To participate in Medicaid, federal law requires states to cover certain groups of individuals. Low-income families, qualified pregnant women and children, and individuals receiving Supplemental Security Income (SSI) are examples of mandatory eligibility groups. Wondering if you qualify for SNAP?

Understanding the Context

Learn about income limits, how to apply, what your EBT card covers, and how to keep your benefits. WZZM: What the USDA-announced changes to SNAP-authorized retailers could mean for lower-income areas What the USDA-announced changes to SNAP-authorized retailers could mean for lower-income areas MSN: Potential overhaul of SNAP: What the OBBBA proposal means for low-income families Potential overhaul of SNAP: What the OBBBA proposal means for low-income families AOL: Does Social Security Count as Income for SNAP? What Seniors Need to Know To qualify for SNAP, Americans must have a gross monthly income at or below 130 percent of the federal poverty line, meaning they must make $1,729 or less a month, and have under $3,000 in assets. Does Social Security Count as Income for SNAP?

Key Insights

What Seniors Need to Know Tennessean: Tennessee SNAP error rate could trigger $240M bill under Trump law WSMV: Some Tennessee SNAP recipients eligible for benefit replacements in aftermath of deadly winter storm Some Tennessee SNAP recipients eligible for benefit replacements in aftermath of deadly winter storm NBC Chicago: New SNAP eligibility rules take effect Feb. 1. Here's the major change New SNAP eligibility rules take effect Feb. 1. Here's the major change The Snap!

Final Thoughts

Community. Snap! is a blocks-based programming language built by UC Berkeley and used by hundreds of thousands of programmers around the world.