State guide Washington

What Washington Claimants Should Know About Overpayments & Fraud

A grounded overpayments & fraud page for Washington readers who want useful answers early, without filler.

Reviewed June 2026 5 min read Official-source linked Ver en Espanol
Quick Facts Washington Employment Security Department
Phone 800-318-6022
Max weekly benefit $1152/week
Max duration 26 weeks
Waiting week No β€” paid from week 1
Work search required 3 contacts/week
Phone hours Tue & Thu 8:00 a.m.–noon (adjusted 2026 schedule)

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 Washington, the avoidable delay happens early, before the claim is organized and before anyone notices a missing week.
  • People who received an overpayment notice usually want to know why it happened, what the repayment options are, and whether the determination can be disputed.
  • 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.

Washington Employment Security Department recovers UI overpayments through ESD eServices account holds, Washington state tax refund offsets, and civil collection. Washington's appeal window for overpayment notices is 30 calendar days from the mailing date β€” generous compared to states like New Jersey (7 days) or North Carolina (10 days). Given Washington's $1,152/week maximum, overpayment amounts can be substantial β€” a 10-week overpayment at the maximum represents $10,190 in recovery obligation. Washington distinguishes sharply between non-fraud overpayments (repayment only) and willful misrepresentation (repayment plus civil penalty plus potential disqualification).

Key Takeaways
  • 30 calendar days from the notice mailing date to appeal through ESD eServices.
  • Non-fraud overpayments: repay the amount, no penalty. Willful misrepresentation: repay plus civil penalty (up to 15%) plus disqualification period.
  • Washington's high benefit amounts make overpayment recovery significant β€” contact ESD for repayment plans if the amount is large.
Official Resources

Always verify exact numbers, deadlines, and forms on the Washington Employment Security Department'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
  • Washington state agency: Washington Employment Security Department: source

Common Causes in Washington

  • Unreported consulting or 1099 income β€” Common among tech workers who take contract projects during UI; detected through IRS 1099 cross-matching and employer quarterly filings.
  • Employer appeal reversal β€” ESD initially approves; employer appeals months later and wins; all paid benefits become an overpayment.
  • Work search deficiency β€” ESD audit finds insufficient documented job contacts for specific weeks; benefits for those weeks are recovered.
  • Stock vesting or RSU income β€” Restricted stock units that vest and are reported as W-2 income during the benefit period may constitute earnings requiring reporting.

Responding to Overpayment Notices

Appeal within 30 days through ESD eServices if you believe the overpayment notice is incorrect. Present documentation for the specific weeks identified. If the overpayment is accurate, contact ESD to set up a repayment plan. Monthly installments are available. Future Washington UI benefits are held and applied to the balance. Washington state tax refunds can be offset. For non-fault overpayments creating genuine hardship, ask ESD about waiver options.

Frequently Asked Questions

Washington ESD sent an overpayment notice for a RSU vesting that occurred during my UI benefit period. Is that correct?
RSU (Restricted Stock Unit) vesting is complex from a Washington UI standpoint. When RSUs vest, they are reported as W-2 income by your former employer β€” this appears in employer quarterly wage filings and can trigger a cross-match with your UI certification. If you did not report the RSU vest value as earnings during the certification week when vesting occurred, ESD may determine that week was not properly certified and issue an overpayment. The key question is whether RSU income from a former employer constitutes "wages" in the week of vesting for Washington UI purposes. This is a contested area β€” contact an employment attorney in Washington if the amount is significant, and appeal within 30 days presenting the argument that RSU vesting at a former employer is not current week's "work" or earnings for UI certification purposes.
I accidentally reported the wrong week's earnings in ESD eServices. Now I have an overpayment notice. Is this fraud?
Not if it was a genuine mistake. Washington distinguishes non-fraud overpayments (administrative errors, honest mistakes) from willful misrepresentation (intentional false statements). Entering earnings in the wrong week because you misallocated the earnings date is a non-fraud administrative error β€” you repay the difference without civil penalty. Contact ESD through esd.wa.gov/unemployment immediately to explain and self-report the error. Self-reporting before ESD catches it through cross-matching is treated significantly more favorably. If ESD has already issued a willful misrepresentation finding based on the error, appeal within 30 days and present documentation establishing the error was unintentional β€” the weekly certification records and the timing of your actual work performance support the non-fraud characterization.
I owe Washington ESD $15,000 in overpayments at $1,152/week. I cannot pay this back quickly. What are my options?
Contact Washington ESD through esd.wa.gov/unemployment to establish a monthly installment repayment plan. ESD accepts plans sized to your current income and expenses β€” payment plans can extend over an extended period for large balances. No interest accrues on non-fraud overpayments while a plan is active and current. Future Washington UI benefits are intercepted and applied to the balance. Washington state tax refunds are offset against the balance. If the overpayment was non-fault (employer appeal reversal, ESD system error, or similar), ask ESD specifically about a hardship waiver or waiver petition β€” Washington has a process for waiving overpayments that meet specific criteria. The $15,000 figure at $1,152/week represents approximately 14-15 weeks of overpayment, which is a manageable period for negotiating a payment plan.
How long do I have to appeal a Washington ESD overpayment determination?
30 calendar days from the mailing date on the overpayment notice. File through ESD eServices at esd.wa.gov/unemployment or by mail as directed on the notice. Washington's 30-day window is one of the more generous in the country β€” you have adequate time to review the specific weeks identified, compare them to your certification records, and gather documentation for weeks where you believe the overpayment finding is incorrect. File sooner rather than later β€” the OAH hearing scheduling process begins when you file the appeal, and earlier filing gets you a hearing date sooner.
ESD found willful misrepresentation for weeks I certifying saying I had 3 job contacts but actually had 2. What happens?
A willful misrepresentation finding for work search certification means ESD determined you intentionally overstated your contacts. Consequences: repayment of all benefits paid in the affected weeks; a civil penalty of up to 15% of the overpayment amount; and a disqualification period preventing future Washington UI receipt. Appeal within 30 days to the OAH. In your appeal, present any evidence that you actually did make 3 contacts that week (documentation you may have missed at first) or that the misrepresentation was an honest mistake rather than intentional β€” perhaps you misunderstood what counted as a valid contact or counted something that genuinely seemed valid to you. OAH ALJs can convert willful misrepresentation findings to non-fraud overpayments when the evidence supports that intent was absent.