The number of people enrolled in SNAP has fallen by roughly 3.5 million since July 2025, dropping from an average of 42.1 million participants in the prior fiscal year to about 38.5 million as of January 2026, according to reporting by The Wall Street Journal.
The decline follows the implementation of expanded eligibility rules included in the "One Big Beautiful Bill," signed into law by Donald Trump on July 4, 2025. The legislation broadened existing work requirements for able-bodied adults, mandating that individuals between the ages of 18 and 64 without young dependents participate in at least 80 hours per month of work, volunteering, or government-run programs.
Comment: Twenty hours a week. How easy a gig is that? They'll even find you the job.Yet folks would rather quit the program than do something useful.
Previously, the requirements applied to a narrower age group and included different criteria for dependents, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, which oversees SNAP. Officials told The Wall Street Journal that the recent changes represent the most sweeping adjustments to the program in decades.
Under the updated policy, eligibility restrictions have also tightened for some categories of legal immigrants. Federal law has long barred undocumented immigrants from receiving SNAP benefits.
Comment: Immigrants should not be getting government financial help, period. Legal immigrants should either financially independent, have a legitimate position in place, or be sponsored by relatives, who take full financial responsibility for them. That is the system in most sane countries.
Data compiled by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities shows that nearly every state has experienced a decline since the policy took effect. Alaska, Hawaii, and Kentucky are exceptions, each reporting modest increases. Meanwhile, SNAP participation in Guam has risen sharply, while Puerto Rico operates under a separate nutrition assistance program.
Several states, including Virginia, Florida, North Carolina, and Tennessee, have reported double-digit percentage declines. In response, some state officials have begun efforts to connect affected residents with employment and volunteer opportunities to help them meet the new requirements.
Arizona has seen the steepest drop, with participation falling by more than half. According to state data, more than 424,000 fewer residents are receiving benefits, including approximately 181,000 children. State officials attributed much of the decline to the rapid implementation of the new federal rules.
Comment: Seems those folk don't want to be looked at too closely.
"The expanded work requirements were primarily responsible for the drop," Brett Bezio, a spokesman for Arizona's Department of Economic Security, told The Wall Street Journal.




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