Trump Admin to Require All SNAP Recipients to Reapply for Benefits/ TezzBuzz/ WASHINGTON/ J. Mansour/ Morning Edition/ The Trump administration will mandate all SNAP recipients to reapply for food assistance, citing widespread fraud. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins says the move aims to ensure benefits go only to the truly vulnerable. Critics warn this could create new barriers for millions of low-income Americans already struggling with hunger.
WASHINGTON, D.C. — November 14, 2025
The Trump administration is implementing a sweeping new requirement that will force all participants in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) — commonly known as food stamps — to reapply for benefitsAgriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins announced Friday.
In an interview with NewsmaxRollins said the policy is intended to root out what the administration calls “rampant fraud” in the $100 billion program, which serves nearly 42 million Americans.
No timeline or procedural details for the reapplication process were provided. The USDA has not yet responded to inquiries seeking clarification on how this requirement differs from the current system, where states already mandate periodic recertification, often every six months.
Anti-hunger advocates and policy experts are warning that the reapplication mandate could disrupt access to food for millions — especially elderly, disabledor non-English speaking participants who may struggle to navigate new bureaucratic hurdles.
USDA’s own Food and Nutrition Service has found that fraud accounts for less than 1% of program costs. Nonetheless, the Trump administration continues to emphasize abuse, pointing to anecdotal cases and data from selective state audits.
Rollins claimed that USDA had identified 186,000 deceased individuals still receiving benefits based on data from 29 states — a figure that watchdog groups are urging the department to verify through independent audits.
This announcement is the latest development in the administration’s effort to overhaul SNAP, part of what Rollins calls a broader mission to “modernize and clean up” the program. Earlier this year, USDA requested sensitive personal dataincluding Social Security numbersfrom state SNAP agencies — a move now being challenged in federal court over privacy and civil liberties concerns.
Rollins has teased a larger reform package in the coming weeks, possibly introducing more work requirements, time limits, and verification rules.
President Donald Trump has long been critical of the SNAP program, especially as budget negotiations intensify around government spending. Speaking on Fox News Monday, Trump claimed the program is “many times larger than it should be.”
Earlier this year, Trump signed the One Big Beautiful Bill Acta massive budget-cutting law that slashed $186 billion from SNAP over the next decade. The legislation added new work requirementscapped benefit periods for certain recipients, and gave USDA expanded oversight authority — including power to mandate full reapplication reviews.
The administration says these changes are necessary to control spending and restore accountability.
Until USDA provides a full plan, it remains unclear whether all 42 million recipients will need to reapply at once, or if the change will be phased in.
If implemented poorly, experts warn the policy could lead to mass disenrollment, delays in benefits, and increased food insecurity — especially among vulnerable populations.
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