Yes. The moment your Pennsylvania LLC pays wages that meet the threshold, you are legally required to register for Unemployment Compensation (UC) with the Pennsylvania Department of Labor and Industry. This is not optional, and it is not something you set up later — registration must happen within 30 days of when covered employment begins.
This requirement catches a lot of new employers off guard because it applies broadly. Part-time employees, seasonal workers, temporary hires — they all count. There is no minimum number of hours an employee needs to work before the obligation kicks in.
When the Registration Requirement Triggers
Pennsylvania’s UC law specifies two thresholds that trigger the requirement:
For most small Pennsylvania LLCs, the first threshold is the relevant one. If you hire even a part-time employee and pay them anything meaningful, you will cross the $300 quarterly wage threshold quickly.
One thing specific to LLCs that surprises people: the family exemption does not apply to LLCs. Other business structures can sometimes exempt family members from UC coverage. With an LLC, wages paid to family members who work for the business are subject to UC contributions the same as any other employee.
How to Register for UC in Pennsylvania
Registration happens through two separate systems, and you need both:
- Register with the PA Department of Revenue through myPATH (mypath.pa.gov). This sets up your withholding tax account — required for withholding state income tax from employee wages. Go to myPATH, select ‘Register a New Business,’ and complete the Pennsylvania Online Business Tax Registration. You will receive a state tax withholding account number.
- Register with the Department of Labor and Industry’s Unemployment Compensation Management System (UCMS). This is the separate system that handles UC contributions specifically. You can access UCMS through the L&I employer portal at uc.pa.gov. After completing registration, you will receive a 7-digit UC account number.
Both registrations should be completed before or immediately after your first employee’s start date. You have 30 days from when covered employment begins — do not wait until the end of the quarter.
Allow a few weeks for your account numbers to arrive. Some payroll systems and service providers need these numbers before they can set up your payroll accounts, so starting the registration process early matters.
What PA Unemployment Compensation Costs in 2026
UC contributions are paid by the employer — not deducted from employee wages. The rate depends on your industry and your history with the UC system.
| Employer Type | 2026 New Employer UC Rate |
| Non-construction employers | 3.8220% |
| Construction employers | 10.5924% |
These rates apply to the taxable wage base, which is the first $10,000 of each employee’s wages per year. Once an employee earns more than $10,000 in a calendar year, you stop paying UC tax on their wages for that year.
As a new employer, you pay the new employer rate for your first few years. After that, your rate is experience-rated — it can go up or down based on your history of former employees filing UC claims. Businesses with low turnover and few claims tend to see their rates decrease over time.
Other Registrations You Need at the Same Time
UC registration is one piece of a larger set of obligations that come with your first hire. Doing them all at the same time avoids running into compliance gaps:
What Happens If You Do Not Register
Failing to register for UC is a violation of the Pennsylvania UC Law. Penalties include:
The Department of Labor and Industry does audit employers. If someone you previously employed files for unemployment, the state will check whether you were registered and paying contributions. Discovering you were not will trigger a review of your full payroll history.
The registration process itself is straightforward. There is no good reason to delay it once you make your first hire.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. Pennsylvania’s UC law covers part-time, full-time, and seasonal employees. If you pay a part-time employee $300 or more in any calendar quarter, you are required to register and pay UC contributions on their wages.
Members of an LLC are not automatically covered as employees. Whether a member is subject to UC depends on whether they are classified as an employee of the LLC and receive wages. If you pay yourself a salary as an employee of your LLC, those wages may be subject to UC contributions. Consult your accountant for the specifics of your LLC structure.
Registration through myPATH and UCMS is typically completed online in under an hour. Receiving your UC account number and state tax withholding number may take several weeks. Factor this timeline into your payroll setup — you need these account numbers to run compliant payroll.
The taxable wage base is the first $10,000 of each employee’s wages per calendar year. You pay UC contributions on wages up to that amount per employee. Once an employee’s annual wages exceed $10,000, you stop paying UC tax on the additional earnings for that year.
Yes, and most do. Full-service payroll providers like Gusto, ADP, or QuickBooks Payroll handle UC registration, withholding calculations, and quarterly UC tax filings on your behalf. You still need your own UC account number — but many payroll services will walk you through the registration process or handle it for you.





