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An EBT SNAP sign is shown on a self check out screen at a grocery store in Mount Prospect, Ill., Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh, File)
Starting Thursday, Americans in five states who get government help paying for groceries will see new restrictions on soda, candy and other foods they can buy with those benefits.
Indiana, Iowa, Nebraska, Utah and West Virginia are the first of at least 18 states to enact waivers prohibiting the purchase of certain foods through the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP.
It’s part of a push by Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins to urge states to strip foods regarded as unhealthy from the $100 billion federal program -- long known as food stamps -- that serves 42 million Americans.
“We cannot continue a system that forces taxpayers to fund programs that make people sick and then pay a second time to treat the illnesses those very programs help create,” Kennedy said in a statement in December.
The efforts are aimed at reducing chronic diseases such as obesity and diabetes associated with sweetened drinks and other treats, a key goal of Kennedy’s Make America Healthy Again effort.
But retail industry and health policy experts said state SNAP programs, already under pressure from steep budget cuts, are unprepared for the complex changes, with no complete lists of the foods affected and technical point-of-sale challenges that vary by state and store. And research remains mixed about whether restricting SNAP purchases improves diet quality and health.
The National Retail Federation, a trade association, predicted longer checkout lines and more customer complaints as SNAP recipients learn which foods are affected by the new waivers.
“It’s a disaster waiting to happen of people trying to buy food and being rejected,” said Kate Bauer, a nutrition science expert at the University of Michigan.
A report by the National Grocers Association and other industry trade groups estimated that implementing SNAP restrictions would cost U.S. retailers $1.6 billion initially and $759 million each year going forward.
“Punishing SNAP recipients means we all get to pay more at the grocery store,” said Gina Plata-Nino, SNAP director for the anti-hunger advocacy group Food Research & Action Center.
The waivers are a departure from decades of federal policy first enacted in 1964 and later authorized by the Food and Nutrition Act of 2008, which said SNAP benefits can be used for “any food or food product intended for human consumption,” except alcohol and ready-to-eat hot foods. The law also says SNAP can’t pay for tobacco.
In the past, lawmakers have proposed stopping SNAP from paying for expensive meats like steak or so-called junk foods, such as chips and ice cream.
But previous waiver requests were denied based on USDA research concluding that restrictions would be costly and complicated to implement, and that they might not change recipients’ buying habits or reduce health problems such as obesity.
Under the second Trump administration, however, states have been encouraged and even incentivized to seek waivers – and they responded.
“This isn’t the usual top-down, one-size-fits-all public health agenda,” Indiana Gov. Mike Braun said when he announced his state’s request last spring. “We’re focused on root causes, transparent information and real results.”
The five state waivers that take effect Jan. 1 affect about 1.4 million people. Utah and West Virginia will ban the use of SNAP to buy soda and soft drinks, while Nebraska will prohibit soda and energy drinks. Indiana will target soft drinks and candy. In Iowa, which has the most restrictive rules to date, the SNAP limits affect taxable foods, including soda and candy, but also certain prepared foods.
“The items list does not provide enough specific information to prepare a SNAP participant to go to the grocery store,” Plata-Nino wrote in a blog post. “Many additional items — including certain prepared foods — will also be disallowed, even though they are not clearly identified in the notice to households.”
Marc Craig, 47, of Des Moines, said he has been living in his car since October. He said the new waivers will make it more difficult to determine how to use the $298 in SNAP benefits he receives each month, while also increasing the stigma he feels at the cash register.
“They treat people that get food stamps like we’re not people,” Craig said.
SNAP waivers enacted now and in the coming months will run for two years, with the option to extend them for an additional three, according to the Agriculture Department. Each state is required to assess the impact of the changes.
Health experts worry that the waivers ignore larger factors affecting the health of SNAP recipients, said Anand Parekh, a medical doctor who is the chief health policy officer at the University of Michigan School of Public Health.
“This doesn’t solve the two fundamental problems, which is healthy food in this country is not affordable and unhealthy food is cheap and ubiquitous,” he said.
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The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
Soda and candy should absolutely not be available through SNAP. Sugared soda processes differently than other sugars and is a direct cause of diabetes and obesity. Sugar has been proven to “feed” cancer cells and any patient at high risk for cancer is told to reduce their sugar consumption. IMO sugared soda should not be consumed by children, period. Additionally buying these items at the store increases the stigma of “being on food stamps” because no one wants to see a parent getting state help buying their family that crap. If no fresh available, frozen vegetables are just as healthy and readily available even at dollar stores. Get real about this, it’s a no brainer.
I don't see problem with thoughtful and sensible changes to what can be purchased with snap. For example for candy and soda to be excluded. To try and rush this without clear direction for all parties will be more costly than no change at all. What is truly disturbing is the ugliness of the comments here. As though people who need assistance should have to grovel to receive powdered milk. Yet no concern for the cooperate welfare taxpayers support and the CEO's in private jets drinking champagne. PThe selective ignorance is stunning. The ugliness is tragic.
The entitlement is way too thick amongst those who are shouting, "I should be able to..." in reference to money that isn't actually theirs... I should be able to have and do a LOT of things, but you don't see me griping about people not providing me with said luxuries...
He’s required to fly on “our dime” as a government employee for security reasons. For personal flights, he is required to pay back the costs of the flights for himself and any guests, just like it’s always been.
FBI director is required to pay back the cost at the rate of a commercial flight. The cost of the FBI jet is a tad more expensive. The girlfriend has flown solo on the fbi jet. Nowhere does it indicate she should have fbi security. That is entitlement.
Let's keep everyone morbidly obese, with hypertension, diabetes etc...so the tax PAYORS can pay for the health care also! edited
If this were to truly address health issues then have it address everyone and not just a small subset of people. Nearly 60% of Americans enrolled in SNAP are either children under 18 or adults who are 60 or older. Of the 10 states with the highest percentage of people on SNAP, five are also in the top 10 for the percentage of the population in poverty: New Mexico, Louisiana, Oklahoma, West Virginia and Nevada. - why discriminate this sector of people ? And healthcare of lack thereof is dramatically changing tomorrow. Over 13.7 million will lose their coverage starting 2026, while millions more will see plans so expensive they will decide whether to have any health insurance.
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