SNAP food assistance in Minnesota
The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), known in Minnesota as Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) Minnesota EBT Card, provides monthly food benefits via Electronic Benefit Transfer (EBT) cards usable at participating retailers. Below is the state-specific information for applying and receiving benefits in Minnesota.
Minnesota state SNAP contacts
- State SNAP agency info: State SNAP Website 800-657-3698 State List of Local Office Locations Benefit Issuance Schedule Employment and Training Program
- State application portal: Apply for Benefits — mnbenefits.mn.gov
- EBT card help: State EBT Website 888-997-2227 — ebtedge.com
- Online food-purchasing retailers (Minnesota): ALDI Amazon Cash Wise Coborn’s Costco County Market (Jerry’s Enterprises, Inc.) Cub Foods CVS Banners Daily Cart Dashmart Dollar General Ernie’s Food Market Family Dollar Go-Puff Goldenrod Market Garden Hornbacher’s Hugo’s Family Marketplace HyVee Jerry’s Foods Lunds and Byerly’s Mackenthun’s Fine Foods Sam’s Club Scan and Go Target Thrive Market Ukura’s Big Dollar Walgreens Walmart Whole Foods
- Instacart.com/County-Market
- Instacart.com/Jerrys-Food
- thrivemarket.com
- ukurasbigdollar.com
- dailycart.com
- grownby.app/farms
- sameday.familydollar.com
- shop.cashwise.com
- shop.coborns.com
- aldi.us
- amazon.com
- amazon.com/wfm
- costco.com
- doordash.com/business
- doordash.com/business
- doordash.com/convenience
- doordash.com/convenience
- erniesfoodmarket.com
- gohugos.com
- gopuff.com
- hornbachers.com
- hy-vee.com
- instacart.com/store
- mackenthuns.com
- samsclub.com
- target.com
- walgreens.com
- walmart.com
- USDA FNS regional office: Midwest Regional Office (MWRO) — 77 West Jackson Blvd 20th Floor Chicago, IL 60604-3507 Google Maps · 312-353-6664
Eligibility for non-citizens
SNAP has STRICT immigration-status rules. To receive SNAP benefits in Minnesota, the household member must be ONE of:
- U.S. citizen
- Lawful Permanent Resident (LPR) with 5+ years of LPR status (or earlier in some cases)
- Refugee or asylee (no 5-year wait — eligible from grant date)
- Cuban/Haitian entrant
- Trafficking victim with T visa or pending T application
- Battered immigrant (VAWA self-petitioner)
- Iraqi/Afghan Special Immigrant
- Veteran or active-duty US military or qualifying family member
Children of undocumented parents: If a child is a U.S. citizen or eligible non-citizen, that child can receive SNAP even if the parents cannot. The household applies for benefits for the eligible members only.
What SNAP can buy (and can’t)
CAN buy:
- Fruits, vegetables, meat, poultry, fish
- Dairy products
- Breads, cereals, pasta, rice
- Snack foods, non-alcoholic beverages
- Seeds and plants that produce food
CANNOT buy:
- Alcohol, tobacco
- Hot prepared foods (with limited exceptions)
- Vitamins, supplements
- Non-food items (paper goods, household supplies, pet food)
Related procedural information
- SNAP eligibility by immigration status (federal) — overview of who qualifies
- Medicaid in Minnesota — health coverage eligibility
- CHIP — children’s health insurance — separate program for children
- WIC (Women, Infants, Children) — pregnant + young child nutrition
- Find legal aid in your state — appeals + public benefits attorneys
Last verified: 2026-05-27. General procedural information — not legal or tax advice. SNAP rules and amounts change; verify current eligibility with the Minnesota SNAP agency.
Frequently asked questions
Can undocumented immigrants get SNAP in Minnesota?
How do I apply for Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) Minnesota EBT Card in Minnesota?
Does applying for SNAP affect my immigration case?
What if I move to a different state?
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General information, not legal advice. MigrantUSA is an independent publisher and is not a law firm; using this site does not create an attorney-client relationship, and this content is not a substitute for advice from a licensed attorney about your specific situation. US federal, state, and local government procedures, fees, and forms change. Always verify current details directly with the relevant agency before acting. For immigration, tax, or other legal matters specific to your situation, consult a licensed attorney or BIA-accredited representative.