New SNAP Update for May 2026: Benefits, Rules & Key Changes

New SNAP update for May 2026 showing EBT card with updated benefit amounts, work requirements, and food stamp rule changes

SNAP benefits have changed significantly in 2026. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), signed July 4, 2025, has reshaped who qualifies, how much families receive, and what they can buy.

If you or someone you know gets SNAP, these updates affect you right now.

Page Contents

Quick Answer Summary

  • May 2026 SNAP max benefit is $994/month for a family of 4 — up 2.8% from last year
  • Income limit for a family of 4 is $3,483/month gross to qualify for benefits
  • Work rules now apply to adults ages 18–64 — 80 hours per month required
  • 17+ states are blocking soda, candy, and energy drinks at EBT checkout
  • Refugees, asylees, and VAWA survivors lost SNAP eligibility as of July 4, 2025
  • Most May 2026 payments land between May 1–10 depending on your state

May 2026 SNAP Benefit Amounts (Official USDA Data)

The USDA confirmed a 2.8% cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) for Fiscal Year 2026. These updated amounts apply from October 1, 2025, through September 30, 2026 — including all May 2026 payments.

These are the maximum monthly allotments for the 48 contiguous states and Washington, D.C.

Maximum Monthly SNAP Benefits by Household Size

Household SizeMaximum Monthly Benefit
1 person$298
2 persons$546
3 persons$785
4 persons$994
5 persons$1,183
6 persons$1,421
7 persons$1,571
8 persons$1,789
Each additional person+$218

📌 Source: USDA Food and Nutrition Service — SNAP Maximum Allotments FY2026

Other Important Benefit Numbers

  • Minimum monthly benefit: $24
  • Excess shelter deduction cap: $744/month
  • Asset limit: $3,000 for most households
  • Asset limit (age 60+ or disabled): $4,500

Standard Deduction Amounts

Household SizeStandard Deduction
1–3 persons$209
4 persons$223
5 persons$261
6 or more$299

SNAP Income Limits for May 2026

To qualify for SNAP, your household must meet two income tests:

  1. Gross income test — 130% of the Federal Poverty Level (FPL)
  2. Net income test — 100% of the Federal Poverty Level (FPL)

These limits apply to all May 2026 applications.

For a full breakdown by every state — including states with higher thresholds — see our detailed guide on SNAP income limits by state 2026.

FY2026 SNAP Income Limits Table

Household SizeMax Gross Monthly Income (130% FPL)Max Net Monthly Income (100% FPL)
1$1,696$1,305
2$2,292$1,763
3$2,888$2,221
4$3,483$2,680
5$4,079$3,138
6$4,675$3,596
7$5,271$4,055
8$5,867$4,513
Each additional+$596+$459

⚠️ Important Notes:

  • Income limits are higher in Alaska and Hawaii
  • Some states using Broad-Based Categorical Eligibility (BBCE) allow higher income thresholds
  • Households with a person age 60+ or a disability only need to pass the net income test

📌 Source: USDA FNS SNAP Eligibility

Are You Eligible? Check Before You Apply

Before you apply, use our free SNAP eligibility calculator in 2026 to see if your household qualifies based on your income, family size, and state.

It takes less than 2 minutes and gives you an instant estimate.

May 2026 SNAP Payment Dates by State

Benefits are loaded onto your EBT card based on your state’s schedule. Here are confirmed May 2026 payment windows:

State Payment Schedule — May 2026

StateMay 2026 Payment Window
AlabamaMay 4–23
AlaskaMay 1
ArizonaMay 1–13
ArkansasMay 4–13
CaliforniaMay 1–10
ColoradoMay 1–10
ConnecticutMay 1–3
DelawareMay 2–23
District of ColumbiaMay 1–10
FloridaMay 1–28
OregonMay 1–9
WisconsinMay 1–15
WyomingMay 1–4

📌 Note: States like Alaska, North Dakota, Vermont, and Rhode Island pay all benefits on May 1. States like California and Florida spread payments over multiple weeks based on case number or surname.

New SNAP Work Requirements in 2026

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act made the biggest changes to SNAP work rules in decades. These new rules are rolling out nationally and affect millions of people.

