State guide Indiana

Indiana Denied Claims & Appeals: Records, Pressure Points, and What to Handle Now

A grounded denied claims & appeals page for Indiana readers who want useful answers early, without filler.

Reviewed June 2026 4 min read Official-source linked Ver en Espanol
Quick Facts Indiana Department of Workforce Development
File online Uplink CSS β†’
Max weekly benefit $390/week
Max duration 26 weeks
Waiting week Yes β€” 1 unpaid week
Work search required 3 contacts/week
Phone hours Mon–Fri 8:00 a.m.–4:30 p.m.
Office address 10 North Senate Avenue, Indianapolis, IN 46204

Verify current amounts and deadlines at the official agency site β€” numbers change when state legislatures update UI statutes.

Key Takeaways
  • For most claimants in Indiana, the avoidable delay happens early, before the claim is organized and before anyone notices a missing week.
  • People whose claim was denied usually want to know exactly how long they have to appeal, what a hearing actually involves, and whether benefits can keep coming while the appeal is pending.
  • Contacting the state agency directly is most useful when normal processing delays, identity verification, and the need to keep a complete work-history record could change the outcome.

Indiana Department of Workforce Development gives claimants 10 calendar days from the mailing date of a determination to file an appeal. Indiana's appeal hearings are conducted by phone before the Review Board of the Indiana Department of Workforce Development. With a maximum benefit of $390/week for 26 weeks, a wrongfully denied Indiana claim represents up to $10,140 in lost benefits β€” act within the 10-day window immediately.

Key Takeaways
  • 10 calendar days from the mailing date to appeal β€” Indiana's window is short. File the day you receive the notice.
  • Telephone hearing before an Indiana DWD Appeals Administrative Law Judge. Present your evidence and your account of events.
  • Continue weekly Uplink CSS certifications throughout the appeal β€” retroactive payment covers all certified weeks if you win.
Official Resources

Always verify exact numbers, deadlines, and forms on the Indiana Department of Workforce Development's official website – this page provides general guidance, not state-specific legal advice.

  • Find your state's unemployment office (CareerOneStop, U.S. Dept. of Labor): source
  • Federal unemployment insurance overview (U.S. Dept. of Labor): source
  • Indiana state agency: Indiana Department of Workforce Development: source

Filing the Appeal

File your appeal through Uplink CSS at uplinkcss.in.gov using the appeals section, or mail a written appeal to Indiana DWD's address on the denial notice. State what you are appealing and include a brief factual explanation β€” you do not need legal language. An Administrative Law Judge will be assigned and will contact you to schedule the telephone hearing, typically within 4 to 8 weeks of filing. Continue weekly certifications throughout this entire period.

Frequently Asked Questions

I received an Indiana DWD denial notice on a Friday. Do I have until the following Monday to appeal?
Indiana's 10-day window starts from the mailing date on the notice, not the date you received it. Count 10 calendar days from that date. If day 10 falls on a weekend or Indiana state holiday, file the business day before to be safe. Do not wait until day 10 β€” file immediately through Uplink CSS or by calling Indiana DWD the day you receive the notice.
I won my Indiana UI appeal. When do I get paid for the weeks I missed?
After the Administrative Law Judge issues a favorable decision, Indiana DWD processes retroactive payment for all weeks you were eligible and certified. Retroactive payment typically arrives within 2 to 4 weeks of the decision. Direct deposit is faster. Continue certifying each week until your benefits are fully reinstated β€” do not assume payments resume automatically without ongoing weekly certifications.
My former Indiana plant employer is fighting my UI claim at the appeal. Can they do that?
Yes. Employers in Indiana have the right to contest UI claims because approved claims increase the employer's state UI tax rate. In a phone hearing, both you and a representative of your employer present your account of the separation. The Administrative Law Judge decides based on evidence and Indiana UI law. Prepare specifically: bring documentation of your layoff notice, any severance paperwork, and any communications about your separation. Indiana's misconduct standard requires willful, deliberate acts β€” challenge any characterization of your separation as misconduct with specific factual counter-evidence.
The Indiana ALJ ruled against me. What are my next options?
Appeal to the Review Board of the Indiana Department of Workforce Development within 15 days of the ALJ decision. The Review Board reviews the case record and ALJ decision β€” it may affirm, modify, or reverse. If the Review Board also rules against you, you can appeal to Indiana Court of Appeals. Legal representation becomes important at the Review Board level and is essentially required in court. Indiana Legal Services provides free assistance to low-income claimants in some cases.
My Indiana employer claims I was fired for attendance violations. I had documented FMLA leave. What do I do?
Appeal immediately and present your FMLA documentation in the hearing. Indiana UI misconduct requires willful violation of employer policy β€” absences covered by federal FMLA are protected leave, not policy violations. Bring your FMLA approval paperwork, doctor's notes, and any communications with your employer about your FMLA status. Indiana's ALJ cannot disqualify you for absences that were legally protected under federal FMLA.