2025 Session Last amended: 2022 session

§ 268.095 — Ineligibility Because of Quit or Discharge

Plain-Language Summary

If you quit your job, you are generally not eligible for unemployment benefits unless you had a good reason caused by the employer (like unsafe conditions or harassment). If you were fired, you are only disqualified if you were fired for employment misconduct or aggravated misconduct. Being laid off is not misconduct and does not disqualify you.

Practical Notes
When this applies: When someone who quit or was fired from a job in Minnesota applies for unemployment benefits. Who this affects: All Minnesota workers who lost their job by quitting or being discharged. Key points: A ‘good reason caused by the employer’ must be directly related to the job, adverse to the worker, and serious enough that a reasonable person would quit. If you had a problem at work, you must complain to the employer and give them a chance to fix it before quitting. You can also quit and keep benefits if you quit for serious medical reasons, lost child care, faced domestic abuse, or to relocate with a military spouse. ‘Employment misconduct’ means intentional or seriously negligent behavior. Simple unsatisfactory work, honest mistakes, and illness-related absences with proper notice are not misconduct. A layoff is always treated as a discharge without misconduct.