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Just make sure you have a backup plan in case it takes a while to get approved. The process can sometimes drag on longer than expected, especially if your employer disputes the claim.
One more tip - if you think there might be an error in your wage records that affected your calculation, you can request a wage transcript from Washington ESD to verify they have the correct information from your employers.
You can request it online through your eServices account, but if you need help interpreting it or think there's an error, you'll probably need to call or use something like that Claimyr service people mentioned.
This has been super educational! I had no idea the calculation was so involved. Makes me appreciate that someone at Washington ESD actually has to do all this math for every claim.
Make sure you understand the difference between fraud and overpayment. Fraud requires intent to deceive. Overpayment can happen due to mistakes or misunderstanding. Your situation sounds like the latter.
Whatever you do, don't ignore this hoping it goes away. I know someone who did that and it turned a simple overpayment into a much bigger problem with way higher penalties.
Definitely not ignoring it. I'm going to try calling first thing Monday and if I can't get through I'll try that Claimyr service.
had to wait 10 days for my first payment even though everything looked fine online - just the way their system works unfortunately
Final suggestion - if your payment is still delayed after checking all these things, document everything (screenshots of your claim status, weekly claim confirmations, etc.) in case you need to escalate the issue or file an appeal later.
Diego Castillo
At least Washington state has some of the higher unemployment benefits compared to other states. I moved here from Florida where the max was like $275/week. Still not enough but could be worse.
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Mikayla Brown
•True but cost of living here is also way higher than Florida, so it evens out to being just as hard to survive on.
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Owen Jenkins
•Yeah, $487 in Seattle money feels like $200 anywhere else with normal rent prices.
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Logan Stewart
Bottom line is unemployment insurance was designed as temporary partial wage replacement, not full income replacement. It sucks but that's the reality. Focus on job searching and use every resource available - career centers, networking, online applications, everything.
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Owen Jenkins
•You're right, I need to treat job searching like a full-time job itself. Just frustrating when the safety net feels so inadequate.
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Sean Matthews
•WorkSource Washington has good job search resources and required workshops that might help speed up your search.
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