Do I Qualify for SNAP in Minnesota?
2026 income limits, benefit amounts, and how to apply
Minnesota SNAP uses broad-based categorical eligibility (BBCE), which means the gross income limit is 165% of the federal poverty level. For a family of 4, your gross income must be under $51,480/year ($4,290/month). Maximum monthly benefit: $975 for a family of 4.
Could Your Family Get SNAP in Minnesota?
Enter your household size and gross annual income to check the gross income test. Net income (after deductions) is calculated at your interview.
The next step is applying through Minnesota DHS. At your interview, they will calculate your net income (after deductions for shelter, childcare, etc.) to determine your benefit amount.
Elderly or disabled household member? Households with a member age 60+ or receiving disability benefits are exempt from the gross income test. Only the net income test applies.
Income just changed? SNAP uses current monthly income. A job loss, reduced hours, or other change may now put you under the limit. Apply based on your current situation.
Enter your household size and income to check.
Minnesota SNAP Gross Income Limits (165% FPL)
Gross income before any deductions. Minnesota uses BBCE at 165% FPL.
| Household size | Annual gross limit | Monthly gross limit | Max benefit/month |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 person | $24,849 | $2,071 | $292 |
| 2 people | $33,726 | $2,811 | $536 |
| 3 people | $42,603 | $3,550 | $768 |
| 4 people (reference) | $51,480 | $4,290 | $975 |
| 5 people | $60,357 | $5,030 | $1,158 |
| 6 people | $69,234 | $5,770 | $1,390 |
| 7 people | $78,111 | $6,509 | $1,536 |
| 8 people | $86,988 | $7,249 | $1,756 |
Source: USDA FNS 2026 federal poverty guidelines. Contact Minnesota DHS to confirm current thresholds.
Net Income Test: 100% FPL (All States)
After passing the gross test, your caseworker calculates net income by subtracting allowed deductions. Net income must be at or below 100% FPL. For a family of 4: $31,200/year ($2,600/month).
Common SNAP deductions:
- • 20% earned income deduction (automatic for all wages)
- • Standard deduction ($198 for 1-3 people, $208 for 4+)
- • Dependent care costs (childcare while working or training)
- • Excess shelter costs above 50% of adjusted income
- • Medical expenses over $35/month for elderly/disabled members
- • Child support payments made to non-household members
How to Apply for SNAP in Minnesota
Applications are processed by Minnesota DHS.
Submit your application
Apply online through MNBenefits.mn.gov or at your county human services office. Minnesota uses BBCE at 165% FPL.
Complete an interview
Within 30 days (7 days for expedited cases). Phone interviews available in most states. Bring proof of identity, income (pay stubs, tax returns), housing costs, and childcare expenses.
Receive your EBT card
Benefits are loaded monthly to an EBT card accepted at grocery stores, farmers markets, and online retailers (Amazon, Walmart) in Minnesota. Expedited households receive benefits within 7 days.
SNAP Eligibility in Other States
More Family Assistance in Minnesota
Minnesota Family Assistance Programs
Families who qualify for one program often qualify for others. Check each one.
Childcare Subsidy (CCDF)
Income limits and how to apply in Minnesota
Head Start Eligibility
Free early education for low-income families
WIC Benefits
Food assistance for children under 5
Free Pre-K Programs
State-funded preschool eligibility
Free School Meals
NSLP income limits for school-age kids
Childcare Tax Credits
Federal + Minnesota state credits
TANF Cash Assistance
Monthly cash benefits for families with children
Energy Assistance (LIHEAP)
Help paying heating and cooling bills
Section 8 Housing
Housing vouchers — income limits and waitlists