Black Health
SNAP · South Carolina

South Carolina SNAP

Run by the South Carolina Department of Social Services.

The number

South Carolina SNAP: Maximum monthly SNAP for a household of 3, FY 2025 is $766.

Quick facts

Application channel
Online
Average processing time
30 days
Maximum monthly SNAP for a household of 3, FY 2025
$766

South Carolina SNAP in South Carolina

South Carolina SNAP is run by the South Carolina Department of Social Services. SNAP — what most South Carolina residents still call food stamps — helps low-income households buy groceries at most supermarkets, corner stores, and an increasing number of farmers' markets. Federal income tests for FY 2025 (October 2024 through September 2025): gross monthly income at or below 130% of the federal poverty line ($2,798 for a household of three), and net income at or below 100% of poverty after standard deductions. The federal asset limit is $3,000 ($4,500 for elderly or disabled households), though many states have used the Broad-Based Categorical Eligibility option to remove or raise the asset test above the federal floor.

The maximum monthly SNAP allotment for a household of three in South Carolina is $766 in FY 2025. SNAP benefits load monthly to an Electronic Benefit Transfer card and can buy any food product for human consumption: meats, produce, dairy, breads, cereals, snacks, and seeds or plants that produce food for the household. SNAP cannot be used for alcohol, tobacco, hot prepared foods (with limited Restaurant Meals Program exceptions), vitamins, pet food, or non-food items.

Apply online at https://apply.scdhhs.gov/ or by calling 1-800-616-1309. Federal processing time is 30 days for a regular application; 7-day expedited service is required for households with under $150 in monthly income and $100 in liquid assets, or migrant + seasonal workers (7 CFR 273.2(i)). Bring photo ID, Social Security numbers for everyone applying, proof of income for the last 30 days, proof of housing costs, and any child-support orders. Able-Bodied Adults Without Dependents (ABAWDs) ages 18-54 face a 3-month time limit unless they meet a 20-hour-a-week work requirement — veterans, homeless adults, and youth aging out of foster care are exempt under the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023.

South Carolina is the only state that retains the full lifetime drug-felony SNAP ban from the 1996 PRWORA. South Carolina Appleseed and the ACLU of South Carolina have litigated and lobbied unsuccessfully against the ban since 2009.

For Black families in South Carolina

About 76% of SNAP-eligible Black households in South Carolina are enrolled, per USDA's Reaching Those in Need state-level participation series. Nationally, Black households participate at roughly three times the rate of white households — reflecting both higher poverty rates from historical wage and wealth gaps and SNAP doing what it is designed to do.

The 2023 federal expansion of the Able-Bodied Adults Without Dependents time limit to age 54 hit Black SNAP recipients hardest — an Urban Institute analysis found Black adults made up about 31% of those subject to the new ABAWD rule. The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities maintains a state-by-state ABAWD-waiver tracker at cbpp.org/research/food-assistance; check whether South Carolina has a current waiver in your county before counting on the time limit applying.

South Carolina is the only state that retains the full lifetime drug-felony SNAP ban from the 1996 PRWORA. South Carolina Appleseed and the ACLU of South Carolina have litigated and lobbied unsuccessfully against the ban since 2009.

Where to get help

If you want help with the application or want to walk in and have someone sit with you through the forms, three places in South Carolina can do that for free:

  • Federally Qualified Health Centers in South Carolina — every FQHC has certified application counselors on staff and cannot turn you away for inability to pay. They cross-enroll Medicaid + WIC + SNAP at the same visit.
  • South Carolina Medicaid — if you qualify for Medicaid you are automatically income-eligible for WIC under federal adjunctive eligibility rules (7 CFR 246.7).
  • South Carolina uninsured rate by race — SNAP enrollment is one of the strongest predictors of also qualifying for Medicaid, particularly in expansion states. Verify your Medicaid status in the same visit.

Other safety-net programs in South Carolina

References & primary sources

Data refreshed: