If you receive SNAP, Medicaid, or cash assistance benefits, you may be eligible to receive utility assistance through the Electric Assistance Program and the Fuel Assistance and Weatherization Assistance Programs.
Using a plastic card that works like a debit card, recipients may access their benefits at retail Point-of-Sale (POS) devices. Each Mississippi SNAP Benefit household will be issued an EBT card. The Mississippi EBT card can be used at any participating store displaying the Quest® logo. Shop with your SNAP EBT card on Amazon.com, including free access to AmazonFresh and Prime Pantry. Amazon accepts SNAP EBT in all states except Alaska, Hawaii.
Contact your local Community Action Agency to apply today.
How You Will Receive and Use Your SNAP Benefits. Your food stamp/SNAP benefits are directly deposited once a month into your Electronic Benefits Transfer SNAP account. You will use an EBT debit card to go shopping at participating grocery stores. At check out, you will use the same card. Nowadays SNAP benefits are loaded onto Electronic Benefits Transfer cards that work just like debit cards. EBT cards can be swiped in grocery stores or at other designated points of sale. In response to increased safety concerns around the novel coronavirus pandemic, a vast majority of states have now signed on with the USDA Food and Nutrition.
See the COVID-19 Data on DHHS Client Services Programs
Online Purchasing
EBT cardholders are now able to make online purchases at Amazon, ALDI, and Walmart. Amazon can accept EBT SNAP purchases on SNAP approved items only, and any additional fees (such as delivery fees) must be paid via another form of payment. Walmart can accept both EBT SNAP and Cash purchases, with cash being able to be used for any additional fees and non-SNAP approved items.
Amazon, ALDI, and Walmart may offer promotions at different times and delivery fees may be charged. Prior to making purchases the retailers’ websites should be checked to find any current promotions being offered.
For more information on the SNAP Online Purchasing Program, please see the DHHS Press Release: NH DHHS Announces Online Purchasing Program For SNAP Recipients.
Farmers' Markets
Get more with your SNAP dollars at participating Farmers' Markets. With every SNAP dollar spent, you will get an additional dollar to spend on fresh fruits and veggies. Go to the Market Manage Booth and ask for “Granite State Market Match!”
Shopping at farmers markets or farm stands doesn’t just help your community’s farmers, it’s fun!
For locations, and more information, visit granitestatemarketmatch.org.
Double Up Food Bucks
Another healthy and delicious way to stretch your SNAP benefit is to shop where you see the DOUBLE UP FOOD BUCKS sign. You can get 50% off the fresh fruits and vegetables you buy instantly when you ask the cashier for Double Up Food Bucks. Then swipe your EBT or P-EBT card and enjoy!!
Visit DoubleUpNH.org for more information.
Double-Up Food Bucks are Available at these Participating Stores | |
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Berlin Marketplace | 19 Pleasant Street, Berlin, NH 03570 |
EM Heath Supermarket | 12C Main Street, Center Harbor, NH 03226 |
Hanover Co-op Food Store | 45 South Park Street, Hanover, NH 03755 |
Root Seller | 77 Main Street, Lancaster, NH 03584 |
Vista Foods | 378 South Main Street, Laconia, NH 03246 |
LaPerle’s IGA | North Main Street, Colebrook, NH 03576 |
Monadnock Food Coop | 34 Cypress Street, Keene NH 03431 |
Lebanon Co-op Food Store | 12 Centerra Parkway, Lebanon, NH 03766 |
Newberry Farms | 66 Main Street, Newmarket, NH 03857 |
Lovell Lake Food Center | 66 Meadow Street, Sanbornville, NH 03872 |
Sully’s Superette | 39 Allenstown Road, Allenstown, NH 03275 |
White River Junction Co-op Food Store | 209 Maple Street, White River Junction, VT 05001 |
The Local Grocer | 3358 White Mountain Highway, N. Conway, NH 03818 |
Fiddlehead Farmers Marketplace | 451 High Street, Somersworth, NH 03878 |
Concord Food CO-OP | 52 Newport Road, New London, NH 03257 |
Concord Food CO-OP | 24 South Main Street, Concord, NH 03301 |
About The SNAP Program
The SNAP Program is about good nutrition and health. It provides eligible people with benefits to buy food items at grocery stores, farmers markets and other approved food retailers.
Who is eligible for SNAP?
