State guide Montana

Montana Guide to Weekly Benefit Amount: What Gets Harder If You Wait Too Long

Clear, state-level weekly benefit amount guidance for Montana readers who need the first moves and documentation laid out cleanly.

Reviewed June 2026 5 min read Official-source linked Ver en Espanol
Quick Facts Montana Unemployment Insurance Division
Max weekly benefit $767/week
Max duration 28 weeks
Waiting week Yes β€” 1 unpaid week
Work search required 3 contacts/week

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

Key Takeaways
  • In Montana, the strongest early move is usually to slow down long enough to get the timeline, documents, and weekly routine under control.
  • Most readers want to know how much they will actually receive each week, how that number gets calculated, and how many weeks of payments they can expect.
  • 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.

Montana Unemployment Insurance Division calculates your weekly benefit at approximately 1% of your total base period wages, capped at $767 per week with a minimum of $227 per week. Montana's total maximum potential benefit is $767 Γ— 28 weeks = $15,456 β€” one of the higher maximums among Western states. Montana's $227/week minimum ensures that agricultural, seasonal, and part-time workers with modest wage histories receive meaningful income support. Montana's benefit calculation rewards concentrated seasonal wages β€” a strong summer or harvest quarter can push benefits toward the $767 cap.

Key Takeaways
  • Weekly benefit β‰ˆ 1% of total base period wages, capped at $767/week, minimum $227/week.
  • Total maximum $15,456 (28 weeks Γ— $767) β€” Montana's 28-week window is 2 weeks above the national standard.
  • Appeal your Montana UI Claims monetary determination within 10 days if wages are incorrect.
Official Resources

Always verify exact numbers, deadlines, and forms on Montana Unemployment Insurance Division'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
  • Montana state agency: Montana Unemployment Insurance Division: source

Reading Your Montana UI Claims Monetary Determination

Montana UI Claims generates a monetary determination showing your weekly benefit amount, total maximum benefit, and benefit year dates. Cross-check it against your W-2 and pay stubs: Montana's formula uses approximately 1% of your total base period wages. At $55,200 in base period wages, you hit Montana's $767 cap. Wages below $15,700 in the base period produce the $227 minimum. Appeal within 10 days of the mailing date if any quarterly wages are missing or incorrect β€” missing employer reports are the most common cause of incorrect monetary determinations.

Frequently Asked Questions

I earned $70,000 at my Billings energy company. Why does Montana UI Claims only pay $767/week?
Montana's $767/week statutory cap applies regardless of prior income. At $70,000 annually, your 1% formula would produce approximately $700/week β€” but Montana's cap limits the actual weekly benefit to $767. Over 28 weeks, your total Montana UI benefit is $15,456 β€” about 22% of your $70,000 annual income. Montana's $767 cap is set by state law. Budget carefully around this reality while searching for your next position. Montana's energy, tech, and healthcare sectors in Billings and Missoula are typically the fastest-reemployment sectors β€” workers in these fields often find positions before the 28-week maximum is reached.
I worked harvest season in eastern Montana β€” long hours from July through November but nothing the other months. How does Montana's 1% formula treat seasonal wages?
Montana's 1% formula uses your total base period wages from all covered quarters, not just the peak quarter. If you earned $50,000 from July through November of the base period year, that $50,000 enters the total base period wage calculation: $50,000 Γ— 1% = $500/week β€” below Montana's $767 cap. The fact that those wages are concentrated in 5 months doesn't penalize you under Montana's formula β€” total base period wages is the numerator regardless of how they're distributed across quarters. You need wages in at least two quarters to qualify, so one very strong quarter with no other wages wouldn't meet the two-quarter minimum. Montana's harvest workers who work July-November typically have wages in Q3 (July-September) and Q4 (October-December), meeting the two-quarter requirement.
Montana UI Claims shows $227/week β€” the minimum. I worked full-time at a Helena call center for 6 months. That seems wrong.
$227/week with 6 months of full-time call center work is almost certainly an error. At even $15/hour for 40 hours/week, 6 months of work produces approximately $15,600 in wages β€” and 1% of $15,600 is $156/week, just barely hitting the $227 minimum. If your hourly rate was higher or you worked overtime, the benefit should be above $227. Check what quarterly wages Montana Unemployment Insurance Division has on file by reviewing your monetary determination against your W-2. A common cause: your employer filed their Montana quarterly wage report late, and only Q4 wages (2 months) appeared in the base period rather than all 6 months. Contact Montana Unemployment Insurance Division with your W-2 and pay stubs showing the full 6-month wage history and appeal within 10 days of the mailing date.
I had wages from Montana and Wyoming employers during my base period. Which state's Montana UI Claims should I use?
File with Montana Unemployment Insurance Division and disclose your Wyoming wages β€” Montana allows combined wage claims that include wages from other states in the base period calculation. Montana aggregates your Montana wages and Wyoming wages into the total base period wage figure and applies the 1% formula to the combined total. This may produce a higher weekly benefit than using either state's wages alone. If Montana's combined total produces a better benefit than Wyoming's combined total, file with Montana. If you're unsure which state produces the higher benefit, contact both Montana Unemployment Insurance Division and Wyoming's UI agency to compare calculations. File in the state with higher total wages or where you currently reside for easiest administration.
I worked 4 months then moved from Montana to Idaho. Can I still collect Montana UI Claims benefits from Idaho?
Yes β€” you can collect Montana UI Claims benefits after relocating to Idaho. File your initial claim with Montana Unemployment Insurance Division (since your wages are from Montana employers). After establishing your Montana claim, you can manage it remotely through Montana UI Claims online portal from Idaho. Update your address to Idaho in Montana UI Claims. Idaho's new job market is your work search base β€” Montana UI Claims requires 3 work search contacts per week, and contacts with Idaho employers are valid. Montana Unemployment Insurance Division may refer you to an Idaho American Job Center for reemployment services. Continue certifying weekly through Montana UI Claims β€” your benefit amount and duration (up to 28 weeks at the Montana rate) remain determined by Montana's formula regardless of your Idaho address.