State guide Virginia

What Virginia Claimants Should Know About Self-Employed & Gig Workers

A grounded self-employed & gig workers page for Virginia readers who want useful answers early, without filler.

Reviewed June 2026 5 min read Official-source linked Ver en Espanol
Quick Facts Virginia Employment Commission
File online VEC Online β†’
Max weekly benefit $430/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.

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 Virginia, the avoidable delay happens early, before the claim is organized and before anyone notices a missing week.
  • Independent contractors and gig workers usually want to know whether they can qualify at all, since standard unemployment insurance is built around W-2 wage history rather than 1099 income.
  • 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.

Virginia Employment Commission does not provide standard UI benefits for self-employment or 1099 independent contractor income because Virginia's UI fund is financed through employer contributions on W-2 wages. 1099 earnings generate no UI contribution and no benefit entitlement. The federal Pandemic Unemployment Assistance program that temporarily covered Virginia gig workers ended in September 2021. Virginia's Northern Virginia corridor has a significant population of 1099 consultants and independent contractors β€” particularly in government contracting and technology β€” many of whom may have W-2 wages alongside 1099 income that could generate UI eligibility.

Key Takeaways
  • Virginia UI covers W-2 employees only. 1099 and self-employment income generates no eligibility.
  • Workers with any W-2 wages alongside 1099 income should file β€” W-2 wages qualify independently for up to $430/week.
  • Virginia enforces worker misclassification rules β€” some 1099 arrangements may be reclassifiable as employment.
Official Resources

Always verify exact numbers, deadlines, and forms on the Virginia Employment Commission'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
  • Virginia state agency: Virginia Employment Commission: source

The Structural Reason

Virginia's UI system is built on the employer-employee relationship β€” specifically, the payroll taxes that covered employers pay on W-2 wages. Self-employed workers and 1099 contractors do not have employers paying these contributions, so the fund that pays UI benefits is never funded on their behalf. This is a national feature of the UI system, not a Virginia-specific restriction.

Mixed Income Situations

Northern Virginia government contractors frequently have periods of W-2 employment alongside 1099 consulting work. If you have W-2 wages in your base period β€” even from a single contracting employer over a brief period β€” file through VEC Online. Virginia evaluates W-2 wages independently. The 1099 income is excluded from the base period calculation. Report any 1099 earnings you receive during your Virginia UI benefit period in your weekly VEC Online certification.

Frequently Asked Questions
I'm a 1099 IT contractor in Northern Virginia. My contract ended. Can I file for Virginia UI?
Not on 1099 contract income alone β€” 1099 earnings do not generate Virginia UI eligibility because no employer contributed to the Virginia UI fund on those earnings. However: if any of your contracting was as a W-2 employee of a staffing or contracting firm (rather than direct 1099 to the end client), those W-2 wages may be on file with VEC. Many Northern Virginia contracting arrangements run through firms like Booz Allen or SAIC where workers are W-2 employees of the firm, not 1099 contractors of the federal agency. File through VEC Online and let VEC determine what wages are on file. Also consider whether your contracting arrangement constitutes employment under Virginia's worker classification standards.
PUA covered Virginia gig and contract workers during COVID. Is there anything similar available now?
No. Pandemic Unemployment Assistance was a federally authorized and funded program under the CARES Act, active from 2020 through September 2021. Virginia cannot continue it independently without federal authorization and funding. There is currently no state-funded equivalent for gig workers or independent contractors in Virginia. If new federal legislation creates a successor program, the Virginia Employment Commission would implement it. Check vec.virginia.gov and dol.gov for any new program announcements.
I'm a Northern Virginia consultant who has been placed by a staffing firm. Am I a W-2 employee or 1099?
Check your pay stubs and the IRS form you received (W-2 or 1099-NEC). Many staffing firms place workers as W-2 employees on the firm's payroll β€” the worker receives a W-2 from the staffing company, not a 1099. If you are a W-2 employee of the staffing firm, your wages are covered for Virginia UI purposes, and you can file with VEC based on those wages. If the firm placed you as a 1099 independent contractor, you need to evaluate whether the arrangement satisfies Virginia's worker classification rules or whether a misclassification claim is appropriate. The distinction matters significantly for your UI eligibility.
I run a small tech consulting business in Northern Virginia and recently lost my biggest client (80% of revenue). Is there UI help?
Not for the consulting income itself β€” self-employment and 1099 income do not qualify under Virginia UI. However: if your consulting business had a period when you were classified as a W-2 employee of a client or partner firm, those wages may be on file with VEC. Virginia American Job Centers in Northern Virginia can assist with reemployment services, business planning resources, and referrals to other assistance programs even when UI eligibility does not exist. Additionally, the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) has programs for business owners experiencing significant revenue loss β€” these are separate from UI and worth exploring through the SBA's Northern Virginia resources.
Virginia denied my claim saying I was a contractor. What should I do?
Appeal within 30 days through VEC Online. In your appeal, present facts that support employee classification under Virginia's common law control test: did the entity control the manner and means of your work (schedule, methods, tools)? Were you economically dependent on a single client? Were you integrated into the client's daily operations? Did the client provide training, equipment, or workspace? These are employment indicators. Simultaneously contact VEC's employer tax compliance unit about filing a misclassification complaint. The appeal challenges your current claim; the misclassification complaint investigates whether your wages should have generated UI contributions. Both are worth pursuing if the employment indicators are present.