June 24, 2026

Statement on Florida's 2025 SNAP Error Rate and Nearly $1 Billion Penalty

FPI put out the statement below in response to USDA’s release of states’ 2025 SNAP error rates.

The latest USDA data, which shows that Florida’s SNAP error rate is 12.97 percent, means that Florida will now be on the hook for an estimated $984 million in SNAP benefit costs in the 2028-29 fiscal year alone in order to maintain existing benefit levels.

Forcing states to take on a share of SNAP benefit costs was among the deep cuts to food assistance included in H.R.1, federal reconciliation legislation enacted last year. We are now seeing the worst case scenario play out concerning a massive cost shift based on Florida’s newly released 2025 SNAP error rate — FPI and the Safety Net Advocacy Coalition sounded the alarm on this when federal lawmakers were considering H.R. 1, and after it was signed we urged state lawmakers and administration officials to focus on reducing the error rate to avoid a nearly $1 billion penalty.

Now, unless Florida lawmakers act to raise revenue to preserve SNAP and make up for the loss in federal funds, we will see a cut to SNAP program eligibility or benefits, or cuts in other areas of the state budget. This will be especially acute as the cost-share penalty will come in the same year — fiscal year 2028-29 — that state economists project over a $6 billion deficit.

SNAP participation in Florida had already declined by 10 percent in Florida the first five months after H.R. 1 was enacted, at a time of rising prices and rising unemployment. Now, all SNAP benefits are at risk if the next Legislature doesn’t appropriate nearly $1 billion towards SNAP for the first time. This oncoming disaster was avoidable — unfortunately, the warnings of anti-hunger advocates weren’t taken to heart, and now Floridians start down a future where the state’s participation in SNAP as a whole is in question.

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