May 13, 2026

​Can You Collect Unemployment If You Are Fired in California?

The email from HR said "terminated for cause." Now a coworker is telling you that phrase means you cannot collect unemployment in California. Your former employer is counting on you to walk away and believe that.

California's Employment Development Department does not see it that way. The EDD runs its own legal review. It does not accept your employer's framing as the final word. The legal standard for denial is narrow, and most employees who get fired can still collect unemployment in California. This guide explains how the EDD review works and what actually counts as misconduct. It also covers what to do if your claim is denied or your firing crossed a legal line.

A California employee on a phone call with the EDD while reviewing her unemployment claim documents

How to Collect Unemployment Benefits After a Firing in California

California's unemployment program exists for eligible workers who lose their jobs and need income while they search for new work. Employers fund it through payroll taxes, and the EDD runs it under state law. State law sets the eligibility rules, not your employer's internal handbook.

When you file after a firing, the EDD looks at two things. It starts by checking your work hours and employment wages during your base year to see if you qualify. Your base period covers the first four of the last five completed calendar quarters. Then it reviews why you lost your job. That second check is where most disputes happen. It is also where California law protects more employees than most people realize.

What "Misconduct" Means Under California Unemployment Law

Misconduct under California unemployment law means a willful disregard of your employer's interests. This definition comes from Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations, Section 1256. It is a narrow legal standard, not a general description of workplace behavior.

To deny your benefits on misconduct grounds, your employer must prove three things to the EDD. First, you knew what your employer expected. Second, you chose to act against it on purpose. Third, your actions caused real harm to the business. Poor performance, missing shifts for medical reasons, and clashing with a manager almost never clear that bar. The EDD applies the law, not the label on your firing notice.

This matters because employers often write "terminated for cause." In most of those cases, the facts only show a performance gap or a single mistake. In most of those cases, you can still collect unemployment.

Does the Reason for Your Firing Affect Your Eligibility to Collect Unemployment?

The reason your employer gives for firing you matters, but it is not the final word. In California, the EDD focuses on what actually happened, and the way a termination is labeled is only a starting point. Common firing situations are generally handled in patterns under California law, but every case depends on its own facts.

Reason for Firing How the EDD Treats It in California
Poor performance Usually eligible. Inability to meet performance standards is not misconduct under California law.
Attendance issues Often eligible when absences had a valid reason like illness or a family emergency. Repeated no-call no-shows are harder to defend.
Insubordination Depends on the facts. Refusing a reasonable instruction may deny benefits to you. Pushing back on an unlawful order usually does not.
One-time policy violation Often eligible. A single, unintentional mistake usually does not meet the willful disregard standard the EDD requires.
Theft or dishonesty Usually deny benefits toing when documented. Allegations alone are not enough. Your employer must prove the conduct, not just describe it.
Layoff labeled as a firing Usually eligible. The EDD looks at what actually happened, not the label your employer chose to use.
Fired with no reason given Usually eligible. The employer carries the burden of proving misconduct. Giving no explanation usually fails that test.

For more on how these situations play out, see our guides on what to do after being fired in California and the difference between being terminated and laid off.​

Unemployment Benefits vs. a Legal Claim: Understanding the Difference

These are two separate processes, and understanding where one ends and the other begins will save you a lot of confusion.

What You Handle Directly with the EDD

Filing to collect unemployment is something you do on your own, directly with the EDD. That includes submitting your initial claim, certifying weekly claims, attending the eligibility phone interview, and filing an appeal if the EDD denies your benefits. Employment lawyers do not file unemployment claims on your behalf, manage your EDD account, or appear as your representative at EDD hearings. The claims process is designed for employees to navigate without legal help, and most people do.

Where an Employment Lawyer Gets Involved

A lawyer steps in when your firing may have broken California law, and that is a completely different track from the EDD claims process. If you were fired because of your race, gender, age, disability, or a protected complaint you made, that situation may support a wrongful termination lawsuit. A legal claim involves its own investigation, negotiation, and potentially litigation in court or arbitration. The recovery in a legal case can include lost wages, emotional distress damages, and sometimes punitive damages. That is a different outcome than what unemployment benefits provide.

