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Negative Sentiment

USDA publishes FY2025 SNAP error-rate state rankings

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Media Bias Meter
Sources: 11
Left 20%
Center 40%
Right 40%
Sources: 11

United States. The U.S. Department of Agriculture released fiscal year 2025 SNAP payment error-rate data this week, showing a national error rate of 10.62% and wide variation among states; South Dakota registered 2.47% while Alaska recorded the highest rate of 23.15%, with Maryland at 13.08% and Illinois at 14.7%. The report, published June 24, 2026, carries fiscal consequences under the 2025 One Big Beautiful Bill: states with error rates above 6% face matching penalties of 5%–15% beginning October 2027. State officials and federal spokespeople provided statements this week noting accuracy efforts, and multiple states cited administrative procedures to avoid penalties.

Prepared by Christopher Adams and reviewed by editorial team.

Timeline of Events

  • 2022 — Maryland legislative audit identified tens of thousands of ineligible SNAP households.
  • Oct 1, 2024–Sept 30, 2025 — Fiscal Year 2025 period during which USDA measured payment errors.
  • 2025 — One Big Beautiful Bill enacted, establishing state matching penalties for >6% error rates.
  • June 24, 2026 — USDA released FY2025 SNAP payment error-rate data reported by national and local outlets.
  • October 2027 — New federal matching penalties scheduled to take effect for states above threshold.

Why This Matters to You

Your tax dollars fund SNAP. High error rates mean wasted money. If your state's rate is above 6%, expect changes. Officials will work to lower errors and avoid penalties. Check your state's rate and watch for updates.

The Bottom Line

SNAP error rates are a measure of efficiency. Too high, and states face penalties. This could tighten budgets, possibly affecting services. Keep an eye on your state's efforts to improve. Worth forwarding if you know someone concerned about government spending.

Media Bias
Articles Published:
5
Right Leaning:
2
Left Leaning:
1
Neutral:
2

Who Benefited

States with low FY2025 SNAP error rates, such as South Dakota and Idaho, avoid fiscal penalties and potential state matching costs that will be imposed beginning October 2027 under the 2025 legislative changes.

Who Impacted

States with high FY2025 SNAP error rates, including Illinois and Maryland, face increased federal penalties and potential budgetary impacts that could reduce program resources or shift costs to state budgets beginning October 2027.

Media Bias
Articles Published:
5
Right Leaning:
2
Left Leaning:
1
Neutral:
2
Distribution:
Left 20%, Center 40%, Right 40%
Who Benefited

States with low FY2025 SNAP error rates, such as South Dakota and Idaho, avoid fiscal penalties and potential state matching costs that will be imposed beginning October 2027 under the 2025 legislative changes.

Who Impacted

States with high FY2025 SNAP error rates, including Illinois and Maryland, face increased federal penalties and potential budgetary impacts that could reduce program resources or shift costs to state budgets beginning October 2027.

Coverage of Story:

From Left

Illinois food assistance error rate continues to grow as federal penalties loom

wglt.org
From Center

USDA publishes FY2025 SNAP error-rate state rankings

WMAR DRGNews
From Right

Iowa one of nine states that won't have to match portion of federal SNAP benefits

Times-Republican East Idaho News

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