Maryland Division of Unemployment Insurance requires that you earned wages in at least two base-period quarters and that your total base-period wages equal at least 1.5 times your highest-quarter wages. Maryland's standard base period is the first four of the last five completed calendar quarters. For the large portion of Maryland workers in the Washington DC corridor β federal contractors, government support, consulting, and tech β most full-time workers easily satisfy these thresholds.
- Wages in at least 2 base-period quarters. Total must be at least 1.5 times your highest-quarter wages.
- Laid off through no fault of your own: eligible. Misconduct discharge or unexcused quit: generally not eligible without appeal.
- Federal contractors: file through BEACON β Maryland DUI verifies your employer's contribution status separately.
Always verify exact numbers, deadlines, and forms on the Maryland Division of Unemployment Insurance's official website β this page provides general guidance, not state-specific legal advice.
Eligible Separations
Contract non-renewals, position eliminations, layoffs, and facility closures all qualify in Maryland as separations through no fault of your own. If your employer discharged you claiming misconduct, Maryland applies a deliberate-willful standard β poor performance, honest mistakes, and single incidents typically don't meet it. If you quit voluntarily, Maryland requires you to show good cause attributable to the employer: material changes in wages or duties, unsafe conditions, or documented harassment you reported without adequate resolution.
Frequently Asked Questions
- My federal contract in Maryland ended and wasn't renewed. Is that a qualifying separation?
- Yes β contract non-renewal is a separation through no fault of your own, the same as a layoff. File through BEACON at beacon.labor.maryland.gov and note the reason as "contract ended" or "lack of work." Maryland Division of UI confirms your eligibility based on whether your employer (the contracting company) paid Maryland UI contributions. Contract-end separations are among the most common qualifying separations in Maryland's DC corridor.
- I was fired from my Maryland government contractor job for a security clearance denial. Does that disqualify me?
- A security clearance denial is complex. Maryland DUI evaluates whether you controlled the factors that led to the clearance denial. If the clearance was denied for reasons outside your control (financial hardship, health issues outside your control), the separation may be treated more like a layoff. If the clearance was denied for deliberate conduct (falsification on a clearance application), Maryland may find fault. File through BEACON and be prepared to explain the specific reason for the clearance denial. Appeal any denial within 15 days.
- I quit my Maryland consulting job because my client work dried up and my hours were cut to near zero. Is that good cause?
- Maryland recognizes substantial reductions in hours and compensation as potential good cause for quitting. If your hours were reduced to near zero β making the position effectively non-existent β Maryland DUI may treat this as a constructive separation rather than a voluntary quit. Document your original hours and pay, the date and extent of the reduction, any communication with your employer, and when you resigned. File through BEACON and appeal any initial denial with this documentation.
- Maryland DUI denied my claim for insufficient wages. Can I check if an alternate base period would help?
- Request a monetary redetermination through BEACON within 15 days of the determination mailing date. Specifically ask whether Maryland's alternate base period (the four most recently completed calendar quarters) would produce a qualifying monetary calculation. If your most recent quarter has significant wages not captured in the standard base period, the alternate period may qualify you. Maryland DUI reviews both periods β request explicitly that both be evaluated if the standard period produces an insufficient result.
- I'm a part-time Maryland employee who lost hours due to a business slowdown. Can I get partial UI?
- Yes β Maryland's partial UI benefit applies when your weekly earnings fall below your WBA. File through BEACON at beacon.labor.maryland.gov. Report your continuing part-time earnings each week in BEACON certification. Maryland offsets part-time earnings against your WBA using Maryland's formula. If your hours were substantially reduced, your partial benefit may cover a meaningful portion of your lost income. Part-time workers should file β Maryland DUI calculates your specific benefit based on your actual reported wages.