Where the Two Tracks Overlap

You can collect unemployment and pursue a legal claim at the same time, and many employees in California do exactly that. The evidence that supports your EDD case often supports your legal claim too. The place where the two tracks connect most directly is the EDD hearing. Statements you make during that hearing can come up in a later lawsuit. If you believe your firing was illegal and a legal claim is likely, talking to a lawyer before your EDD hearing is worth doing. That conversation does not mean the lawyer is handling your unemployment claim. It means you understand how the two processes relate before you walk into one that can affect the other.

A residential mailbox containing a Notice of Decision from the California Employment Development Department after an unemployment claim

What Happens After You File to Collect Unemployment in California

The application process starts at the EDD website or by calling their claims line. After you file your initial claim, the EDD sends you a Notice of Decision approving or denying your benefits. Once the EDD approves your claim, you certify weekly claims to keep receiving your weekly benefit amount. Your first benefit check usually arrives within a few weeks of approval, and your benefit year covers the twelve-month period during which you can draw on that claim. The claims process involves several steps, and knowing what to expect at each one makes it easier to stay on track. If the EDD needs more details, it schedules a phone interview before issuing a decision. Both you and your former employer get to present your accounts. Keep your answers factual and tie them to documents whenever you can.

How to Appeal a Denied Unemployment Claim in California

If the EDD denies your claim, you have twenty days to appeal. That window starts from the mailing date on the Notice of Decision. Act right away, because missing this deadline limits your options in ways that are hard to undo.

Your appeal goes before a California Administrative Law Judge. The hearing usually takes place by phone. Both sides present evidence and call witnesses. The judge applies California's misconduct standard to the facts and issues a written decision. Before the hearing, gather every document you have: performance reviews, warnings, emails, texts, and attendance records. Many employees who could not collect unemployment after a denial win at this stage. Employers often fail to prove the legal misconduct standard when they have to show up and make their case. Workplace Fairness has a plain-language overview of how termination and unemployment connect.

A California construction worker checking his phone to review the status of his unemployment claim after being fired

When Your Firing in California May Be Illegal

Your firing can be illegal in California even if your employer had a stated reason for it. California is an at-will employment state under California Labor Code Section 2922. Employers have broad power to end the working relationship. That power stops where California's labor laws and worker protection rules begin.

California law bans firing someone based on their race, gender, age, disability, or national origin. It also bans firing someone for reporting harassment or asking for medical leave. Filing a wage complaint and refusing to break the law are protected too. Firing an employee after they file a workers' compensation claim is illegal retaliation under California law. These situations may qualify as wrongful termination, and the remedies available go far beyond what you collect from unemployment benefits.

You can collect unemployment and pursue a wrongful termination claim at the same time. Many employees in California do exactly that. The evidence from your EDD case often supports your legal claim too. One important note: what you say at your EDD hearing can come up in a lawsuit later. Talk to an lawyer before the hearing if a legal claim is also on the table. For more context, see our guides on wrongful termination and retaliation in California, being fired for no reason in California, and at-will employment in California.

An employee discussing her wrongful termination case with an employment attorney at a consultation meeting in California

Collecting Unemployment After Being Fired: Answers to Common California Questions

The questions below come directly from employees in California working through EDD claims and firings. Each answer gives you a clear, direct response you can act on.

What Qualifies as Misconduct for California Unemployment Purposes?

Misconduct for California unemployment purposes means a willful disregard of your employer's interests. Your employer must prove you knew the rules, chose to break them, and caused real harm to the business. Poor performance, valid attendance issues, and workplace disagreements rarely meet this standard. Most "for cause" firings do not hold up when the EDD reviews the actual facts.

Can My Employer Stop Me from Collecting Unemployment After Firing Me?

Your employer cannot block your ability to collect unemployment benefits on its own. It can file a response contesting your claim with the EDD. The EDD then reviews both accounts and makes the final decision. If the agency denies your benefits, you have twenty days from the Notice of Decision to file an appeal.