You may qualify for SNAP benefits depending on your household size, income, expenses and resources. You may qualify if you own your home, have no home, live with someone else or live alone. You can have a job and you do not have to have children as long as your household meets eligibility guidelines. The Program gives deductions for things like housing costs, utilities, medical costs and child care.
Don’t assume that you won’t be eligible. The only way to find out is to apply.
You can apply on line at nheasy.nh.gov. You can print an application from this website and mail it in. Or you can call 271-9700 or 1-800-852-3345 extension 9700 and they will mail you an application.
If you have an unresolved SNAP concern/complaint, you can work with your District Office to address it, complete and submit the Unresolved Food Stamp Complaints form.
What You Can Buy With Your Snap Benefits
With your Food SNAP benefits you can buy milk and other dairy products; meat, fish, poultry, eggs and beans; cereals, rice, pasta and other grain products; any ingredient used for baking or cooking; fruits and vegetables; cold deli foods for home consumption; ice and water for human consumption; infant formula, some special dietetic or diabetic food and 'natural' or 'organic' food items; and garden seeds and plants for growing food at home.
You cannot buy any kind of beer, alcohol or wine; any type of tobacco products; non-food items like cleaning products, soap and paper products; drugstore medicines such as aspirin, cough syrup and vitamins; items to preserve food such as jars and freezer containers; any 'hot' prepared foods that are ready to eat; and foods not for people such as pet foods.
How You Will Receive and Use Your SNAP Benefits
Your food stamp/SNAP benefits are directly deposited once a month into your Electronic Benefits Transfer SNAP account. You will use an EBT debit card to go shopping at participating grocery stores. At check out, you will use the same card machine used by all other customers. No one will know how you are paying for your food except the cashier and you. The store clerk is trained to assist you if you need help. You can learn more about EBT at the EBT webpage.
SNAP Program Work Rules
Special ABAWD work rules
Please read this important information about work rules for ABAWD SNAP recipients:
Please read this important information about work rules for ABAWD SNAP recipients:
- SNAP Program Work Rules
- Reglas de trabajo del programa de estampillas para comida (Spanish)
If you do not understand these rules or have questions about them, please call, email or visit your local District Office.
SNAP Employment & Training Program
If you get SNAP benefits, we have services that can help you find and get a job. Find out more at the SNAP E&T webpage.
Are You Eligible For WIC?
If you are pregnant or have young children up to the age of 5, you may be eligible for the WIC Nutrition Program. WIC offers nutritious foods, like milk and cheese and fruits and vegetables, along with nutrition education and breastfeeding support. To apply, call WIC at 1-800-942-4321 or visit the WIC Program's webpage for more information.
SNAP Nondiscrimination Notice
Declaración de No-Discriminación (Spanish)
Nondiscrimination Statement
This institution is prohibited from discriminating on the basis of race, color, national origin, disability, age, sex and in some cases religion or political beliefs.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture also prohibits discrimination based on race, color, national origin, sex, religious creed, disability, age, political beliefs or reprisal or retaliation for prior civil rights activity in any program or activity conducted or funded by USDA.
Persons with disabilities who require alternative means of communication for program information (e.g. Braille, large print, audiotape, American Sign Language, etc.), should contact the Agency (State or local) where they applied for benefits. Individuals who are deaf, hard of hearing or have speech disabilities may contact USDA through the Federal Relay Service at (800) 877-8339. Additionally, program information may be made available in languages other than English.
To file a program complaint of discrimination, complete the USDA Program Discrimination Complaint Form, (AD-3027), found online at How to File a Complaint, and at any USDA office, or write a letter addressed to USDA and provide in the letter all of the information requested in the form. To request a copy of the complaint form, call (866) 632-9992. Submit your completed form or letter to USDA by:
- Mail: U.S. Department of Agriculture Office of the Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights 1400 Independence Avenue, SW Washington, D.C. 20250-9410
- Fax: (202) 690-7442; or
- Email: [email protected]
For any other information dealing with Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) issues, persons should either contact the USDA SNAP Hotline Number at (800) 221-5689, which is also in Spanish, or find them online at www.fns.usda.gov/contact-us.
To file a complaint of discrimination regarding a program receiving Federal financial assistance through the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), write: HHS Director, Office for Civil Rights, Room 515-F, 200 Independence Avenue, S.W., Washington, D.C. 20201 or call (202) 619-0403 (voice) or (800) 537-7697 (TTY).
This institution is an equal opportunity provider.
