Food stamps are a safeguard for millions of Americans, keeping them away from the risk of hunger. More than 40 million people put food on the table thanks to SNAP benefits, the abbreviation for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP).
The SNAP benefits program started in 1964 as food stamps, laying the foundation for the program we know today. It is important to note that SNAP benefits not only feed the most needy or low-income households across the United States, but also stimulate the economy. Participants in this program spend their benefits within three weeks of receiving them, supporting local grocery stores, farmers, and the supply chain in general.
SNAP Benefits During the Most Critical Moments in the U.S.
As we mentioned earlier, SNAP benefits are crucial for local economies and the finances of the most needy households, not only in times of economic prosperity. During economic recessions, like the most recent one during the coronavirus pandemic, food stamps acted as economic stabilizers, and research has concluded that every dollar spent generated approximately $1.54 in local economies.
The program has evolved since 1964 to the present day with bipartisan efforts, such as adjusting the Thrifty Food Plan so that benefits are updated according to the costs of the latest nutritional guidelines, and other times thanks to legal battles led by the Food Research & Action Center and others.
Upcoming SNAP Benefits Payments — When Will I Receive My EBT Deposit?
We have already mentioned that SNAP benefits are vital for the economies of low-income households, so a timely and properly executed distribution ensures that their money will arrive every month in the same way and on the same day. This is why each state and territory in the United States has implemented its own payment schedule based on its needs and structural capabilities.
That said, it is understood that not all states start and finish the distribution of allocations on the same dates or with the same durations. While some states distribute all of their benefits in a single day, others do so over a period of up to 28 days due to the complexity of the state-level system and the number of beneficiaries they have.
To find out when your payment date is, you can review the communications sent to you, either by email or postal mail, after your SNAP benefits application was approved, or you can contact the office that administers this program at the local level where you initially applied.
In any case, if you don’t know your date, first check the following alphabetically organized list and find your state to know between which dates SNAP benefits will be sent in September 2024, which is the next month:
- Alabama: September 4-23, 2024
- Alaska: September 1, 2024
- Arizona: September 1-13, 2024
- Arkansas: September 4-13, 2024
- California: September 1-10, 2024
- Colorado: September 1-10, 2024
- Connecticut: September 1-3, 2024
- Delaware: September 2-23, 2024
- District of Columbia: September 1-13, 2024
- Florida: September 1-28, 2024
- Georgia: September 5-23, 2024
- Guam: September 1-10, 2024
- Hawaii: September 3-5, 2024
- Idaho: September 1-15, 2024
- Illinois: September 1-20, 2024
- Indiana: September 5-23, 2024
- Iowa: September 1-10, 2024
- Kansas: September 1-10, 2024
- Kentucky: September 1-19, 2024
- Louisiana: September 1-23, 2024
- Maine: September 10-14, 2024
- Maryland: September 4-23, 2024
- Massachusetts: September 1-14, 2024
- Michigan: September 3-21, 2024
- Minnesota: September 4-13, 2024
- Mississippi: September 4-21, 2024
- Missouri: September 1-22, 2024
- Montana: September 2-6, 2024
- Nebraska: September 1-5, 2024
- Nevada: September 1-10, 2024
- New Hampshire: September 5, 2024
- New Jersey: September 1-5, 2024
- New Mexico: September 1-20, 2024
- New York: September 1-9, 2024
- North Carolina: September 3-21, 2024
- North Dakota: September 1, 2024
- Ohio: September 2-20, 2024
- Oklahoma: September 1-10, 2024
- Oregon: September 1-9, 2024
- Pennsylvania: September 3-14, 2024
- Puerto Rico: from September 4 to 22, 2024
- Rhode Island: September 1, 2024
- South Carolina: September 1-19, 2024
- South Dakota: September 1-9, 2024
- Tennessee: September 1-20, 2024
- Texas: September 1-28, 2024
- Utah: September 5, 11 and 15, 2024
- United States Virgin Islands: September 1, 2024
- Vermont: September 1, 2024
- Virginia: September 1-7, 2024
- Washington: September 1-20, 2024
- West Virginia: September 1-9, 2024
- Wisconsin: September 1-15, 2024
- Wyoming: September 1-4, 2024