on your total taxable income for the year. If you did not withhold taxes during collection, you may owe the difference when you file your return.
- What is Form 1099-G and what do I do with it?
- Form 1099-G is the tax statement your state unemployment agency sends by January 31. Box 1 shows total unemployment compensation paid to you during the year. Box 4 shows any federal income tax withheld. You report Box 1 on Schedule 1, Line 7 of your federal Form 1040. The IRS receives a copy from your state and will match it to your return.
- How do I withhold taxes from unemployment payments?
- Submit Form W-4V to your state unemployment agency and check Box 3 to elect 10% federal withholding. The agency deducts that amount from each weekly payment and remits it to the IRS. You can revoke the election at any time by submitting a new W-4V. Electing withholding at the start of your claim avoids a lump-sum tax bill in April.
- What happens if I did not withhold and now owe taxes on unemployment?
- You owe the tax and may owe an underpayment penalty if you underpaid by more than $1,000 and paid less than 90% of your current-year liability. Pay via IRS Direct Pay or set up a payment plan at IRS.gov. If your total income for the year was low enough that the standard deduction covers most of it, you may owe very little despite receiving benefits.
- Do states tax unemployment benefits?
- Nine states have no income tax at all, so UI is automatically exempt: Alaska, Florida, Nevada, New Hampshire, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Washington, and Wyoming. California explicitly exempts UI under Revenue and Taxation Code §17083. In most other states with an income tax, UI benefits are taxable as ordinary income. Check your state Department of Revenue for the current rule.
- What is the actual tax rate on unemployment benefits?
- There is no special rate. Benefits are added to your total income and taxed at your ordinary federal bracket — 10%, 12%, 22%, 24%, 32%, 35%, or 37%. Most people collecting unemployment are in a lower-income year and land in the 10% or 12% bracket. The 10% voluntary withholding election is calibrated to match this. If you return to work mid-year and have significant wage income, the effective rate on UI income may be higher.
- My 1099-G shows income I did not receive. What do I do?
- Contact your state unemployment agency immediately and request a corrected 1099-G — this is often a sign of unemployment fraud committed in your name. File your return reporting only what you actually received. If you receive an IRS CP2000 notice, respond promptly with documentation of the fraud report and the corrected amount. Do not ignore the notice or delay your return waiting for the correction.
- I repaid some unemployment benefits. Can I deduct the repayment?
- Yes. Under the claim-of-right doctrine in IRC §1341, if you repaid more than $3,000 that was previously taxed, you can claim either a deduction or a credit equal to the prior-year tax on that amount — whichever is more beneficial. For repayments of $3,000 or less, the deduction as a miscellaneous itemized deduction is currently suspended under TCJA through 2025 for most taxpayers. See IRS Publication 525 for details.