Here is what changed and who it affects starting in 2026.

Who Must Now Meet Work Requirements

Previously, work rules applied to Able-Bodied Adults Without Dependents (ABAWDs) ages 18–54. Now the rules are expanded significantly.

New Work Requirement Rules

  • Age range expanded from 18–54 to 18–64
  • You must work, volunteer, train, or study for at least 80 hours per month
  • Parents of children 14 and older must now comply
  • Veterans, homeless individuals, and former foster youth exemptions have been narrowed or removed

Who Is Still Exempt

  • Adults caring for a child under age 14
  • People with a qualifying disability
  • American Indian individuals (specific federal exemption remains)

Work Requirement Rollout Timeline

PhaseDateWhat Happened
Phase 1November 2025 – January 2026Iowa and early states began enforcement
Phase 2February 1, 2026Illinois and additional states added
Phase 3 (National)March 1–2, 2026Most remaining states activated new rules

⚠️ Impact: According to CBS News (April 2026), peer-reviewed research shows SNAP work requirements do not increase employment. More than 2.5 million people had already lost benefits by late April 2026. Projections show up to 4 million Americans could lose SNAP in 2026.

SNAP Junk Food Purchase Restrictions by State (2026)

As part of the “Make America Healthy Again” (MAHA) initiative, the USDA has approved state waivers to ban certain food purchases using SNAP benefits.

As of April 26, 2026, 22+ states have received approval or are implementing restrictions.

How It Works at Checkout

When you try to buy a restricted item with your EBT card, the payment is automatically declined at the register. All other approved food items in your cart still process normally.

States with Active or Scheduled SNAP Purchase Restrictions

StateEffective DateItems Restricted
IndianaJanuary 1, 2026Soft drinks, candy
IowaJanuary 1, 2026All taxable food items (strictest in nation)
NebraskaJanuary 1, 2026Soda, energy drinks
UtahJanuary 1, 2026Soft drinks
IdahoFebruary 15, 2026Soda, candy
OklahomaFebruary 15, 2026Soda, candy
LouisianaFebruary 18, 2026Soda, candy, energy drinks
West VirginiaApril 1, 2026Soft drinks
TexasApril 1, 2026Candy, sweetened beverages (>5g added sugar)
FloridaApril 20, 2026Soda, energy drinks, candy, prepared desserts
ColoradoApril 30, 2026Soft drinks
ArkansasJuly 1, 2026Fruit drinks with <50% juice content
TennesseeJuly 31, 2026Broad restrictions on processed foods/beverages
HawaiiAugust 1, 2026Soft drinks only
South CarolinaAugust 31, 2026Candy, energy drinks, soft drinks
North DakotaSeptember 1, 2026Comprehensive ban on sugary snacks and drinks
MissouriOctober 1, 2026Unhealthy beverages, prepared desserts
AlabamaNo earlier than April 1, 2027Candy, soda (federal waiver still pending)

📌 Note: Kansas, Nevada, Ohio, and Wyoming received USDA waivers in March–April 2026, but enforcement start dates are still months or years away.

Non-Citizen and Immigrant SNAP Eligibility Changes

The OBBBA significantly changed who can receive SNAP based on immigration status.

Who Is No Longer Eligible for SNAP

The following groups lost SNAP eligibility as of July 4, 2025:

  • ❌ Refugees
  • ❌ Asylees and individuals granted withholding of removal
  • ❌ Parolees (including humanitarian paroles)
  • ❌ Victims of trafficking
  • ❌ VAWA self-petitioners (domestic violence survivors)

Who Remains Eligible for SNAP

  • ✅ U.S. citizens
  • ✅ Lawful Permanent Residents (green card holders) — subject to the 5-year waiting period
  • ✅ Cuban and Haitian entrants
  • ✅ COFA citizens (Marshall Islands, Micronesia, Palau)

⚠️ Mixed-Status Households: An undocumented parent can still apply for U.S. citizen children. Benefits are calculated only for the eligible household members.

📌 Legal Note: 21 states and D.C. have sued the USDA over these restrictions. Legal proceedings were ongoing as of April 26, 2026.