Can You Collect Unemployment If Fired for Attendance in California?

Many employees fired for attendance still collect unemployment in California. Attendance problems tied to illness, injury, or a protected medical condition are usually not misconduct under EDD standards. The agency looks at the reason behind the absences, not just the number of times you missed work. Repeated no-call no-shows with no explanation are harder to defend before the EDD.

Does Severance Pay Affect Unemployment Benefits in California?

Severance pay usually does not reduce your California unemployment benefits. The EDD treats severance as compensation for past service, not current wages. This can shift if your employer labels it as wages in lieu of notice. Always report any payment from your former employer when you file. Before signing anything, read our guide to severance pay in California, because some agreements contain language that affects your legal rights.

What Happens at a California Unemployment Appeal Hearing?

A California unemployment appeal hearing takes place before an Administrative Law Judge, usually by phone. Both sides present evidence, call witnesses, and answer questions. The judge applies California's misconduct standard to the facts and issues a written decision. Either side can appeal that decision further to the California Unemployment Insurance Appeals Board.

Can You Collect Unemployment and File a Wrongful Termination Claim at the Same Time?

Yes, you can collect unemployment and pursue a wrongful termination claim at the same time in California. Unemployment replaces a portion of your lost wages while your legal case moves forward. Both processes often draw on the same evidence. Statements you make at your EDD hearing can come up in a later lawsuit, so speak with an lawyer before that hearing if you also plan to file a legal claim.

Your Firing Deserves a Real Legal Review

Frontier Law Center does not file unemployment claims. The EDD process is yours to manage directly with the agency, and you do not need a lawyer to do it. What Frontier Law Center does is look at whether your firing crossed a legal line that the EDD process cannot address.

Most employees who reach out are not sure which category they fall into. They know something felt wrong about how they were let go. What they cannot tell on their own is whether that wrong rises to the level of illegal: whether the firing was tied to discrimination, retaliation, or a protected right that California law shields you from losing your job over. That is the question a free case evaluation answers.

Frontier Law Center represents employees across California in wrongful termination, discrimination, retaliation, and whistleblower cases. When you reach out, you connect with a legal team that looks at the full picture of your firing. They examine not just the final conversation, but the pattern of decisions and events that led up to it. The team at Frontier Law Center will tell you directly whether your situation looks like a legal claim, what that claim could be worth, and what the next steps look like.

Everything you share stays completely confidential, and there is no obligation to move forward. Frontier Law Center works on contingency, which means you pay nothing unless your case leads to a recovery. The conversation costs you nothing, and it gives you a clear answer on whether the legal track is worth pursuing alongside your EDD claim.

Reach out to Frontier Law Center and take the first step toward understanding where you stand.
   

Let's discuss.

​Can You Collect Unemployment If You Are Fired in California?

Can you collect unemployment after being fired in California? Learn how EDD eligibility works and what to do if your claim is denied.

May 19, 2026

Call us now at (800) 437-7991 or chat with us.

Schedule a free consultation about how to proceed with your case.

Chat with us

The email from HR said "terminated for cause." Now a coworker is telling you that phrase means you cannot collect unemployment in California. Your former employer is counting on you to walk away and believe that.

California's Employment Development Department does not see it that way. The EDD runs its own legal review. It does not accept your employer's framing as the final word. The legal standard for denial is narrow, and most employees who get fired can still collect unemployment in California. This guide explains how the EDD review works and what actually counts as misconduct. It also covers what to do if your claim is denied or your firing crossed a legal line.

A California employee on a phone call with the EDD while reviewing her unemployment claim documents

How to Collect Unemployment Benefits After a Firing in California

California's unemployment program exists for eligible workers who lose their jobs and need income while they search for new work. Employers fund it through payroll taxes, and the EDD runs it under state law. State law sets the eligibility rules, not your employer's internal handbook.

When you file after a firing, the EDD looks at two things. It starts by checking your work hours and employment wages during your base year to see if you qualify. Your base period covers the first four of the last five completed calendar quarters. Then it reviews why you lost your job. That second check is where most disputes happen. It is also where California law protects more employees than most people realize.

