The moment the meeting ends is the part nobody warns you about. Whatever happened, whether you saw it coming for weeks or got blindsided on a random Tuesday, the minutes afterward give you just enough quiet to start running the math. Rent. Health insurance. The conversation waiting for you at home. A LinkedIn profile you haven't touched in three years.
If you just lost your job, the next few days will feel like a lot to carry at once. The good news is that most of what you need to do falls into a fairly predictable sequence, and you don't have to figure it all out in one sitting. This guide walks through the steps that matter most in the first 72 hours, the logistics to handle in week one, and how to approach your next job search based on how much runway you actually have.
The instinct after losing a job is to file for unemployment first. But Annette Garsteck, a career coach who spent years managing teams at companies like AT&T and FedEx Custom Critical before building her own coaching practice, has different advice. She thinks there's something more urgent to handle first: the paperwork your employer hands you on the way out.
"If you've received any kind of severance or separation package, get it reviewed by an employment attorney right away," Garsteck says. "Most people don't know this, but the items in that separation package are often negotiable."
A negotiated severance can buy you breathing room: an extra month of pay, a longer runway on health insurance, a clearer timeline for finding your next role without panic-applying to everything in sight. And once you sign, you're bound by the terms. Most agreements give you a window to review before you have to decide, and you have the right to use it.
Workers 40 and older have even more protection worth knowing about. Under the Older Workers Benefit Protection Act, employers who ask workers to sign away their right to sue for age discrimination in exchange for severance must give them at least 21 days to review the agreement (or 45 days in a group layoff), plus 7 days after signing to revoke their decision. Employers are also required to advise workers in writing of their right to consult an attorney before signing. "I would take some time to find out what your options are," Garsteck recommends. An employment attorney can walk you through what applies in your situation.
Once you've had your separation paperwork reviewed, the next priority is replacing what you just lost: income and health coverage. Both have deadlines, and both are easier to handle in the first week than the third.
If you lost your job through no fault of your own, you likely qualify, though each state runs its own program with its own rules and filing windows. The U.S. Department of Labor's CareerOneStop maintains a directory of every state's unemployment office, which is the fastest way to find the right application for where you live. File as soon as you can — some states have strict deadlines, and benefits typically don't start arriving the day you apply.
If you were fired for misconduct or chose to resign, you generally won't qualify. But "fired" and "laid off" aren't always as clearly defined as they seem, and if your claim is denied, you have the right to appeal. Don't assume a denial is the final answer.
Losing your job-based coverage triggers a Special Enrollment Period through the Health Insurance Marketplace, which gives you 60 days to sign up for a new plan without waiting for open enrollment. Depending on your income, you may qualify for subsidies that make Marketplace coverage significantly cheaper than COBRA, which lets you keep your employer's plan but usually at the full unsubsidized cost. Run both numbers before you choose.
The median length of unemployment in the U.S. was about 11 weeks in March of 2026, but the average was closer to 25 weeks because some outlier searches stretch much longer. Build your budget assuming you'll need at least a few months of runway, and longer if you can manage it. If you have bills you can't pay, call those companies before you miss payments. Many lenders offer temporary hardship accommodations, and an upfront conversation is usually better for your credit than a missed payment.
Before you start applying anywhere, answer one question: how much runway do you actually have? Add up your savings, any severance you negotiated, your partner's income if that applies, and your expected unemployment benefits. Divide that number by your monthly essentials. That's your runway in months, and it shapes how your search should look.
"Your timeline depends on what is happening," Garsteck says. "Do you need to get back to work for pay? Do you need to get back to work for health benefits? Whatever those motivations are, then your job search might look a bit different than if you have more of a cushion."
If you need to get back to work fast, target roles similar to the one you just left. This isn't the moment for a career pivot. Instead, use the skills and titles already on your resume to land somewhere you can start earning again.
A staffing agency can meaningfully shorten your timeline here. Staffing agencies have openings to fill now, existing relationships with employers, and the infrastructure to move a qualified candidate from first conversation to start date in days rather than weeks. Garsteck knows the model firsthand: she started her own career through Kelly Services on college breaks, and the first company she temped for ended up hiring her directly. She went on to spend years at a Fortune 50 telecom. "Staffing services launched my whole career," she says.
Regardless of your timeline, Sieron Dottin, Vice President of Direct Sourcing and Vendor Neutral Recruitment at Kelly, recommends a few actions that apply to nearly every job search:
Garsteck also says there's one thing every job seeker should be doing right now: "Make sure that you're educating yourself on AI. That is the thing that's going to differentiate you no matter how fast or slow you're moving in your search."
Every interview you land is going to include some version of the question: “so, what happened at your last job?” Too much detail puts the interviewer in the middle of someone else's conflict, while too little sounds evasive. And bitterness, even if it feels justified, is the thing hiring managers remember longest.
Garsteck walks her clients through a simple process. First, write down the authentic truth of what happened, just for yourself. "Document what really happened," she says. "Then from that realistic story, decide what you are comfortable disclosing." Sometimes the honest answer is simple: you were one of 400 people laid off in a restructuring. Sometimes it's harder to explain. Either way, when you know your own version first, you don’t have to improvise in the moment.
Then pivot quickly to why you're interested in this specific company. "Talk about why you're interested in working with their company. What about their structure, their products or services, is really interesting to you? Then share that you're ready to pour your experience into this new organization," Garsteck says.
One last tip: process the loss before you start posting about it. Garsteck often sees job seekers write long, emotional LinkedIn posts in the first days after a layoff. "Take a few moments. Take a step back and process it first," she says. A post describing what you're looking for next is fine. A post that reads like a grievance follows you into every interview that comes after.
Losing a job is one of the most destabilizing things that can happen in a working life, and no article can make the next few weeks feel easy. But the actionable steps in this guide are the ones that consistently help people land on their feet. Take them one at a time, give yourself a moment to process, and when you're ready, reach out to the people and partners who can help.
If you need to get back to work, a Kelly recruiter can help you move fast. Start your job search with Kelly today.