Access to Justice for Washington Consumers
LegalConsumer.com has been providing free tools and legal information to Washington consumers since 2006.
LegalConsumer.com has been providing free tools and legal information to Washington consumers since 2006.
In Alaska, you can use an Affidavit procedure if the entire estate consists only of vehicles with a total value of up to $100,000 and personal property (other than vehicles) worth up to $50,000. There is a 30-day waiting period. Alaska Stat. 13.16.680.
You can use a small estates procedure if the entire estate, not counting debts owed on the property, adds up to less that $100,000 of vehicles and $50,000 of personal property (furniture, clothes, and other tangible items). There is a 30-day waiting period.
Washington, like most states, does not impose an estate or inheritance tax. Only a few states do.
Yes. Alaska allows residents to use the federal exemptions pursuant to Code § 522(b). If the debtor choses to use the Alaska exemptions, AS § 09.38.055 limits the exemptions available to a debtor filing bankruptcy and residing in Alaska to those within the following statutes: AS §§ 09.38.010, 09.38.015, 09.38.017, 09.38.020, 09.38.025 and 09.38.030.
Principal residence up to $72,900* -- joint owners may each claim a portion, but total can't exceed $72,900
Homestead amount adjusted for inflation every two years. Current as of 10/1/2020. Source: Alaska BK Court.
Up to $4,050 worth of one vehicle, as long as the total value of the vehicle does not exceed $27,000.
In Alaska, you can receive unemployment benefits for a maximum of 16 to 26 weeks, depending on how evenly spread your earnings were throughout the base period. If you earned most of your income in your highest-paid quarter, your benefits will last for a shorter period; if your earnings were more evenly divided over the entire base period year, you will receive benefits for a longer time. See Calculating Your Weekly Benefit Amount and Duration for more information.
The minimum wage in Alaska is $11.73 an hour. Because this is higher than the federal minimum wage of $7.25, employees in Alaska must be paid at least $11.73 an hour.
The minimum wage in King County is $11.73 an hour, the state minimum wage. However, cities and counties in Washington are free to adopt their own higher minimum wage, and dozens of cities and counties across the country have done so. To find out whether King County has passed its own minimum wage law since we last updated, visit https://kingcounty.gov/.
The tipped minimum wage in Alaska is the same as the regular minimum wage: $11.73 an hour. Tips don't count against the employer's obligation to pay the minimum wage.