What "Misconduct" Means Under California Unemployment Law

Misconduct under California unemployment law means a willful disregard of your employer's interests. This definition comes from Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations, Section 1256. It is a narrow legal standard, not a general description of workplace behavior.

To deny your benefits on misconduct grounds, your employer must prove three things to the EDD. First, you knew what your employer expected. Second, you chose to act against it on purpose. Third, your actions caused real harm to the business. Poor performance, missing shifts for medical reasons, and clashing with a manager almost never clear that bar. The EDD applies the law, not the label on your firing notice.

This matters because employers often write "terminated for cause." In most of those cases, the facts only show a performance gap or a single mistake. In most of those cases, you can still collect unemployment.

Does the Reason for Your Firing Affect Your Eligibility to Collect Unemployment?

The reason your employer gives for firing you matters, but it is not the final word. In California, the EDD focuses on what actually happened, and the way a termination is labeled is only a starting point. Common firing situations are generally handled in patterns under California law, but every case depends on its own facts.

Reason for Firing How the EDD Treats It in California
Poor performance Usually eligible. Inability to meet performance standards is not misconduct under California law.
Attendance issues Often eligible when absences had a valid reason like illness or a family emergency. Repeated no-call no-shows are harder to defend.
Insubordination Depends on the facts. Refusing a reasonable instruction may deny benefits to you. Pushing back on an unlawful order usually does not.
One-time policy violation Often eligible. A single, unintentional mistake usually does not meet the willful disregard standard the EDD requires.
Theft or dishonesty Usually deny benefits toing when documented. Allegations alone are not enough. Your employer must prove the conduct, not just describe it.
Layoff labeled as a firing Usually eligible. The EDD looks at what actually happened, not the label your employer chose to use.
Fired with no reason given Usually eligible. The employer carries the burden of proving misconduct. Giving no explanation usually fails that test.

For more on how these situations play out, see our guides on what to do after being fired in California and the difference between being terminated and laid off.​

Unemployment Benefits vs. a Legal Claim: Understanding the Difference

These are two separate processes, and understanding where one ends and the other begins will save you a lot of confusion.

What You Handle Directly with the EDD

Filing to collect unemployment is something you do on your own, directly with the EDD. That includes submitting your initial claim, certifying weekly claims, attending the eligibility phone interview, and filing an appeal if the EDD denies your benefits. Employment lawyers do not file unemployment claims on your behalf, manage your EDD account, or appear as your representative at EDD hearings. The claims process is designed for employees to navigate without legal help, and most people do.

Where an Employment Lawyer Gets Involved

A lawyer steps in when your firing may have broken California law, and that is a completely different track from the EDD claims process. If you were fired because of your race, gender, age, disability, or a protected complaint you made, that situation may support a wrongful termination lawsuit. A legal claim involves its own investigation, negotiation, and potentially litigation in court or arbitration. The recovery in a legal case can include lost wages, emotional distress damages, and sometimes punitive damages. That is a different outcome than what unemployment benefits provide.

Where the Two Tracks Overlap

You can collect unemployment and pursue a legal claim at the same time, and many employees in California do exactly that. The evidence that supports your EDD case often supports your legal claim too. The place where the two tracks connect most directly is the EDD hearing. Statements you make during that hearing can come up in a later lawsuit. If you believe your firing was illegal and a legal claim is likely, talking to a lawyer before your EDD hearing is worth doing. That conversation does not mean the lawyer is handling your unemployment claim. It means you understand how the two processes relate before you walk into one that can affect the other.

A residential mailbox containing a Notice of Decision from the California Employment Development Department after an unemployment claim

What Happens After You File to Collect Unemployment in California

The application process starts at the EDD website or by calling their claims line. After you file your initial claim, the EDD sends you a Notice of Decision approving or denying your benefits. Once the EDD approves your claim, you certify weekly claims to keep receiving your weekly benefit amount. Your first benefit check usually arrives within a few weeks of approval, and your benefit year covers the twelve-month period during which you can draw on that claim. The claims process involves several steps, and knowing what to expect at each one makes it easier to stay on track. If the EDD needs more details, it schedules a phone interview before issuing a decision. Both you and your former employer get to present your accounts. Keep your answers factual and tie them to documents whenever you can.

