Severance in Louisiana
Louisianaseverance & layoff calculator
State law shapes how much of your severance you keep, when you can collect unemployment, and whether your employer owed you advance notice. Here’s what applies in Louisiana.
- Top marginal tax
- 3.00%
- WARN Act
- Federal WARN only
- Unemployment max
- $275 / week
- PTO payout
- Required by law
- Right to work
- Yes
- Notes for Louisiana
- Worth knowing
Severance is taxed at your state's top marginal rate when it pushes you into that bracket.
Louisiana doesn't have a state mini-WARN, so federal rules apply: 100+ employees, 60 days' notice.
Up to 26 weeks. Severance is treated as wages here, which delays unemployment insurance eligibility until your severance period ends.
Louisiana requires accrued, unused PTO to be paid out at separation regardless of your employment agreement.
Right-to-work means union dues can't be a condition of employment. It does not weaken individual severance rights.
Vacation pay considered earned wages and must be paid out. Flat 3% income tax (2025).
Sources: state department of labor, state department of revenue, and the U.S. Department of Labor ETA. Last verified: 2026-04.
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Estimates based on public data and industry benchmarks. Not legal advice.