Title 15 › Chapter 116— CORONAVIRUS ECONOMIC STABILIZATION (CARES ACT) › Subchapter II— UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE PROVISIONS › § 9023
Allows a State to choose to make temporary extra weekly unemployment payments by signing an agreement with the Secretary of Labor. If a State joins, its agency must pay people their normal state unemployment amount plus a federal extra weekly payment and, when eligible, an extra $100 for workers who earned at least $5,000 from self-employment in the most recent tax year. The federal extra weekly payment was $600 for weeks starting after a State’s agreement and ending on or before July 31, 2020, and $300 for weeks starting after December 26, 2020 (or after the State’s agreement date if later) and ending on or before September 6, 2021. The extra payments can be paid together with regular benefits or separately each week. States must check self-employment income before giving the $100 payment. If a State changes its law so that regular benefits are smaller than they were on January 1, 2020, the Secretary can stop the agreement. The federal government will pay States back 100% of the extra weekly payments and any extra admin costs. Payments to States may be advanced or reimbursed each month and adjusted later. A State can end its agreement with 30 days’ written notice. If someone knowingly lies to get these extra payments, they can lose future payments, must repay the money (unless the State waives repayment for no-fault and fairness), and may be prosecuted under federal law. States have three years to recover overpayments, must give notice and a hearing before taking money back, and must treat appeals the same way they treat other unemployment decisions. Definitions used include: compensation (unemployment pay); regular compensation (normal state benefits); benefit year (the person’s benefit period); State (the state government); State agency (the office running unemployment); State law (the state’s unemployment rules); week (the weekly benefit period). The same rules also apply to related programs like extended benefits, pandemic assistance, pandemic emergency compensation, and short-time compensation. The monthly value of the federal extra payment is ignored when checking income for Medicaid and CHIP.
Full Legal Text
Commerce and Trade — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
15 U.S.C. § 9023
Title 15 — Commerce and Trade
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60