Quick Answer

Register at ides.illinois.gov when you first hire employees in Illinois. You'll receive an employer account number and an initial SUI rate. File quarterly UI-3/40 reports. Registration can be done online through IDES TaxNet.

What Is IDES?

The Illinois Department of Employment Security (IDES) is the state agency that administers unemployment insurance in Illinois. Every employer who hires workers in the state must register with IDES, contribute to the unemployment insurance trust fund, and file quarterly wage reports.

IDES is separate from the Illinois Department of Revenue (IDOR), which handles state income tax withholding. As an Illinois employer, you'll interact with both agencies, but they serve different purposes and operate different online portals.

This guide walks you through the IDES registration process, what you'll receive after registering, and the ongoing filing obligations that come with being an Illinois employer.

When You Must Register

Illinois law requires employers to register with IDES within 30 days of becoming a liable employer. You become a liable employer when either of these conditions is met:

  • Wage threshold: You pay wages of $1,500 or more in a single calendar quarter, OR
  • Employment duration: You employ at least one worker for 20 weeks in a calendar year (the weeks do not need to be consecutive)

Once either threshold is triggered, you must register with IDES within 30 days. Most new employers hit one of these thresholds quickly, so in practice, you should plan to register as soon as you make your first hire.

Don't wait. Late registration can result in penalties and back-dated contributions. If you've already hired employees, register immediately rather than waiting to see if you meet the threshold.

What You Need Before Registration

Before you begin the online registration process, gather the following information:

  • Federal Employer Identification Number (EIN) — obtained from the IRS via Form SS-4
  • Business entity information — legal name, DBA (if applicable), business address, entity type (LLC, corporation, sole proprietorship, etc.)
  • NAICS code — the North American Industry Classification System code that describes your primary business activity
  • Owner/officer Social Security Numbers — SSNs for all owners, partners, or corporate officers
  • Date of first payroll — the date you first paid (or will pay) wages to an employee in Illinois
  • Number of employees — current or expected employee count
  • Business formation date — when the business was legally established
Get your EIN first. You cannot register with IDES without a federal EIN. If you haven't obtained one yet, apply online at irs.gov — it takes about 15 minutes and you receive the number immediately.

How to Register Online

IDES registration is completed through the IDES TaxNet portal. Here's the step-by-step process:

Step 1: Create an IDES TaxNet Account

Go to taxnet.ides.illinois.gov and select the option to create a new employer account. You'll set up login credentials (email address and password) for your TaxNet account. This account is how you'll manage all unemployment insurance obligations going forward.

Step 2: Complete the Registration Form

Once logged in, complete the new employer registration form. You'll enter your federal EIN, business entity details, NAICS code, owner/officer information, and date of first payroll. The system will ask about your business type, ownership structure, and whether you acquired the business from a previous employer (which can affect your initial SUI rate).

Step 3: Submit and Receive Your Employer Account Number

After submitting the registration, IDES will process your application and assign you an Illinois employer account number. In most cases, you'll receive confirmation within a few business days. Your account number will be sent via mail, and you'll also be able to view it in TaxNet once it's assigned.

Processing time. Online registrations are typically processed faster than paper submissions. Allow 5–10 business days for your account number to be assigned and mailed. You can check the status through TaxNet.

What You Receive After Registration

After IDES processes your registration, you'll receive the following:

IDES Employer Account Number

Your employer account number follows the format XXX-XXXX-X (three digits, a dash, four digits, a dash, one digit). This number identifies your business in all unemployment insurance filings and correspondence with IDES. Keep it in a safe place — you'll use it on every quarterly report.

Initial SUI Rate Assignment

New employers in Illinois are assigned an initial State Unemployment Insurance (SUI) rate of 3.175%. This rate applies until you build enough experience history for IDES to calculate an experience-based rate, which typically takes about three years of filing history. The rate is applied to taxable wages up to the annual wage base ($13,271 for 2026).

Filing Frequency Information

IDES will confirm your quarterly filing requirement. All Illinois employers file on the same quarterly schedule — there is no option for annual or monthly filing with IDES (unlike some other state agencies).

Filing Requirements

Once registered, your primary ongoing obligation with IDES is filing the UI-3/40 (Employer's Contribution and Wage Report) each quarter. This report serves two purposes: it reports wages paid to each employee, and it calculates your SUI contribution for the quarter.

Quarterly Deadlines

UI-3/40 reports are due on the following dates each year:

  • Q1 (Jan–Mar): Due April 30
  • Q2 (Apr–Jun): Due July 31
  • Q3 (Jul–Sep): Due October 31
  • Q4 (Oct–Dec): Due January 31

If the due date falls on a weekend or holiday, the deadline moves to the next business day.

What You Report

Each quarterly UI-3/40 filing includes:

  • Total wages paid to all employees during the quarter
  • Taxable wages (wages up to the $13,271 annual wage base per employee)
  • Individual employee wage detail (name, SSN, wages for each employee)
  • SUI contribution amount owed (taxable wages multiplied by your SUI rate)

How to File and Pay

File your UI-3/40 electronically through IDES TaxNet. You can also make SUI contribution payments directly through the portal. Electronic filing is required for employers with 25 or more employees, but IDES recommends all employers file electronically regardless of size.

