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California Unemployment Guide: Navigating the EDD

DEV Community
James McCabe

California Unemployment Guide: Navigating the EDD If you've been laid off in California, you are dealing with the Employment Development Department (EDD). The system is notorious for being bureaucratic and slow, but California offers some of the highest weekly benefit amounts in the country. Here is the technical breakdown of what you are entitled to and how to get it. California's unemployment math is based on your "base period"—a 12-month period before you filed your claim. Maximum Weekly Benefit Amount (WBA): $450 per week. Minimum Weekly Benefit Amount: $40 per week. Maximum Duration: Up to 26 weeks of regular UI benefits within a one-year benefit period. Total Maximum Payout: $11,700 (26 weeks x $450). To hit the max of $450/week, you must have earned at least $11,674.01 in your highest-earning quarter of your base period. To qualify for EDD benefits, you must meet strict criteria: Unemployed through no fault of your own: Layoffs, company closures, or significant reductions in force. Firing for egregious misconduct disqualifies you. Physically able to work. Available for work. Actively looking for work: You must maintain a work search record and certify it bi-weekly. In California, standard severance pay (a lump sum or continuation of pay not tied to future services) does not typically delay or reduce your unemployment benefits. The EDD considers severance a payout for past services. However, "in lieu of notice" pay or continuation of benefits where you remain technically employed on paper might delay your UI eligibility. Always report all payouts to the EDD truthfully, but know that standard severance usually won't block your claim. File Immediately: Do not wait. The EDD has a one-week unpaid waiting period. File the day after your official termination date. Use UI Online: Paper applications vanish into the void. Use the EDD UI Online portal. Certify Religiously: Every two weeks, you must log in and certify that you looked for work and were able to work. Miss a certification window, and your payments stop. The system does not forgive latency. Calculate your runway carefully. $450 a week is $1,800 a month—rarely enough to cover rent in California, but crucial capital to keep the lights on while you pivot.