October 8, 2025

Florida's Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) is at a Crossroads

To avoid a significant cost share, Florida must act now to identify the root causes of its SNAP error rate and move forward with solutions.

The federal government has always paid 100 percent of the grocery benefits provided to families participating in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance program (SNAP). However, due to H.R.1—the reconciliation bill recently enacted by Congress—these benefits are no longer fully guaranteed. H.R. 1 requires that states identified as having SNAP error rates of 6 percent or higher as of the year 2025 must begin paying between 5 and 15 percent of the cost of grocery benefits, effective as early as 2028.i

States that have SNAP error rates below 6 percent will continue to have 100 percent of grocery benefits paid for by the federal government. However, states with error rates above 6 percent will now be obligated to pay a percentage of the cost of benefits, based on a predetermined range. States that have error rates of 6 to 8 percent will have to pay five percent of the cost of benefits; states that have error rates of 8 to 10 percent will have to pay 10 percent of the cost of  benefits; and states that have error rates of over 10 percent will have to pay 15 percent of the cost of benefits.

Although Department of Children and Families’ (DCF) SNAP error rate was 15.13 percent in 2024,ii the good news is that Florida now has an opportunity to lower its error rate and avoid having to pay higher costs—or any costs at all—for the SNAP grocery benefits provided to the state’s residents. Even a reduction in the state’s error rate by just one-half would reduce Florida's cost share by approximately two-thirds.

Reducing the state’s share of the cost of grocery benefits is especially important, given the fact that the passing of H.R.1 has imposed additional administrative costs onto states. While states have only had to pay 50 percent of administrative costs for SNAP in the past—H.R. 1 shifts almost all of the burden onto states—requiring all states to start paying 75 percent, effective in 2027. For Florida, the administrative costs would amount to about $205 million every year;iii on top of that—unless the state reduces its error rate—Florida would have to bear the weight of paying the updated costs for grocery benefits as well. Reducing the SNAP error rate is an attainable goal and a common-sense solution. Although Florida’s SNAP error rate is currently above 15 percent for 2024, this dramatically high error rate is an outlier for the state—especially in comparison to the data reported in past years. For perspective, of the error rates reported for Florida by the USDA since 2017 through 2024, Florida’s SNAP error rate was as low as 4.39 percent during the year 2018.iv

It is imperative that DCF identifies the root causes of its unusually high increase in its error rate and implement the most effective solutions to lower this rate immediately. If DCF does not see to the task, Florida will be bound to pay as much as $1 billion annually in order to continue providing grocery assistance to Floridians who participate in SNAP—or risk withdrawing from the program and forfeiting SNAP benefits altogether. The health and well-being of vulnerable Floridians participating in the program should not be up for debate. It is the state’s responsibility to save SNAP. The ability for struggling Floridian families to thrive depends on the state moving towards swift, decisive action to reduce its SNAP error rate.

_________________________

Notes

iH.R.1--119th Congress, (2025-2026), https://www.congress.gov/bill/119th-congress/house-bill/1.

iiFood and Nutrition Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture, “SUPPLEMENTAL NUTRITION ASSISTANCE PROGRAM: PAYMENT ERROR RATES :FISCAL YEAR 2024,” June 30, 2025, https://www.fns.usda.gov/snap/qc/per.

iiiFood Research & Action Center, “SNAP State Budget Cost Shift: Fiscal Year 2023,” https://frac.org/wp-content/uploads/SNAP-State-Budget-Cost-Shift.pdf.

ivIn Fiscal Years 2020 and 2021, USDA was unable to establish error rates for any state due to suspension of some data collections during the COVID-19 public health emergency.

Downloadable Resources

There are no attachments currently.
No items found.