SNAP is the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). It used to be called food stamps. It helps low-income Kentucky families buy food. Many grocery stores and other retailers that sell food take SNAP as payment.
Any household that meets certain basic income and other guidelines may be able to get SNAP benefits.
A household is any person, family or group of people who live together and buy and eat food together. For SNAP benefits, a household could be:
Adult children over 21 who live with their parents may be able to get their own SNAP benefits if they buy or fix meals separately from the other adults. Adult siblings who live together (but not with their parents) who buy and fix their meals separately may also have separate SNAP benefit accounts.
You need to show proof of household income and expenses in order to get deductions.
Examples of proof can be things like:
The final amount of benefits you get is based on your household size and income after deductions.
There are 4 ways to apply:
Once the DCBS office gets your application, they will contact you to set up an interview. The head of your household or an authorized representative must be interviewed before the application can be completed. An authorized representative is someone the household names to act on your household’s behalf to complete the interview.
After you file the application and go through the interview process, you get a notice within 30 days telling you if your household is approved. If your household is approved, you get a letter telling you the amount of benefits you will get and when you have to interview again to keep getting SNAP benefits.
You might be able to get SNAP benefits sooner if:
Your household’s SNAP benefits are deposited into a SNAP account each month. Your household gets an Electronic Benefit Transfer (EBT) card in the mail. It comes with instructions on how to activate the card and how to choose a Personal Identification Number (PIN) so you can access your SNAP account. The EBT card works like a debit card, not a credit card. You can only spend the amount that is in the account. You can only use it to buy food for your household.
Sign the back of your EBT card right away. Your SNAP benefits can be used to buy almost any food, except ready-to-eat hot foods. You can also use your SNAP benefits to buy seeds and plants to grow your own fruits and vegetables.
You can’t use your SNAP benefits to buy these items:
If your EBT card is lost, stolen or damaged, report it by calling 1-888-979-9949. This phone number is available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
If you disagree with anything that happens in your case, you have the right to a fair hearing. But the time you have to object and ask for a fair hearing is often very limited! If you don’t agree with a decision that DCBS made about your SNAP benefits, you must ask for a hearing within 90 days of the date you get the notice from DCBS telling you about the change. To ask for a hearing, you can
Cabinet for Health and Family Services
Division of Administrative Hearings Families and Children Administrative Hearings Branch
105 Sea Hero Road, Suite 2
Frankfort, KY 40601
NOTE: Make sure you keep a copy of any written correspondence with DCBS for yourself.
If you want to keep getting the same SNAP benefits while you wait for a hearing, ask for the hearing within 10 days. You also specifically have to ask them that your current benefits continue.
At the hearing, you or someone in your household has a chance to tell a hearing officer why you disagree. If the hearing officer finds that a mistake has been made, you get the benefits that you were denied because of that mistake.
No. Federal law says that sales tax can’t be charged on food purchases made with SNAP benefits. If your household buys food with a combination of food benefits and cash, sales tax can only be charged for the taxable items that you paid for with cash.