States are complying with a new federal law and narrowing eligibility for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP).
Massachusetts officials said that while the changes to SNAP are being enforced as of Nov. 1, not all recipients will be immediately affected.
“DHS will communicate directly with clients regarding their case, and any required action and timeline will be outlined in that communication. DHS encourages clients to regularly check the notices section of their Georgia Gateway account for updates,” the department stated on its website.
The One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which President Donald Trump signed into law in July after approval from Congress, made the changes to SNAP.
One update concerns the most stringent work requirement for SNAP recipients designated as able-bodied adults without dependents. Previously, non-disabled adults without dependents aged 18 to 54 had to work 80 hours a month. Now, the requirement also applies to adults aged 55 to 64.
People with dependents used to be entirely excluded from the more stringent requirement, but now parents with children aged 14 or older also have to meet the work requirement.
Exceptions introduced in 2023—for homeless people, veterans, and people aged 24 and younger who were in foster care when they turned 18—ended as of Nov. 1. Unchanged exceptions include being pregnant and not being able to work due to a disability, and new exceptions cover Native Americans.
Those subject to the new work requirement can be limited to receiving food stamps for just three months in a three-year period.
Less stringent work requirements for most SNAP recipients, such as accepting a suitable job if it’s offered or not working fewer than 30 hours a week if the recipient already has one, remain in place. Recipients who do not meet those requirements will lose SNAP for one month. If they then meet the requirements, they can start receiving the benefits again. If they later don’t meet the requirements once more, then they lose the benefits for longer than a month and face permanent disqualification from the program.
Immigrant Eligibility
The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), which runs SNAP with states, also informed states that refugees and some other immigrants are no longer able to receive SNAP benefits.Ending Waivers Blocked in Ruling
The changes started being enforced as payments to SNAP users stopped due to the government shutdown.McConnell also ordered officials not to terminate any of the waivers for the more stringent work requirements before the waivers’ expiration dates. Plaintiffs in the case argued that the agency acted without legal authorization in moving to terminate the waivers early.
The waivers are now only allowed if an area has an unemployment rate of at least 10 percent.
The USDA in October encouraged states to terminate active waivers, even if they were not due to expire soon. The department said it would end the waivers in 30 days if states did not do so.







