Restarting Benefits
Restarting Benefits after Temporary Work
When you take a temporary job and earn more than your weekly benefit amount, your benefits will stop. When your temporary assignment ends, you need to re-file for unemployment. The same rules for leaving this new employer apply; if you voluntarily quit or you are fired for just cause, you may not be eligible for benefits.
Re-Filing for Benefits
When you apply for unemployment benefits, you establish an active unemployment account for 52 weeks. This is referred to has a benefit year. When your benefit year ends and you still require unemployment assistance, your claim will stop and require you to file a new claim. To be approved for benefits in a new benefit year, you must have earned five times your weekly benefit amount.
Example - Sue filed for benefits on January 1, 2014 and stopped in May (5 months). She was laid off again in the middle of December so she filed a new claim. Since her benefit year ended after 52 weeks, her benefit stopped and she had to apply again. Because Sue’s benefit was $100 a week, she had to have earned at least $500 during the last year to qualify for a new claim.
Unemployment Benefit Extensions
With the new Indexing policy, Tennesseans are only eligible for a maximum currently of 12 weeks of unemployment insurance in a year. If you exhaust your benefits, no extensions are available. To be eligible for unemployment again, you will have to meet several requirements:
- You must have additional earnings from a "covered employer."
- You must be laid off by no fault of your own.
- And, you must apply after your benefit year has ended.