How to Appeal a Denied Unemployment Claim in California

If the EDD denies your claim, you have twenty days to appeal. That window starts from the mailing date on the Notice of Decision. Act right away, because missing this deadline limits your options in ways that are hard to undo.

Your appeal goes before a California Administrative Law Judge. The hearing usually takes place by phone. Both sides present evidence and call witnesses. The judge applies California's misconduct standard to the facts and issues a written decision. Before the hearing, gather every document you have: performance reviews, warnings, emails, texts, and attendance records. Many employees who could not collect unemployment after a denial win at this stage. Employers often fail to prove the legal misconduct standard when they have to show up and make their case. Workplace Fairness has a plain-language overview of how termination and unemployment connect.

A California construction worker checking his phone to review the status of his unemployment claim after being fired

When Your Firing in California May Be Illegal

Your firing can be illegal in California even if your employer had a stated reason for it. California is an at-will employment state under California Labor Code Section 2922. Employers have broad power to end the working relationship. That power stops where California's labor laws and worker protection rules begin.

California law bans firing someone based on their race, gender, age, disability, or national origin. It also bans firing someone for reporting harassment or asking for medical leave. Filing a wage complaint and refusing to break the law are protected too. Firing an employee after they file a workers' compensation claim is illegal retaliation under California law. These situations may qualify as wrongful termination, and the remedies available go far beyond what you collect from unemployment benefits.

You can collect unemployment and pursue a wrongful termination claim at the same time. Many employees in California do exactly that. The evidence from your EDD case often supports your legal claim too. One important note: what you say at your EDD hearing can come up in a lawsuit later. Talk to an lawyer before the hearing if a legal claim is also on the table. For more context, see our guides on wrongful termination and retaliation in California, being fired for no reason in California, and at-will employment in California.

An employee discussing her wrongful termination case with an employment attorney at a consultation meeting in California

Collecting Unemployment After Being Fired: Answers to Common California Questions

The questions below come directly from employees in California working through EDD claims and firings. Each answer gives you a clear, direct response you can act on.

What Qualifies as Misconduct for California Unemployment Purposes?

Misconduct for California unemployment purposes means a willful disregard of your employer's interests. Your employer must prove you knew the rules, chose to break them, and caused real harm to the business. Poor performance, valid attendance issues, and workplace disagreements rarely meet this standard. Most "for cause" firings do not hold up when the EDD reviews the actual facts.

Can My Employer Stop Me from Collecting Unemployment After Firing Me?

Your employer cannot block your ability to collect unemployment benefits on its own. It can file a response contesting your claim with the EDD. The EDD then reviews both accounts and makes the final decision. If the agency denies your benefits, you have twenty days from the Notice of Decision to file an appeal.

Can You Collect Unemployment If Fired for Attendance in California?

Many employees fired for attendance still collect unemployment in California. Attendance problems tied to illness, injury, or a protected medical condition are usually not misconduct under EDD standards. The agency looks at the reason behind the absences, not just the number of times you missed work. Repeated no-call no-shows with no explanation are harder to defend before the EDD.

Does Severance Pay Affect Unemployment Benefits in California?

Severance pay usually does not reduce your California unemployment benefits. The EDD treats severance as compensation for past service, not current wages. This can shift if your employer labels it as wages in lieu of notice. Always report any payment from your former employer when you file. Before signing anything, read our guide to severance pay in California, because some agreements contain language that affects your legal rights.

What Happens at a California Unemployment Appeal Hearing?

A California unemployment appeal hearing takes place before an Administrative Law Judge, usually by phone. Both sides present evidence, call witnesses, and answer questions. The judge applies California's misconduct standard to the facts and issues a written decision. Either side can appeal that decision further to the California Unemployment Insurance Appeals Board.

Can You Collect Unemployment and File a Wrongful Termination Claim at the Same Time?

