Alabama Department of Labor requires weekly certification through Alabama UI Claims at workforce.alabama.gov to receive each payment. Alabama certifies weekly β each week must be certified within the applicable window. With only 14 base weeks of benefits at $275/week, missing a certification week in Alabama means losing approximately 7% of your total potential benefits. Certify as early in each window as possible and log your 3 work search contacts before submitting.
- Weekly certification through Alabama UI Claims at workforce.alabama.gov. Do not miss any week β at 14 weeks total, every week counts.
- Report all wages earned during the week. Log 3 work search contacts before certifying each week.
- Alabama's short benefit window makes consistent, timely certification more critical here than in most states.
Always verify exact numbers, deadlines, and forms on the Alabama Department of Labor's official website β this page provides general guidance, not state-specific legal advice.
What Alabama Asks Each Week
During each Alabama UI Claims weekly certification, you confirm: whether you worked or earned wages; whether you were able and available for work; whether you refused any suitable work; and whether you made your 3 employer contacts. Answer accurately. Alabama DOL cross-checks certification answers against employer quarterly wage records. Report all gross wages earned during the week β not when received. Log your work search contacts before starting your certification.
Frequently Asked Questions
- I missed a week of Alabama UI certification. With only 14 weeks total, what can I do?
- Contact Alabama DOL at 1-866-234-5382 immediately. Alabama may allow late certification for documented good cause β illness, documented system outages, or extraordinary circumstances. Given Alabama's 14-week maximum, a single missed week at $275 is $275 lost β pursue the exception process the same day you realize you missed it. Continue certifying all subsequent weeks on time while pursuing the missed week separately. Alabama DOL handles late certification requests case by case.
- I earned $150 this week doing yard work while on Alabama UI. How does that affect my benefit?
- Report the $150 earned in your weekly Alabama UI Claims certification. Alabama applies a partial benefit formula β your wages reduce your WBA proportionally. If your WBA is $275 and you earned $150, Alabama reduces your benefit: typically $275 - ($150 - a small disregard) = your partial benefit for that week. Report all earnings honestly. Alabama DOL's quarterly wage cross-matching detects unreported earnings and creates overpayment obligations. Certify accurately every week.
- Alabama UI Claims online is slow. Is there a phone option I can use instead?
- Yes β call Alabama DOL at 1-866-234-5382 during business hours. Alabama accepts weekly certifications by phone. If you use the phone for certification, document the call (date, time, representative name) in case there is any question about your timely certification. Consistent use of the phone line is an option if the online portal is consistently problematic for you. Alabama DOL prefers online certification but maintains the phone line as a backup.
- Alabama only has 14 weeks. I'm at week 12. What should I do before my benefits end?
- Intensify your job search β apply to more positions per week, engage with Alabama Career Center staff in your area, and use your remaining 2 weeks strategically. Contact Alabama DOL to confirm whether state Extended Benefits are currently active (check workforce.alabama.gov). Apply for Alabama SNAP (food assistance at dhr.alabama.gov) and other state assistance programs before your UI runs out β it's easier to start those processes while you have recent documentation of your unemployment status. Have your resume current and your networks active for your final 2 weeks.
- I returned to work this week in Alabama. Do I certify for a partial week?
- Certify for the week you returned to work, reporting your wages earned that week. If you worked only part of the week and your earnings don't exceed your WBA, you may receive a partial benefit for that final week. Report accurately. After returning to full-time work and your earnings exceed your WBA, stop certifying in Alabama UI Claims. Your claim remains open β if you are laid off again within your benefit year, you can resume certifying for your remaining Alabama weeks.