Big changes are being proposed for a US food aid program. Here's a
breakdown by the numbers
[June 11, 2025]
By DAVID A. LIEB
President Donald Trump's plan to cut taxes by trillions of dollars could
also trim billions in spending from social safety net programs,
including food aid for lower-income people.
The proposed changes to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program
would make states pick up more of the costs, require several million
more recipients to work or lose their benefits, and potentially reduce
the amount of food aid people receive in the future.
The legislation, which narrowly passed the U.S. House, could undergo
further changes in the Senate, where it's currently being debated. Trump
wants lawmakers to send the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” to his desk by
July 4, when the nation marks the 249th anniversary of the Declaration
of Independence.
Here's a look at the food aid program, by the numbers:
Year: 2008
The federal aid program formerly known as food stamps was renamed the
Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, on Oct. 1, 2008. The
program provides monthly payments for food purchases to low-income
residents generally earning less than $1,632 monthly for individuals, or
$3,380 monthly for a household of four.
The nation’s first experiment with food stamps began in 1939. But the
modern version of the program dates to 1979, when a change in federal
law took effect eliminating a requirement that participants purchase
food stamps. There currently is no cost to people participating in the
program.

Number: 42 million
A little over 42 million people nationwide received SNAP benefits in
February, the latest month for which figures are available. That's
roughly one out of every eight people in the county. Participation is
down from a peak average of 47.6 million people during the 2013 federal
fiscal year.
Often, more than one person in a household is eligible for food aid. As
of February, nearly 22.5 million households were enrolled SNAP,
receiving an average monthly household benefit of $353.
Dollars: $295 billion
Legislation passed by the House is projected to cut about $295 billion
of federal spending from SNAP over the next 10 years, according to the
Congressional Budget Office.
A little more than half of those federal savings would come by shifting
costs to states, which administer SNAP. Nearly one-third of those
savings would come by expanding a work requirement for some SNAP
participants, which the CBO assumes would force some people off the
rolls. Additional money would be saved by eliminating SNAP benefits for
between 120,000 and 250,000 immigrants legally in the U.S. who are not
citizens or lawful permanent residents.
Another provision in the legislation would cap the annual inflationary
growth in food benefits. As a result, the CBO estimates that the average
monthly food benefit would be about $15 lower than it otherwise would
have been by 2034.

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United States Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins, left, and
Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders speak outside the Governor's
Mansion in Little Rock, Ark., Tuesday, April 15, 2025. (AP
Photo/Andrew DeMillo, file)
 Ages: 7 and 55-64
To receive SNAP benefits, current law says adults ages 18 through 54
who are physically and mentally able and don’t have dependents would
need to work, volunteer or participate in training programs for at
least 80 hours a month. Those who don't do so are limited to just
three months of benefits in a three-year period.
The legislation that passed the House would expand work requirements
to those ages 55 through 64. It also would extend work requirements
to some parents without children younger than age 7. And it would
limit the ability of states to waive work requirements in areas that
lack sufficient jobs.
The combined effect of those changes is projected by the CBO to
reduce SNAP participation by a monthly average of 3.2 million
people.
Percentages: 5% - 25%
The federal government currently splits the administrative costs of
SNAP with states but covers the full cost of food benefits. Under
the legislation, states would have to cover three-fourths of the
administrative costs. States also would have to pay a portion of the
food benefits starting with the 2028 fiscal year.
All states would be required to pay at least 5% of the food aid
benefits, and could pay more depending on how often they make
mistakes with people’s payments.
States that had payment error rates between 6-8% in the most recent
federal fiscal year for which data is available would have to cover
15% of the food costs. States with error rates between 8-10% would
have to cover 20% of the food benefits, and those with error rates
greater than 10% would have to cover 25% of the food costs.

Many states could get hit with higher costs. The national error rate
stood at 11.7% in the 2023 fiscal year, and just three states —
Idaho, South Dakota and Vermont — had error rates below 5%. But the
2023 figures are unlikely to serve as the base year, so the exact
costs to states remains unclear.
As a result of the cost shift, the CBO assumes that some states
would reduce or eliminate benefits for people.
Margin: 1
House Resolution 1, containing the SNAP changes and tax cuts, passed
the House last month by a margin of just one vote — 215-214.
A vote also could be close in the Senate, where Republicans hold 53
of the 100 seats. Democrats did not support the bill in the House
and are unlikely to do so in the Senate. Some Republican senators
have expressed reservations about proposed cuts to food aid and
Medicaid and the potential impact of the bill on the federal
deficit. GOP Senate leaders may have to make some changes to the
bill to ensure enough support to pass it.
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