You may also write: Ombudsman, NH DHHS, 129 Pleasant St., Concord, NH 03301-3857, or call (603) 271-6941 or 1-800-852-3345 ext. 6941. TDD Access: Relay NH 1-800-735-2964 or 711.
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Overview
NEW! January 18, 2021--Food benefits to increase 15% Wednesday for all 213,590 Connecticut households enrolled in SNAP; 110,000 enrolled households will receive monthly COVID-19 emergency benefit increase Saturday
The Connecticut Department of Social Services today announced that it will provide a total of $25.5 million in additional federal food benefits to state residents in two allocations this week through the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP).
- First, all 213,590 households enrolled in SNAP will receive an average benefit increase of $45.91 on Wednesday, January 20 – the first of monthly 15% increases through June. This additional food aid totals an estimated $8.5 million per month, and results from the federal Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2021.
- Second, 110,000 SNAP-enrolled households will receive an average benefit increase of $154.90 on Saturday, January 23 – the tenth monthly emergency allocation authorized by the Families First Coronavirus Response Act of 2020. This additional food aid totals $17 million for January.
Information about the 15% increase in SNAP benefits:
The Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2021 increases the maximum and minimum allotments SNAP households are eligible to receive by 15% for the months of January through June 2021. In essence, this means that 365,500 individuals in the 213,590 households currently receiving SNAP assistance should see an increase on their Electronic Benefit Transfer (EBT) card on Wednesday, January 20. The 15% increase will then be added to the household’s normal SNAP benefits for the months of February through June.
As two examples of how this 15% benefit increase works, a single adult previously receiving the maximum benefit amount of $204 will receive an additional $30, for a new maximum benefit amount of $234; and a family of four previously receiving the maximum benefit amount of $680 will receive an additional $102, for a new maximum benefit amount of $782. If a household was granted benefits on or after January 9, 2021, it already has received the 15% increase as part of its regular SNAP benefits.
Information about the January Emergency SNAP benefit allocation:
Emergency Supplemental Nutrition Assistance (SNAP) benefits totaling $17 million will be provided to more than half of Connecticut SNAP-eligible households on Saturday, January 23 – adding to the $176.2 million in emergency benefits disbursed in April, May, June, July, August, September, October, November and December.
Authorized by the federal Families First Coronavirus Response Act of 2020, the extra food benefits will go to approximately 110,000 households not currently receiving the maximum benefits allowed for their household size. This means that all households enrolled in SNAP will receive the maximum food benefit allowable for their household size, even if they are not usually eligible for the maximum benefit.
With this newest monthly allocation by the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Food and Nutrition Service, emergency benefits are total $193.2 million in additional SNAP assistance statewide during April, May, June, July, August, September, October, November, December and January, with commensurate spending in the food economy.
The average emergency benefit amount a household will see on its electronic benefits transfer (EBT) card on January 23 is $154.90. If a household is granted regular SNAP benefits on or after January 22, 2021, and is also eligible for the emergency supplemental benefits, the latter benefits will be added to the EBT card on a Friday, depending on the date of granting.
Counting the new 15% benefit increase for all enrolled households, emergency benefits allow the household’s SNAP benefit to increase to the maximum, as noted in the following chart:
Household Size | Maximum Benefit Amount |
1 | $234 |
2 | $430 |
3 | $616 |
4 | $782 |
5 | $929 |
6 | $1,114 |
7 | $1,232 |
8 | $1,408 |
Each additional person: add $176
For example, if a household of two normally received $200 of SNAP benefits in January, it will receive a 15% increase of $30 on January 20 and an additional $200 emergency benefit on January 23, to bring this household up to the maximum benefit for its size of $430.
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UPDATED! December 23, 2020 Expansion of online purchasing of food with SNAP benefits; ALDI joins Amazon, Walmart and ShopRite--The Department of Social Services (DSS) is pleased to announce the expansion of its Online Purchasing Pilot to include 27 ALDI stores throughout Connecticut, in partnership with online grocery platform Instacart. As part of this new program, DSS SNAP participants in Connecticut will be able to shop from ALDI via the Instacart online site and mobile app.
Once an Instacart customer profile is created at www.instacart.com or on the Instacart mobile app, customers can enter their EBT food card information as a form of payment in their profile. SNAP enrollees will be able to place food orders online by using the identifying numbers on their EBT cards and individually selected PINs.
Customers can then enter their zip code to determine if they are near a participating ALDI store, and begin shopping and selecting items from ALDI’s EBT SNAP-eligible products. Once items are added to their cart, customers will be able to select how much of their benefits they would like to allocate to the order.
