College students are continuing to struggle with tuition costs and shrinking financial aid. Many students are eligible for SNAP benefits but are not accessing them. This webpage gives you information on who is eligible and how to apply.
According to the a Massachusetts Hope Center Survey in the Fall of 2020, 38% of students in two-year colleges and 29% of students at four-year colleges reported experiencing food insecurity in the previous 30 days. The report also highlighted significant racial and ethnic disparities: 75 % of Indigenous, 70 % Black, and 70 % of American Indian or Alaska Native students experienced food insecurity, housing insecurity or homelessness, compared to 54 % of White students." And s ince the onset of COVID, food insecurity on college campuses has increased. See Health Affairs Forefront, Food Insecurity On College Campuses: The Invisible Epidemic (January 2022) .
During COVID, Congress passed a low to allow students to qualify if they a) had an "Expected Family Contribution" (EFC) of $0, received a full Pell Grant or were "eligible for" work study. These temporary rules ended on Jun 9, 2023 - but students getting SNAP continue to be eligible under these rules for the remainder of their SNAP certification period.
And most low-income Massachusetts students are SNAP eligible under the "regular" Massachusetts SNAP rules for students. This includes students who:
The following college students are also SNAP eligible, and do not have to meet the other student rules listed above:
All state, local, private financial aid (loans, grants, stipends, scholarships, assistantships) do not count as income.
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College Students - SNAP KYR.pdf (133.77 KB) | 133.77 KB |