Re: Worked in rep of ireland but resides in northern ireland
ok found what you needed. There are 2 things you can do.
1)In other words, an Irish resident who is made redundant from their job in Northern Ireland must claim unemployment benefits from their country of residence, which in this case is the Republic of Ireland. Similarly a Northern resident working in the Republic Of Ireland must claim their unemployment benefits from Northern Ireland. In order to satisfy the social insurance conditions for contribution based unemployment benefits workers can combine contributions paid in any EU country in order to qualify. This is sometimes referred to as aggregation. Therefore, a frontier worker can combine contributions paid in Northern Ireland in order to qualify for Jobseeker’s benefit in the Republic of Ireland.
2)
Workers who are intermittently unemployed for short periods of time should claim unemployment benefits from the country in which they were last employed. Therefore, if a worker resident in Northern Ireland is temporarily laid off from their job in the Republic of Ireland, but not made redundant, they should claim unemployment benefits from the South.
So depending on weather you are going to be unemployed or a "short period of time" ( how your meant to know this i dont know ) or not either way you can claim for something somewhere.
I just noticed that it says "but not made redundant" not sure how you lost your job so the 2nd 1 might not be an option.