Understanding When Your EBT Card Gets Refilled: A Complete State-by-State Guide

Wondering how to know when your EBT card will refill? The timing of Electronic Benefits Transfer reloads varies significantly depending on which state you live in and the specific type of benefit you receive. SNAP (Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program) benefits are distributed monthly to help low-income families purchase groceries, but the exact date your EBT card receives funds depends on several personal factors unique to your case.

The good news is that your EBT refill schedule remains consistent month-to-month in 2026 and beyond. Most states use a systematic approach to spread out SNAP distributions throughout the month, meaning you’ll receive your benefits on the same day each month based on factors such as your Social Security number, last name, case number, or EBT account number.

How To Find Your Personal EBT Refill Date

The easiest way to discover when your EBT card will receive its monthly refill is to visit your state’s official EBT website and look for the “EBT in My State” section. This will give you exact information based on your specific identifying factors.

In general, if you’re newly eligible for SNAP or have just opened a case, your first benefits typically deposit between the 1st and 10th of any given month. After that initial period, your EBT refill date becomes fixed based on a formula your state uses—usually tied to the last digit of your Social Security number, the first letter of your last name, your case number, or a combination of these identifiers.

Here’s what you should know about how SNAP distributions work:

  • Most states distribute benefits through a prepaid debit card format, with the full month’s allocation loaded onto your EBT card at one time
  • SNAP funds work like food stamps and can be used to purchase any eligible food items at authorized retailers
  • Each state independently manages its own payment schedule and distribution system
  • While SNAP benefits flow to recipients across America throughout every month, not everyone receives their refill on the same calendar date
  • Your personal refill date depends on state-determined rules, not on when you applied or how much you’re receiving

Why EBT Reload Dates Differ Across States

State-by-state variation exists because each state’s Department of Social Services independently manages SNAP distribution. By staggering the refill dates across the month instead of distributing all benefits on one day, states can better manage their computer systems and avoid processing bottlenecks.

Your state chose its particular formula—whether based on your last name, Social Security digits, birth month, case number, or some combination—to ensure equal distribution of their workload throughout the month.

EBT Refill Schedules by State: Your Complete Reference

Below is a comprehensive breakdown of when SNAP benefits reload across all 50 states, plus the District of Columbia and U.S. territories. Use your identifying information (Social Security number, last name, case number, birth date, etc.) to locate your specific refill window:

Northeast Region:

  • Connecticut: 1st to 3rd (based on first letter of last name)
  • Delaware: Spread over 23 days starting the 2nd (based on first letter of last name)
  • Maine: 10th to 14th (based on last digit of birthday)
  • Maryland: 4th to 23rd (based on first letter of last name)
  • Massachusetts: First 14 days (based on last digit of Social Security number)
  • New Hampshire: 5th of the month
  • New Jersey: First 5 calendar days (based on 7th digit of case number)
  • New York: 1st to 9th, or 1st to 13th in New York City excluding weekends and holidays (based on last digit of case number)
  • Pennsylvania: First 10 business days (based on last digit of case record number)
  • Rhode Island: 1st of the month
  • Vermont: 1st of the month
  • Washington, D.C.: 1st to 10th (based on first letter of last name)
  • West Virginia: First 9 days (based on first letter of last name)

Southeast Region:

  • Alabama: 4th to 23rd (based on case number)
  • Arkansas: 4th to 13th (based on last digit of Social Security number)
  • Florida: 1st to 28th (based on 9th and 8th digits of case number)
  • Georgia: 5th to 23rd (based on last two digits of ID number)
  • Kentucky: First 19 days (based on last digit of Social Security number)
  • Louisiana: 1st to 14th (based on last digit of Social Security number)
  • Mississippi: 4th to 21st (based on last two digits of case number)
  • North Carolina: 3rd to 21st (based on last digit of Social Security number)
  • South Carolina: 1st to 19th (based on last digit of case number)
  • Tennessee: 1st to 20th (based on last two digits of Social Security number)
  • Virginia: 1st to 9th (based on last digit of case number)

Midwest Region:

  • Illinois: 1st to 20th (based on combination of case type and name)
  • Indiana: 5th to 23rd (based on first letter of last name)
  • Iowa: First 10 days (based on first letter of last name)
  • Kansas: First 10 days (based on first letter of last name)
  • Michigan: 3rd to 21st (based on last two digits of ID number)
  • Minnesota: 4th to 13th (based on last digit of case number)
  • Missouri: 1st to 22nd (based on birth month and last name)
  • Nebraska: 1st to 5th (based on last digit of head of household’s Social Security number)
  • North Dakota: 1st of the month
  • Ohio: 2nd to 20th (based on last digit of case number)
  • South Dakota: 10th of the month
  • Wisconsin: First 15 days (based on 8th digit of Social Security number)

Southwest Region:

  • Arizona: 1st to 13th (based on first letter of last name)
  • New Mexico: First 20 days (based on last two digits of Social Security number)
  • Oklahoma: 1st to 10th (based on last digit of case number)
  • Texas: First 15 days (based on last digit of Eligibility Determination Group number)

West Region:

  • Alaska: 1st of the month
  • California: First 10 days (based on last digit of case number)
  • Colorado: 1st to 10th (based on last digit of Social Security number)
  • Hawaii: 3rd to 5th (based on first letter of last name)
  • Idaho: First 10 days (based on last number of birth year)
  • Montana: 2nd to 6th (based on last digit of case number)
  • Nevada: First 10 days (based on last number of birth year)
  • Oregon: 1st to 9th (based on last digit of Social Security number)
  • Utah: 5th, 11th, or 15th (based on first letter of last name)
  • Washington: Staggered throughout the month (based on application and approval dates)
  • Wyoming: 1st to 4th (based on first letter of last name)

U.S. Territories:

  • Guam: 1st to 10th
  • Puerto Rico: 4th to 22nd (based on last digit of Social Security number)

Where You Can Use Your EBT Card

Once your EBT card gets refilled with your SNAP benefits, you can spend those funds at any retailer authorized to accept SNAP payments. This includes most supermarket chains, select farmers’ markets, many convenience stores, warehouse retailers like Walmart and Target, and certain online grocery delivery services.

Your EBT card functions as a prepaid debit card, so spending is limited to eligible food purchases such as fruits and vegetables, meat and poultry, fish and seafood, dairy and eggs, bread and cereals, and other non-prepared food items. You cannot use SNAP benefits for hot prepared foods, alcohol, tobacco, household supplies, or personal care products.

Understanding your specific EBT refill date helps you plan your grocery shopping and budget management throughout each month. By knowing exactly when your card will refill, you can make strategic purchasing decisions and avoid running out of benefits before your next deposit arrives.

This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
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