The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), signed into law on July 4, 2025, represents the most significant overhaul of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) in decades. As the November 2026 rollout approaches, millions of Americans are preparing for a “new normal” in food assistance defined by stricter oversight and higher personal accountability.
Here is a breakdown of the structural changes and the specific groups they affect most.
1. Expanded Work Requirements: The Age Shift
The most immediate change is the expansion of Able-Bodied Adults Without Dependents (ABAWD) rules. Previously, these requirements primarily targeted younger adults, but the OBBBA has moved the goalposts:
- New Age Range: The age limit for mandatory work requirements has increased from 54 to 64.
- The 80-Hour Rule: To maintain benefits for more than three months in a three-year period, these adults must now document at least 80 hours of work, volunteering, or approved training per month.
- Narrower Exemptions: Exemptions are now strictly limited, often requiring dependents to be under age 14 (previously age 18 in many jurisdictions) to excuse a parent from these mandates.
2. State-Level Responsibility and Cost-Sharing
A cornerstone of the OBBBA is shifting the financial and administrative burden from the federal government to individual states.
- State Funding: For the first time, states are required to fund a portion of the actual benefit costs (estimated at up to 15%) and a much higher percentage of administrative costs.
- The “Paperwork Barrier”: With states now financially liable for “payment errors” above 6%, local agencies are implementing much more rigorous verification processes. Expect more frequent recertifications and mandatory in-person interviews in many states.
3. The Impact on “Working Poverty”
While the bill is intended to encourage workforce participation, economists highlight a “documentation trap” for those already employed:
- The Gig Economy Problem: Many recipients work in retail or gig roles where hours fluctuate. If a worker gets 15 hours one week and 25 the next, they may fail to meet the 20-hour weekly average required by some state implementations, triggering a loss of benefits despite being actively employed.
- Income Limits: The OBBBA curtails “broad-based categorical eligibility,” which states previously used to slightly raise income limits for working families. This means some families may lose benefits as soon as they receive a small raise, often referred to as the “cliff effect.”
Comparison of SNAP Rules: Pre-OBBBA vs. Post-OBBBA
| Feature | Pre-OBBBA Rules | OBBBA (Nov 2026) |
|---|---|---|
| ABAWD Age Limit | 18–54 | 18–64 |
| Federal Funding | 100% of benefits | ~85% of benefits (State covers rest) |
| Dependents Exemption | Child under 18 | Child under 14 |
| Work Requirement | 20 hours/week average | Strict 80 hours/month documentation |
| Non-Citizen Rules | Varied by status | 5-year residency for Lawful Permanent Residents |
Proactive Steps for Recipients
As agencies scramble to implement these rules by November, community leaders recommend the following “survival kit” for households:
- Keep Every Paystub: Documentation is now the primary defense against benefit termination.
- Report Changes Immediately: If your work hours drop below the requirement, seek a “Good Cause” waiver from your caseworker immediately.
- Screen for Medical Exemptions: If you have a physical or mental health condition that limits your ability to work 80 hours, ensure you have a signed medical statement on file before the November deadline.
How has your local agency communicated these upcoming documentation requirements to you so far?