Big Structural Changes Coming to SNAP Funding

The OBBBA also changes how SNAP is funded at the state level — in two major phases.

Phase 1: Administrative Cost Shift (October 1, 2026)

Starting FY2027, the federal share of SNAP administrative costs drops from 50% to 25%. States will now pay 75% of administrative costs.

This is described by experts as “the biggest structural change to SNAP since President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the program into law.”

Estimated collective state cost increase: $15 billion annually once fully phased in.

Phase 2: Benefit Cost Sharing (October 1, 2027)

For the first time ever, states will also share actual SNAP benefit costs — but only if their payment error rate exceeds 6%.

Error RateState Pays
Below 6%0% of benefit costs
6%–10%5%–10% of benefit costs
10% or higher15% of benefit costs

SNAP Budget Cuts: The Full Picture

MetricConfirmed Figure
Total SNAP cuts over 10 years (OBBBA)$186–$187 billion
Cut as share of total SNAP budget~20%
Americans expected to lose/reduce benefits~4 million
FY2026 mandatory SNAP funding (House proposal)$101.2 billion — $6.2B below enacted levels
Projected state GDP loss from SNAP + Medicaid cuts$113 billion in 2026
Potential U.S. jobs lost from SNAP + Medicaid cuts~1 million

📌 Sources: Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Food Research & Action Center (FRAC), Commonwealth Fund

SNAP-Ed Nutrition Education Program Eliminated

The SNAP-Ed program — which provided free nutrition and financial literacy education to SNAP families — was fully eliminated under the OBBBA budget cuts.

  • New York alone lost approximately $29 million per year in SNAP-Ed funding
  • No state replacement funding has been identified as of April 2026
  • Families with disabilities were among the most affected

How to Apply for SNAP Benefits in May 2026

Applying is straightforward. Follow these steps:

  1. Find your state’s SNAP office at benefits.gov
  2. Gather required documents: ID, proof of income, rent/utility bills, Social Security numbers
  3. Submit your application online, in person, or by mail
  4. Attend your interview (phone or in-person, varies by state)
  5. Receive your EBT card if approved — usually within 30 days
  6. Request expedited SNAP if you are in a financial emergency — you may receive benefits within 7 days

Official Government Resources

ResourceLink
USDA SNAP Eligibility (FY2026)fns.usda.gov/snap/recipient/eligibility
USDA FY2026 Maximum Allotments PDFfns-prod.azureedge.us

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) — SNAP May 2026

1. What is the maximum SNAP benefit for a family of 4 in May 2026?

A family of 4 can receive up to $994 per month in SNAP benefits in May 2026. This reflects the 2.8% COLA adjustment for FY2026. Actual amounts depend on income, deductions, and household expenses.

2. Who is exempt from the new SNAP work requirements in 2026?

Adults caring for a child under age 14 are still exempt. People with a qualifying disability are also exempt. American Indians retain a specific exemption. Everyone else ages 18–64 must now meet the 80-hour monthly work requirement.

3. When will my May 2026 SNAP benefits be deposited?

It depends on your state. Most states load benefits between May 1–28, based on your case number or last name. Single-day states like Alaska and Rhode Island deposit all benefits on May 1.

4. Can I still buy soda and candy with SNAP in May 2026?

It depends on your state. As of May 2026, 17+ states have active restrictions on soda, candy, and energy drinks. If you live in Iowa, Texas, Florida, or Louisiana (among others), those items will be automatically declined at checkout.

5. Did SNAP income limits change for 2026?

Yes. The gross income limit is $1,696/month for a 1-person household and $3,483/month for a family of 4 — both updated for FY2026. Some states with BBCE allow higher thresholds. Alaska and Hawaii also have higher limits.

6. Can undocumented immigrants still receive SNAP in 2026?

No — undocumented individuals are not eligible. However, an undocumented parent can apply for a U.S. citizen child. Refugees, asylees, and VAWA petitioners also lost eligibility under the OBBBA signed July 4, 2025.

Last Updated: April 26, 2026 | Sources: USDA Food and Nutrition Service, FRAC, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, NPR, CBS News, Pew Research, Commonwealth Fund

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