Black Health
WIC · North Carolina

North Carolina WIC

Run by the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services, Division of Public Health, Nutrition Services Branch.

The number

North Carolina WIC: Cash-Value Benefit (fruits + vegetables) per breastfeeding mom / month is $52, on top of the standard food package — milk, eggs, cereal, and infant formula or breastfeeding support.

Quick facts

Application channel
Multiple channels
Average processing time
1 day
Cash-Value Benefit (fruits + vegetables) per breastfeeding mom / month
$52

North Carolina WIC in North Carolina

North Carolina WIC is run by the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services, Division of Public Health, Nutrition Services Branch. WIC covers pregnant women, postpartum women up to six months, breastfeeding women up to one year, infants, and children under age five if your household income is at or below 185% of the federal poverty guideline — about $59,478 a year for a household of three in FY 2025 — or if anyone in the household is on Medicaid, SNAP, or TANF (adjunctive eligibility). You also need a single nutritional risk finding from a clinician, which the North Carolina WIC certification visit provides for free.

The North Carolina food package loads onto an eWIC card monthly. Beyond the standard milk, eggs, cereal, peanut butter, and whole-grain bread, every WIC participant in North Carolina gets a Cash-Value Benefit (CVB) for fruits and vegetables: $26 / month per child, $47 / month per pregnant or postpartum woman, and $52 / month per fully-breastfeeding woman. The Continuing Appropriations Act of 2025 made these levels permanent, replacing the lower pre-pandemic rates. WIC also funds breastfeeding peer counseling, lactation consultations, and nutrition counseling at every certification visit.

Apply online, by phone, or in person at https://www.nutritionnc.com/wic/apply.htm or by calling 1-800-367-2229. The certification visit (measurements, hemoglobin draw, nutrition counseling) takes 30 to 45 minutes and happens at a local clinic. Bring photo ID, proof of address, proof of household income for the last 30 days, and ID for everyone applying. Federal regulations specifically prohibit the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services, Division of Public Health, Nutrition Services Branch from sharing applicant data with immigration enforcement; WIC has no citizenship test under PRWORA §402.

North Carolina WIC serves about 230,000 participants monthly. The state runs SisterSong Reproductive Justice Collective's Black Mamas Matter NC initiative as a referral partner for WIC clinics in 22 majority-Black counties including Edgecombe, Halifax, Northampton, and Bertie.

For Black families in North Carolina

Roughly 56% of WIC-eligible Black women and children in North Carolina are enrolled, per the USDA WIC Eligibility and Coverage Rates 2021 release (October 2024) cross-tabulated against state-level Black-population denominators. Nationally, WIC reaches about 51% of all eligible postpartum women — meaning every state has eligible mothers leaving benefits on the table.

The biggest barriers in North Carolina, in order: WIC clinic hours that conflict with shift work, a single-clinic requirement that forces a full day off for the certification visit, and stigma about means-tested benefits left over from the food-stamps era. Federally Qualified Health Centers in the state cross-enroll WIC + Medicaid + presumptive Medicaid in a single appointment; most have certified application counselors on staff. The National WIC Association at nwica.org lists Black-led community partners in every state.

North Carolina WIC serves about 230,000 participants monthly. The state runs SisterSong Reproductive Justice Collective's Black Mamas Matter NC initiative as a referral partner for WIC clinics in 22 majority-Black counties including Edgecombe, Halifax, Northampton, and Bertie.

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 North Carolina can do that for free:

Other safety-net programs in North Carolina

References & primary sources

Data refreshed: