Title 15 › Chapter CHAPTER 116— - CORONAVIRUS ECONOMIC STABILIZATION (CARES ACT) › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE PROVISIONS › § 9025
States can sign an agreement with the Secretary of Labor to pay extra unemployment help called pandemic emergency unemployment compensation (PEUC). A State can leave the agreement with 30 days’ written notice. If a State joins, it must pay PEUC to people who have used up all regular unemployment for a benefit year (not counting benefit years that ended before July 1, 2019), have no other regular benefit rights for the week, are not getting Canadian unemployment for that week, and are able, available, and actively looking for work (States must allow flexibility if someone cannot look because of COVID‑19). The State must open a PEUC account for each eligible applicant. Each account is worth 53 times that person’s average weekly benefit amount; the weekly PEUC payment equals the person’s regular weekly benefit plus any extra federal pandemic and mixed‑earner payments allowed by law. If a new benefit year begins and the new weekly amount is at least $25 less than the old one, the State must use one of several allowed methods (for example, delay the new year, delay payment, pay a mix, or let the person choose) to decide whether to pay PEUC or regular benefits. People who were getting state extended compensation for the week that included December 27, 2020 or the week that included March 11, 2021 cannot get PEUC from the law changes tied to those dates until they finish their extended benefits. The agreement covers weeks after it starts and ending on or before September 6, 2021. An agreement ends if the State changes how it computes regular benefits after January 1, 2020 in a way that reduces the number of weeks or the average weekly amount that would be payable. The federal government pays States 100 percent of PEUC costs. Money comes from the Unemployment Trust Fund and transfers from the Treasury general fund and is appropriated without fiscal year limits. If someone lies to get PEUC, they lose future PEUC, must repay the money (unless the State waives repayment for no fault and equity), and can face criminal charges under 18 U.S.C. 1001. States may recover overpayments by deducting from future benefits for up to 3 years after payment, but only after notice, a fair hearing chance, and a final decision. Defined terms (one line each): compensation (unemployment pay), regular compensation (ordinary state unemployment), extended compensation (state extended benefits), benefit year (the 12‑month period for benefits), base period (wage period used to figure benefits), State (the participating State), State agency (the State unemployment office), State law (that State’s unemployment rules), week (the weekly unit for benefits), and actively seeking work (must register, make job contacts, keep a record, and provide it when asked; States must be flexible for COVID‑19).
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Commerce and Trade — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
15 U.S.C. § 9025
Title 15 — Commerce and Trade
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73