ALDI delivery and pickup via Instacart will be available daily from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Orders for delivery and pickup can be placed by customers for to be receivedas quickly as within an hour, or scheduled for days in advance.
ALDI’s delivery service via Instacart now joins three other food retailers--Amazon, Walmart and ShopRite--to offer online purchasing of food with SNAP benefits in Connecticut.
Retailers now approved for online SNAP purchasing are 27 ALDI Stores in Connecticut (pleaseclick herefor list); Amazon, including Amazon Pantry and Amazon Fresh; 12 Walmart stores (please click here for list); and Wakefern Food Corp., with 21 participating ShopRite stores (please click here for list).
Online contact points are www.instacart.com/help/section/360009947632;www.amazon.com/snap-ebt; www.walmart.com/grocery; and https://shoprite.com/Store-Locator
For FAQ, please click here.
Please note: only SNAP benefits on EBT cards can be used for online purchases. At this time, cash assistance benefits on EBT cards cannot be used for any part of online shopping, including shipping, delivery or service fees. Customers will need a secondary form of payment for non-food items, such as taxes, tips and fees, per federal SNAP guidelines.
While federal rules do not allow any SNAP benefits to be used for shipping, delivery or service fees, some food retailers may choose to waive fees, if applicable. To help subsidize costs for EBT SNAP beneficiaries, during a 90-day period starting December 16, 2020, Instacart (representing ALDI) will waive delivery and/or pickup fees on up to the first three EBT SNAP orders for each customer with a valid EBT card associated with their Instacart account. After this period, online shopping customers using SNAP benefits must use another means of payment for any fees and/or any non-SNAP-eligible items they wish to purchase.
Customary shipping/delivery fees are:
- Instacart pickup fees are $1.99 and delivery starts at $3.99.
- ShopRite has a $10 service fee and a separate delivery fee.
- Walmart fees vary between $7.95 and $9.95 (or a flat fee of $98/year).
- Amazon waives delivery fees for orders over $35 with free 2-day shipping for Prime members. For non-Prime members, orders of $25 or more of receive free shipping in 5-8 business days.
SNAP benefits are funded by the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Food and Nutrition Service (FNS), which also regulates which foods are eligible for purchase with the benefits. FNS is the authorizing agency for food retailers participating in the program. For information about enrolling in SNAP EBT and online food sales through SNAP, food retailers can visit www.fns.usda.gov/snap/retailer-requirements-provide-online-purchasing.
To read the federal approval announcement, click here. For more information about the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program in Connecticut, visit www.ct.gov/snap.
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UPDATED November 17, 2020--Special measures to assist SNAP enrollees during the Covid-19 public health emergency
- No Periodic Review Forms--we are suspending the requirement to submit Periodic Review Forms (PRFs) for all SNAP enrollees from December 2020 through June 2021. This means that you will not be receiving PRFs in the mail to fill out during this time period.
- Automatic renewals for six months—we are automatically extending eligibility for SNAP enrollees whose normal annual certification is scheduled to end in November or December 2020. In other words, you will not have to go through a renewal process, and your eligibility will be extended six months (to May or June 2021). Please note: SNAP enrollees whose eligibility was previously extended will still need to go through the renewal process. We will send you a notice when you need to take any action to keep your SNAP eligibility.
Elderly Simplified Application Project (ESAP)
Overview
The Department of Social Services is pleased to announce a Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) demonstration project for older adults and those with disabilities. Once enrolled in SNAP, eligible households qualifying for the Elderly Simplified Application Project (ESAP) will experience additional flexibilities to support continued enrollment.
Flexibilitiesin ESAP include:
- An expanded three-year SNAP certification period of eligibility;
- No periodic report formwill be due halfway through the certification cycle, as is usually the case for SNAP enrollees;
- Revised reporting requirements (explained in greater detail below); and
- The opportunity for some relaxed renewal flexibilities, when households meet additional requirements.
ESAP Eligibility Criteria:
- All adult (18 years or older) household members must be determined elderly (60years or older) or with a disability, per SNAP regulations and
- No household members can be employed (i.e., receive countable earned income).
Revised Reporting Requirements:
Please note that ESAP-eligible SNAP households need to report information to DSS before their renewal is due if they experience a household change that would disqualify them from ESAP(for example, if the household no longer includes an older adult or adult with disability, or if they start working). All SNAP households must report if they receive lotto/gambling winnings equal to or in excess of $3,500.
