Millions of Americans rely on SNAP benefits to keep food on the table, but the date money appears on an EBT card can vary widely depending on where a household lives.
The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program is funded by the federal government and overseen by the USDA, but each state controls its own distribution calendar.
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Some issue all payments on a single day, while others spread deposits across several weeks according to case numbers, Social Security numbers, surnames or eligibility group numbers.
That means many households have already received their July benefits, while others could still see deposits arrive this week.
States continuing SNAP payments through July 19
Payments may still be issued between July 13 and July 19 in Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Puerto Rico, South Carolina, Texas, Utah, Washington and Wisconsin.
Several of those states are nearing the end of their monthly schedules. Arizona, Arkansas, Connecticut, Michigan and Minnesota generally complete payments by July 13, while Maine, Massachusetts and Pennsylvania continue through July 14.
Wisconsin’s final July deposits are expected by July 15. Kentucky, New York and South Carolina continue issuing payments through July 19, while Florida and Texas maintain some of the longest windows in the country, running through July 28.
Utah follows a different system, with benefits distributed on July 5, July 11 or July 15 depending on the recipient’s case number.
Even within the same state, households may receive their benefits on different days. The determining factor is usually listed on approval notices or inside the recipient’s online benefits account.
What to do if your payment hasn’t arrived
Most SNAP deposits appear automatically overnight, although exact processing times differ between states and EBT providers.
A missing deposit does not necessarily mean benefits have been canceled. Delays can occur when recertification forms have not been completed, income documents are missing or a household change has not been properly reported.
Recipients should begin by checking their EBT balance through their state website, ConnectEBT, ebtEDGE or the customer-service number printed on the back of the card. They should also review recent letters, emails or online notices from their state benefits agency.
If the scheduled date has passed and no payment appears, the next step is contacting the local SNAP office. Staff can confirm whether the case remains active, explain any outstanding requirements and identify whether documents must be submitted.
Households facing an immediate food shortage may also ask whether emergency assistance or expedited benefits are available.
Recipients should remain cautious of scams. State and federal agencies will not demand payment, gift cards or banking information to release SNAP benefits.
The safest approach is to confirm the state schedule, check the identifying number used for distribution and contact the local agency quickly if something appears wrong.

