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ERS’s SNAP Distribution Schedule Database Allows for New Research on Program Impacts

ERS’s SNAP Distribution Schedule Database Allows for New Research on Program Impacts

ERS’s SNAP Distribution Schedule Database Allows for New Research on Program Impacts

by Jessica E. Todd and Christian A. Gregory via USDA Website

USDA’s Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) provides financial assistance to low-income families to purchase food at authorized food retailers. SNAP households receive their benefits in a lump-sum on an Electronic Benefit Transfer (EBT) card on a single day each month. States are allowed to stagger their benefit deliveries over the month, with a portion of SNAP recipients receiving their benefits on each distribution day. Benefit distribution schedules differ by State, and many have changed over time.

Knowing when households receive their SNAP benefits in each State over time allows researchers to study whether energy intakes, diet quality, and food-insecure conditions vary among program participants across the benefit month. For example, ERS researchers used this information along with time-use data to study whether the probability of not eating for an entire day varied for SNAP participants across the benefit month. They found that the share of SNAP recipients who reported not eating for an entire day was higher at the end of the benefit month.

The Food and Nutrition Service (FNS)—the USDA agency that administers SNAP—posts the current distribution schedule on its website, but past distribution schedules are not provided. ERS researchers recently collaborated with FNS staff to compile data about monthly SNAP distribution schedules for each of the 50 States and the District of Columbia for 1998 to 2018. This information is now provided in the SNAP Distribution Schedule Database on the ERS website and will be updated annually.


States Are Increasingly Likely to Distribute SNAP Benefits Over a Longer Span of Days Within a Month

One of the reasons that SNAP benefit-distribution schedules have changed is that food retailers for whom SNAP households make up a large share of their customers experience supply bottlenecks when benefits are distributed on a single day or just a few days. That is because many SNAP households redeem a large portion of their benefits within 2 weeks of receiving them, with a majority redeemed during the first 7 days. When all benefits are distributed on a single day or over a short period of time each month, this can produce a surge in demand at grocery stores, followed by a large drop in demand, which makes it difficult for retailers to stock and staff grocery stores adequately throughout the month. Though the grocery industry lobbied to have SNAP benefits split into two payments per month, the 2008 Farm Bill formally maintained the practice of single-day distribution for each household.


Nevertheless, the late 2000s and early 2010s saw an increase in the number of States that opted to stagger their SNAP distribution and extend the number of days over which benefits were distributed each month. For example, in 2012, Virginia switched from distributing on the first of the month to distributing over 4 days between the first and the 9th of each month; Tennessee switched from distributing SNAP on each of the first 10 days of the month to the first 20 days of the month. The SNAP Distribution Schedule Database documents these changes: In particular, it contains the first and last calendar day of distribution in the month, whether benefits are distributed on each day in that period (uniformly), the span between the first and last day, the exact calendar days of distribution if distribution is not uniform, and any uncertainty about the dates.


At the end of 2018, the number of days on which SNAP was distributed in a month ranged from 1 to 28 days. Only seven States distributed SNAP on a single day each month. This number is down 30 percent since 1998, when 10 States had a single SNAP distribution day. This change may even be larger as the distribution schedule in six States is unknown for 1998.


To read the rest of this article on USDA's website, please click here.

USDA Publishes Notice on Farm Bill Changes to Rural Population Limits and Other Eligibility Rules for Several Guaranteed Loan Programs

Congratulations to Chester, Decatur, Hardeman, Hardin, Henderson and McNairy Counties!

Congratulations to Chester, Decatur, Hardeman, Hardin, Henderson and McNairy Counties!

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