SNAP Definition of a Disability:
An individual who meets one or more of the following:
- Receives disability or blindness benefits from any of these programs: Social Security, Supplemental Security Income (SSI), Medicaid, or SSI-related Medicaid.
- Receives a federally or state administered SSI supplement based on disability or blindness, or section 212(a) of PL 93-66.
Receives a disability retirement benefit from a government agency for a disability considered permanent by SSA.
- Is a veteran the VA considers totally disabled or permanently housebound or in need of regular aid and attendance.
- Is a veteran’s surviving spouse who the VA considers:
- in need of regular aid and attendance,
- permanently housebound, or
- approved for benefits because of the veteran’s death and has a disability considered permanent by SSA.
- Is a veteran’s surviving child who the VA considers:
- incapable of self-support, or
- approved for benefits because of the veteran’s death and has a disability considered permanent by SSA
- receives interim assistance benefits pending the receipt of Supplemental Security Income, receives disability related medical assistance under title XIX of the Social Security Act, or receives disability-based State general assistance (SAGA) benefits provided that the eligibility to receive any of these benefits is based upon disability or blindness criteria established by the State agency which are at least as stringent as those used under title XVI of the Social Security Act.
ESAP is designed to increase the efficiency of SNAP and reduce food insecurity among a population whose household circumstances generally stay the same and can have additional barriers associated with age or disability, such as transportation or mobility. The Connecticut Department of Social Services was approved for this demonstration project by the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Food and Nutrition Service, the agency that administers and funds SNAP nationwide. We look forward to serving you! [updated 10-30-20]
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Pandemic EBT (P-EBT) - The Department of Social Services (DSS), in collaboration with the Connecticut State Department of Education (CSDE), received approval to operate this program in response to the COVID-19 related school closures for the 2019 – 2020 school year. P-EBT provides food supports to help families with children who were receiving free and reduced-price school meals pay for food. For more information please follow this link.
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Food Resources for Kids During COVID-19 Emergency:Special information from the Office of Early Childhood(En Espanol)
Suspension of ‘ABAWD’ work requirements. ABAWD work requirements and three-month SNAP time limit for enrollees in all towns in Connecticut has been suspended for the duration of the public health emergency, per Congressional action (ABAWD=Able-Bodied Adults Without Dependent Children enrolled in the Supplemental Nutritional Assistance Program).
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Extension of SNAP eligibility. If your SNAP renewal form or periodic review form (PRF) was due in March 2020—benefits are automatically continued through September 2020. If your SNAP renewal form or PRF is due in April 2020—benefits will be automatically continued through October 2020. If your SNAP renewal form or PRF is due in May 2020—benefits will be automatically continued through November 2020. If your SNAP renewal for or PRF is due in June 2020—benefits will automatically be continued through December 2020.
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For Expedited SNAP cases: DSS will still issues SNAP benefits for one or two months, depending on whether the application was received before or after the 15th of the month, while the interview and verifications are pending. Just as above, If the household then responds with the needed information before completing the interview, and all the criteria above are met, the DSS worker will process the case without the interview. Please note: Expedited SNAP cases are those where the household has gross income less than $150 and liquid assets less than $100 in the month of application, whose combined income and assets are less than their combined rent/mortgage and utility expenses, or who are migrant or seasonal farmworkers who are destitute and have liquid assets less than $100 while residing in Connecticut.
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Snap Cards Reviews
The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), formerly known as Food Stamps, helps eligible individuals and families afford the cost of food at supermarkets, grocery stores and farmers’ markets.
SNAP Time Limits for Able-Bodied Adults without Dependents (ABAWDs): What you should know
Food Stamps Ebt Card
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Snap Cards Game
SNAP recipients in Connecticut must report when their household’s total monthly gross income goes above 130% of the federal poverty level (FPL). Please follow this link to learn more about income reporting requirements.
Mensaje Importante sobre SNAP
Beneficiarios de SNAP en Connecticut tienen que reportar cuando el total del ingreso bruto mensual de su hogar exceda el 130% del nivel federal de pobreza (FPL) Oprime aquí para obtener más información.
If you're enrolled in SNAP, you can now take care of your 'periodic report form' online! Check out www.ct.gov/dss/snapreportform |
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Snap Cards Online
For your safety, ALL Aquarium visits now require a timed ticket and must be reserved online. Follow this link to Learn More.