Severance in Wisconsin
Wisconsin severance & 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 Wisconsin.
- Top marginal tax
- 7.65%
- WARN Act
- State mini-WARN: 50+ employees
- Unemployment max
- $497 / week
- PTO payout
- Depends on employer policy
- Right to work
- Yes
- Notes for Wisconsin
- Worth knowing
Severance is taxed at your state's top marginal rate when it pushes you into that bracket.
Wisconsin layers its own WARN-style protections on top of federal law. Wisconsin Business Closing & Mass Layoff Law triggers at ≥50 employees.
Up to 26 weeks. Unemployment insurance is reduced or offset while severance is paid; you can typically collect a partial benefit.
No statutory requirement to pay out unused PTO — check your employee handbook or offer letter for any contractual obligation.
Right-to-work means union dues can't be a condition of employment. It does not weaken individual severance rights.
Right-to-work since 2015. Max WBA raised from $370 to $497 effective Jan 4, 2026, per 2025 Act 15 (AB50, signed Jul 3, 2025); hadn't changed since 2014.
Sources: state department of labor, state department of revenue, and the U.S. Department of Labor ETA. Last verified: 2026-05.High confidence
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Estimates based on public data and industry benchmarks. Not legal advice.