What the partial government shutdown means for SNAP benefits

Michael Nguyen
Published Feb 2, 2026


A partial government shutdown happens when Congress and the president do not agree on funding for certain federal agencies, so those agencies must temporarily stop some operations.

Many federal employees in the affected agencies are furloughed or work without pay, and some public services may be reduced or delayed. Even so, programs that already have funding — including SNAP — can keep running normally.
 

SNAP will continue normally

 
  • SNAP (the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program) will keep paying full benefits during this shutdown.
  • That’s because the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) — the agency that runs SNAP — already has funding through the end of the federal budget year (Sept. 30).
  • In other words, SNAP is already funded, so a partial shutdown affecting other agencies does not stop SNAP payments.
 

Why this is different from the last major shutdown

 
  • During the 43-day shutdown in the fall, SNAP was affected near the end, and many people received little or no assistance for the final weeks.
  • This time, the situation is different because the legislation that ended the earlier shutdown funded USDA programs for the rest of the year. That includes SNAP.
 

Who SNAP supports and how much help it provides

 
  • SNAP serves about 42 million people — roughly 1 in 8 Americans — in lower-income households.
  • Participants receive an average of about $190 per month per person.
 

Bottom line


This partial shutdown may impact parts of the government, but SNAP benefits should continue without changes, because the program is already funded through Sept. 30.

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