11 March 2025 Delaware unemployment insurance law updated to include fixed wage base and new methodology for determining SUI tax rates H.B. 433 made significant changes to Delaware's state unemployment insurance (SUI) law, which will collectively change the amount of SUI taxes paid by many experience-rated employers. Under prior law adopted in 2013 (H.B. 168), and except for a temporary measure effective only for the 2019 tax year (H.B. 198), the SUI wage base was tied to the state's unemployment insurance trust fund balance as of September 30:
Effective January 1, 2027, H.B. 433 moves Delaware to a fixed SUI wage, which increases incrementally each year until it reaches $16,500 in 2027. US Department of Labor, Comparison of State Unemployment Laws) Effective January 1, 2027, the state will switch from the Benefit Ratio method to the Benefit-Wage Ratio method for determining the SUI tax rate assigned to experience-rated employers. According to the House Committee Report on H.B. 433, this change was made "to be more responsive to changes in the economy over time, to better sustain the solvency of the Unemployment Trust Fund, and to be easier to administer." Until the new rating system goes into effect on January 1, 2027, the law provides temporary relief to employers that pay SUI taxes in 2025 and 2026 by reducing new employer SUI tax rates, simplifying SUI tax rate schedules and reducing or holding constant overall SUI tax rates. Under federal law, states are given flexibility to choose the method they will adopt for determining the method used for determining the tax rate assigned to experience-rated employers. According to the US Department of Labor (Conformity Requirements for State UI laws), there are currently four experience rating methods used by the states and US territories:
Considering Delaware's changing unemployment insurance provisions through 2027, employers should review their assigned SUI tax rates for accuracy and promptly notify the Delaware Division of Unemployment Insurance of any errors. For information concerning the state SUI wages bases and tax rates for 2025, see our special report.
Document ID: 2025-0647 | ||||