Some SNAP recipients in certain states can no longer use benefits to buy soda, candy, and other sugary products as new USDA-approved restrictions begin rolling out across the United States.
SNAP Benefits Restricted Products: The SNAP program helps low-income families buy groceries for home use. People have used these benefits for many years to pick up most basic food items. Now, some states are starting to limit what can be bought with SNAP after getting permission from the U.S. Department of Agriculture to test new rules. These waiver programs are state by state, not nationwide, and USDA’s waiver pages show different start dates and product lists for different states.
The new rules are mostly aimed at sugary drinks and candy. In some approved states, regular soda, soft drinks, energy drinks and different kinds of candy are being taken off the SNAP shopping list.
USDA’s waiver pages show that the exact items can vary from one state to another, but soda and candy are the most common products being restricted. Officials behind the change say these foods add little nutrition and can help drive obesity, diabetes and other long-term health problems.
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The changes do not mean SNAP shoppers lose access to all sweet or packaged foods. Many items that contain sugar are still allowed because they belong to different food groups. Foods like yogurt, cereal, bread, flavored milk and some snack items may still be covered depending on the state rules and federal SNAP guidance.
Basic groceries such as fruit juice, bottled water, milk, fresh produce, meat, poultry, seafood, eggs, rice, pasta, beans and frozen vegetables are still eligible too.
Even before these waivers, SNAP already did not cover alcohol, tobacco, vitamins, supplements, medicines, hot prepared meals, or non-food items like soap, paper products and pet food.
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Supporters say these waivers keep SNAP closer to its nutrition goal and may help people make healthier choices. Critics disagree. They say food access, prices and money problems matter more than banning a few products. They also argue that SNAP users should have the same freedom to choose groceries as other shoppers. Because each state waiver can be different, the restricted list may not look the same everywhere. USDA says states must tell SNAP users about new rules before they start.
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