State guide Alaska

What Alaska Claimants Should Know About Filing a Claim

A grounded filing a claim page for Alaska readers who want useful answers early, without filler.

Reviewed June 2026 5 min read Official-source linked Ver en Espanol
Quick Facts Alaska Division of Employment and Training Services
File online UA Connect β†’
Phone (907) 269-4700 Anchorage: (907) 269-4700 | Fairbanks: (907) 451-2871 | Juneau: (907) 465-5552
Max weekly benefit $370/week
Max duration 26 weeks
Waiting week Yes β€” 1 unpaid week
Work search required 2 contacts/week
Phone hours Monday–Friday, 10:00 a.m.–3:00 p.m.

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 Alaska, the avoidable delay happens early, before the claim is organized and before anyone notices a missing week.
  • Most readers want to know how to start a claim, what information the application requires, and how soon to file after hours are cut or a job ends.
  • 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.

Alaska's UA Connect portal at labor.alaska.gov/unemployment accepts unemployment claims from dismissed cannery workers, tourism staff after the season ends, and laid-off Anchorage office employees under the same process β€” Alaska Division of Employment and Training Services handles all of them through UA Connect online or by phone.

Key Takeaways
  • File through UA Connect online or by phone to Alaska Division of Employment and Training Services. File as soon as possible β€” your claim effective date is the Sunday of the week you file, and you cannot backdate it.
  • Alaska has a one-week waiting period. You will not receive benefits for your first week of eligibility, even if you certify and are approved.
  • Seasonal workers in fishing, tourism, and construction are among the most common Alaska claimants. Alaska Division of Employment and Training Services has specific protocols for seasonal-employment separations.
Official Resources

Always verify exact numbers, deadlines, and forms on Alaska Division of Employment and Training Services'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
  • Alaska state agency: Alaska Division of Employment and Training Services: source

Filing Through UA Connect

UA Connect is Alaska's online unemployment portal. After creating or logging into your UA Connect account at labor.alaska.gov/unemployment, you will complete an application covering your work history for the past 18 months, your reason for separation from each employer, and your contact information. Have your last employer's name, address, and dates of employment ready. If you worked in the fishing industry, tourism, or construction β€” Alaska's three largest seasonal sectors β€” the application has specific fields for seasonal employment. Alaska Division of Employment and Training Services processes most UA Connect applications within two to three weeks and mails a monetary determination showing your weekly benefit amount and how many weeks you're eligible for.

Phone Filing

If you cannot access UA Connect online β€” common for workers in rural communities, remote fishing areas, or villages without reliable internet β€” Alaska Division of Employment and Training Services accepts phone applications. The phone line serves both initial claims and weekly certifications. Call volume is highest at the start of salmon season layoffs and at the end of summer tourism season; mid-week morning calls typically have shorter wait times. Have your Social Security number, work history, and separation reason ready before calling.

What Happens After You File

Alaska Division of Employment and Training Services reviews your claim and mails a monetary determination to your address on file. This shows whether you qualify, your weekly benefit amount (up to $370/week), and how many weeks you may draw (up to 26). If your former employer disputes the separation reason β€” saying you quit when you say you were laid off β€” Alaska Division of Employment and Training Services will contact both parties before making a determination. During this review period, keep certifying through UA Connect each week so you don't lose weeks if you're approved. Approved weeks during a pending dispute are typically back-paid.

Frequently Asked Questions

I worked a salmon season in Kodiak and got laid off at the end. How do I file with Alaska Division of Employment and Training Services?
File through UA Connect at labor.alaska.gov/unemployment as soon as the season ends β€” don't wait until you return to Anchorage or your home state if you're an out-of-state worker. If you worked in Alaska and your wages were covered by an Alaska employer, file with Alaska Division of Employment and Training Services. Select "seasonal layoff" as your separation reason. Alaska has specific protocols for fishing industry separations. Your claim effective date is the Sunday of the week you file, so file immediately even if you're still traveling home from Kodiak.
Can I file for Alaska UI if I live in another state but worked a summer tourism job in Juneau?
Yes. You file with the state where the wages were earned β€” Alaska β€” regardless of where you live. UA Connect at labor.alaska.gov/unemployment accepts out-of-state claimants who worked for Alaska-covered employers. List your out-of-state address for correspondence. Weekly certifications and work search requirements still apply, and you'll need to demonstrate you're available for work in your current location. Alaska Division of Employment and Training Services may contact you by phone or mail during the review process.
I was fired from my Anchorage job. Can I still file for Alaska UI?
Yes β€” being fired does not automatically disqualify you. Alaska Division of Employment and Training Services evaluates discharges case by case. The key question is whether you were fired for misconduct as defined under Alaska law. Missing one shift, a personality conflict with a supervisor, or poor performance (without willful violation of work rules) typically does not rise to disqualifying misconduct in Alaska. File through UA Connect immediately β€” if Alaska Division of Employment and Training Services contacts your employer, continue certifying weekly while the review is pending, so approved weeks can be back-paid.
How long does Alaska take to process a claim after I file on UA Connect?
Alaska Division of Employment and Training Services typically processes initial claims within 2–3 weeks and mails a written monetary determination. Processing can extend to 4–6 weeks when the separation reason is disputed by your employer or during high-volume periods at the start of fishing and tourism layoff seasons. You should receive either an approval letter with your weekly benefit amount (up to $370/week) or a fact-finding notice requesting more information. Continue certifying through UA Connect every week during processing β€” if approved, back weeks are paid.
I filed UA Connect on a Wednesday. When does my benefit week start?
Alaska benefit weeks run Sunday through Saturday. Your claim is effective starting the Sunday of the week you filed β€” Wednesday in your case means your effective date is the previous Sunday, not the day you filed. You will not receive benefits for the first week (Alaska's waiting week) even if you're fully eligible. Your first payable week is the second week after your effective date, assuming your claim is approved and you certify through UA Connect for that week.