Late filing penalties. IDES assesses penalties for late UI-3/40 filings. Interest accrues on unpaid contributions, and repeated late filing can affect your SUI experience rating, leading to higher rates.

MyTax Illinois vs. IDES TaxNet

One of the most common sources of confusion for new Illinois employers is the difference between the state's two main employer tax portals. They are separate systems managed by separate agencies:

IDES TaxNet

  • Agency: Illinois Department of Employment Security (IDES)
  • Purpose: Unemployment insurance
  • What you file: Quarterly UI-3/40 (wage reports and SUI contributions)
  • URL: taxnet.ides.illinois.gov

MyTax Illinois

  • Agency: Illinois Department of Revenue (IDOR)
  • Purpose: State income tax withholding
  • What you file: IL-941 (quarterly withholding returns) and IL-W-3 (annual transmittal)
  • URL: mytax.illinois.gov

You must register with both systems. IDES TaxNet handles unemployment insurance obligations. MyTax Illinois handles state income tax withholding. They do not share accounts or login credentials. Setting up one does not automatically register you for the other.

Two portals, two obligations. Think of it this way: IDES TaxNet is where you report wages and pay SUI contributions. MyTax Illinois is where you report and remit the state income tax you withhold from employee paychecks. Both are required for every Illinois employer.

New Hire Reporting

In addition to IDES registration, Illinois requires employers to report newly hired and rehired employees to the state. This is a separate obligation from unemployment insurance registration.

Reporting Requirements

  • Deadline: Within 20 days of the employee's hire date (or rehire date)
  • Information required: Employee name, address, SSN, date of hire, and employer name, address, and EIN — using information from the employee's W-4 and IL-W-4 forms
  • Filed with: Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services (not IDES)
  • How to file: Electronically through the Illinois New Hire Reporting portal, by mail, or by fax

New hire reporting is a federal requirement under the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act, but each state administers its own program. Illinois routes new hire data through the Department of Healthcare and Family Services, which uses the information to locate parents who owe child support and to detect unemployment insurance fraud.

Common Registration Mistakes

New employers frequently make these mistakes during the Illinois registration process. Avoid them to stay compliant from day one:

1. Registering Late

The most common mistake. Many new employers don't realize they need to register with IDES until after they've been paying employees for several months. By that time, quarterly reports are already overdue and contributions are accruing interest. Register within 30 days of your first hire.

2. Confusing IDES with IDOR

IDES (Department of Employment Security) handles unemployment insurance. IDOR (Department of Revenue) handles income tax withholding. Registering with one does not register you with the other. You need accounts with both agencies.

3. Not Setting Up Both Portals

Some employers register with MyTax Illinois for income tax withholding but forget about IDES TaxNet for unemployment insurance, or vice versa. Both portals require separate registration, separate login credentials, and separate quarterly filings. Make sure you complete both during your initial employer setup.

4. Incorrect NAICS Code

Your NAICS code affects your initial SUI rate assignment. Using the wrong code can result in a higher or lower rate than appropriate for your industry. Take the time to identify the correct code at census.gov/naics.

5. Missing Owner/Officer Information

IDES requires SSNs for all owners, partners, and corporate officers. Incomplete submissions will delay processing. Have this information ready before starting the registration.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does IDES registration take?

Online registration through IDES TaxNet takes about 15–20 minutes to complete. Processing typically takes 5–10 business days, after which you'll receive your employer account number by mail and in TaxNet.

Is there a fee to register with IDES?

No. Registration with IDES is free. Your ongoing costs are the quarterly SUI contributions based on your assigned rate and employee wages.

What if I already have an IDES account from a previous business?

Each business entity requires its own IDES employer account. If you're starting a new business, you need a new registration even if you've had an IDES account before. If you're acquiring an existing business, the previous owner's experience rating may transfer to you under certain conditions — contact IDES for guidance.

Can I register by mail instead of online?

Yes, you can submit a paper registration by mail, but online registration through IDES TaxNet is faster and recommended. Paper submissions take longer to process.

What is the new employer SUI rate for 2026?

New employers in Illinois are assigned an initial SUI rate of 3.175%. This rate applies to the first $13,271 of each employee's wages per year. After approximately three years of filing history, IDES will calculate an experience-based rate that may be higher or lower depending on your claims history.

Do I need to register with IDES if I only have 1099 contractors?

No. IDES registration is only required when you have W-2 employees. Independent contractors (1099 workers) are not covered by unemployment insurance. However, be sure your workers are correctly classified — Illinois enforces worker classification rules strictly under the Employee Classification Act.

What happens if I miss a quarterly UI-3/40 filing?

IDES assesses penalties and interest on late filings and unpaid contributions. Repeated late filings can negatively impact your SUI experience rating, potentially increasing your rate. File on time even if you owe nothing for the quarter.

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Disclaimer

This article provides general information about Illinois IDES registration requirements and is current as of February 2026. It is not legal or tax advice. Illinois employment law, SUI rates, and filing requirements are subject to change.

Consult a qualified Illinois attorney, CPA, or payroll professional for advice specific to your situation. For official guidance, visit ides.illinois.gov.