For millions of Americans, the countdown has already begun.
New SNAP rules are drawing a hard line between who eats and who is quietly cut off.
Older workers, exhausted caregivers, and people on the edge of homelessness are about to face a choice that doesn’t feel like a choice at all.
Beginning November 1, 2025, SNAP will no longer feel like a guaranteed lifeline for many able‑bodied adults without dependents.
The new requirement—at least 80 hours a month of work, volunteering, or training—turns food assistance into a conditional contract,
one that punishes anyone who can’t consistently meet the threshold.
Those who fall short won’t just see a reduction; they’ll be cut off after three
months within a three‑year window, regardless of how unstable their housing, transportation, or local job market may be.
Raising the automatic exemption age from 59 to 65 and narrowing dependency to children under 14
leaves a painful gap for grandparents, caregivers of teens, and older workers trapped in low‑wage or seasonal jobs.
Homeless individuals, veterans, and former foster youth—once recognized as needing special protection—are now exposed to the same rigid rules.
As federal funding faces strain from the government shutdown, families who do everything “right”
may still confront late payments, empty EBT cards, and impossible choices between food, rent, and medicine.
The policy is framed as accountability, but for many, it will feel like abandonment.