The Federal Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) also known as the Food Stamps Program, provides funding for food to citizens, and some non-citizens, who meet low-income eligibility requirements.
But a recent report by Florida TaxWatch shows the state needs to clamp down on those receiving food stamps.
According to TaxWatch, the problem centers around “SNAP payment errors.”
One of the significant areas where this happens is from overpayment to recipients. Much of the overpayments or SNAP payment errors stem from processing mistakes by state government agencies, missed or misreported changes by recipients (income, household size), and in many cases, fraud.
The U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) found that most SNAP errors are a result of unverified eligibility for program benefits. States’ errors often derived from difficulties verifying an applicant’s citizenship, education enrollment, employment status, financial status, household size, proof of identity, or residency.
Breakdown of who receives SNAP benefits.
Children (39%), elderly individuals (20%), and non-elderly individuals with a disability (10%), although any citizen who meets the income eligibility requirements is eligible.
Over the past ten years, Florida’s participation rate has hovered chiefly between 1.5 million and 2.0 million households.
In FY2023, Floridians received more than $6 billion of issued SNAP benefits, with the average benefit per person providing $191.06 per month.
The increase came from COVID-19 pandemic dollars that temporarily increased demand on SNAP, and states received extra federal funding through Joe Biden’s American Rescue Plan Act.
Under the new GOP tax bill that was passed in July of this year, the Trump administration wants states to have a bigger role when determining who should receive welfare benefits.
But that means states like Florida will also see a dramatic increase in state spending on SNAP, especially if Florida does not reduce its SNAP payment error rate.
Nationwide, Florida only ranks 18th in SNAP reliance, but TaxWatch says it has one of the highest SNAP payment error rates in the country.




