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Unemployment benefits: This is the number of weeks each states pays in COVID-19 jobless aid with CARES Act

Although every American is entitled to receive unemployment benefits, the number of weeks they can receive benefits depends on the state they live in.

Workers in most states are eligible for up to 26 weeks of benefits from the regular state-funded unemployment compensation program. Under the CARES Act, enacted in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, most states provide 13 additional weeks of federally funded Pandemic Emergency Unemployment Assistance benefits to unemployed Americans who are out of work.

"After the Great Recession, 10 states reduced the maximum benefit duration below 26 weeks,'' says Michele Evermore, senior researcher and policy analyst for the National Employment Law Project. "However, since the pandemic started four of those 10 states went back to 26 weeks – Idaho, Michigan, Georgia, and Kansas.''

The handful of states continuing to offer less than 26 weeks are Missouri, South Carolina, Arkansas, Florida, North Carolina and Alabama, she says.

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Unemployed Americans are also eligible for an extra $600 a week. But states will pay the extra $600 only through the week ending July 25 or 26, a significant blow to unemployed workers counting on that money to bolster state benefits that average just $370 a week.

Workers in most states are eligible for up to 26 weeks of benefits from the regular state-funded unemployment compensation program.
Workers in most states are eligible for up to 26 weeks of benefits from the regular state-funded unemployment compensation program.

The additional benefits are part of the CARES Act, a $1.8 trillion package Congress passed to help the nation weather the economic storm brought by the coronavirus pandemic, which shuttered businesses, slowed spending and erased a staggering 22 million jobs in just two months.

Alabama: 21 weeks

Alaska: 46 weeks

Arizona: 39 weeks

Arkansas: 30 weeks

California: 39 weeks

Colorado: 39 weeks

Connecticut: 39 weeks

Delaware: 39 weeks

District of Columbia: 39 weeks

Florida: 18 weeks

Georgia: 46 weeks

Hawaii: 39 weeks

Idaho: 39 weeks

Illinois: 39 weeks

Indiana: 39 weeks

Iowa: 39 weeks

Kansas: 46 weeks

Kentucky: 39 weeks

Louisiana: 39 weeks

Maine: 39 weeks

Maryland: 39 weeks

Massachusetts: 39 weeks

Michigan: 39 weeks

Minnesota: 39 weeks

Mississippi: 39 weeks

Missouri: 30 weeks

Montana: 41 weeks

Nebraska: 39 weeks

Nevada: 39 weeks

New Hampshire: 46 weeks

New Jersey: 46 weeks

New Mexico: 39 weeks

New York: 46 weeks

North Carolina: 21.6 weeks

North Dakota: 39 weeks

Ohio: 46 weeks

Oklahoma: 39 weeks

Oregon: 46 weeks

Pennsylvania: 39 weeks

Puerto Rico: 39 weeks

Rhode Island: 46 weeks

South Carolina: 36 weeks

South Dakota: 26 weeks

Tennessee: 39 weeks

Texas: 46 weeks

Utah: 39 weeks

Vermont: 46 weeks

Virgin Islands: 39 weeks

Virginia: 39 weeks

Washington: 46 weeks

West Virginia: 39 weeks

Wisconsin: 39 weeks

Wyoming: 39 weeks

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: New York, California jobless benefits last longer than other states