What Is the Base Period?

 

Find out how your past earnings are used to calculate your unemployment benefits amount in Oklahoma.

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The base period is the length of time used both to determine your eligibility for unemployment benefits and to calculate the amount you will receive. 

In Oklahoma, the base period is the first four of the five complete calendar quarters immediately before you filed for benefits. For example, if you file for benefits on March 15, 2022, your base period will be from October 1, 2020 through September 30, 2021. It would not include the most recent complete calendar quarter before you filed (October 1, 2021 through December 31, 2021) or the first two-and-a-half months of 2022.

 

If you did not earn enough to qualify for benefits during the regular base period, you may be able to use an alternate base period that counts more recent earnings. In Oklahoma, the alternate base period is the last four complete calendar quarters before you file for unemployment. 

If you can't meet the earnings requirement during the regular base period because of a workplace injury for which you were awarded total temporary disability benefits in the workers' compensation system, you may be entitled to an extended bas period. This means that the Oklahoma Employment Security Commission will look to your earlier earnings to see whether you qualify. The base period may substitute any or all of the four quarters preceding the base period, on a quarter-by-quarter basis, for quarters occurring within the base period, if necessary for you to meet the earnings requirement to qualify for benefits. 


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Jurisdictional relevance: ST

There are versions of this article for each State.