Yes, you can collect unemployment and pursue a wrongful termination claim at the same time in California. Unemployment replaces a portion of your lost wages while your legal case moves forward. Both processes often draw on the same evidence. Statements you make at your EDD hearing can come up in a later lawsuit, so speak with an lawyer before that hearing if you also plan to file a legal claim.

Your Firing Deserves a Real Legal Review

Frontier Law Center does not file unemployment claims. The EDD process is yours to manage directly with the agency, and you do not need a lawyer to do it. What Frontier Law Center does is look at whether your firing crossed a legal line that the EDD process cannot address.

Most employees who reach out are not sure which category they fall into. They know something felt wrong about how they were let go. What they cannot tell on their own is whether that wrong rises to the level of illegal: whether the firing was tied to discrimination, retaliation, or a protected right that California law shields you from losing your job over. That is the question a free case evaluation answers.

Frontier Law Center represents employees across California in wrongful termination, discrimination, retaliation, and whistleblower cases. When you reach out, you connect with a legal team that looks at the full picture of your firing. They examine not just the final conversation, but the pattern of decisions and events that led up to it. The team at Frontier Law Center will tell you directly whether your situation looks like a legal claim, what that claim could be worth, and what the next steps look like.

Everything you share stays completely confidential, and there is no obligation to move forward. Frontier Law Center works on contingency, which means you pay nothing unless your case leads to a recovery. The conversation costs you nothing, and it gives you a clear answer on whether the legal track is worth pursuing alongside your EDD claim.

Reach out to Frontier Law Center and take the first step toward understanding where you stand.
   

FAQ's

How do I know if I should seek legal representation?

If you're facing an employment dispute, seeking legal representation is advisable.Signs include unfair treatment, discrimination, or wrongful termination. Schedule a consultation with us to discuss your situation and determine the best course of action.

What documents should I have when I speak with you?

When you consult with us, bring any relevant documents such as employment contracts, termination letters, pay stubs, and communication records with your employer. These documents help us better understand your case and provide informed advice.

What kind of damages can I recover if I win my case?

Damages in a successful employment dispute can include back pay, front pay, compensatory damages for emotional distress, and, in some cases, punitive damages. The specific damages depend on the nature of the case, and we will guide you through the potential outcomes during our discussions.

What happens at the beginning of the litigation process?

At the outset, we request your employee file from your employer. This file includes crucial documents like handbooks, personnel files, agreements, and communications. We review the file to assess the strengths and weaknesses of yourcase, typically taking 45-90 days.

What occurs during the pre-litigation stage?

In this stage, we analyze your employee file, conduct research, and draft a demand letter outlining potential claims to your employer. If negotiation is possible, we may resolve the case without filing a lawsuit. The pre-litigation stage can take 30-90 days or more, depending on case complexity.

What happens if negotiation fails during pre-litigation?

If negotiation isn't successful, or if the defendant is unwilling to negotiate, we move to the litigation stage, which can last 6 months to 2 years or more. It involves filing a lawsuit, engaging in discovery, and potentially proceeding to trial.

What does the litigation stage entail?

The litigation stage involves filing a complaint, engaging in discovery to gather evidence, and potentially going to trial if an agreement cannot be reached. The duration varies, lasting 6 months to 2 years based on case complexity.

Are there alternative dispute resolution options?

Yes, alternatives include arbitration and mediation. Arbitration is required if you signed an agreement with your employer, offering a faster resolution. Mediation is avoluntary process where both parties meet with a neutral third party to settle the case.

How does Frontier Law Center support clients throughout the process?

We keep you informed, answer your questions, and provide guidance and support at every step. Contact us anytime if you have concerns or queries. We are here to fight for your rights and help you navigate this challenging time.

Can you guarantee a specific timeline or outcome?

Every case is unique, and factors may affect timelines or outcomes. While we
strive to provide accurate estimates, there are no guarantees. We promise to keep
you informed, work efficiently, and strive for the best possible resolution.

Call us now at (800) 437-7991 or chat with us.

Schedule a free consultation about how to proceed with your case.

Chat with us