Benefits will arrive between July 1 and July 28—but only on the day tied to your case number’s 9th and 8th digits.
Florida’s Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) follows a strict calendar. The state reloads EBT cards on 28 different days, so neighbors with similar circumstances can still get money weeks apart. Knowing your exact deposit date lets you plan meals, stretch the grocery budget, and avoid last‑minute stress.
How Florida assigns July SNAP deposit dates using case numbers
Florida reads the 9th and 8th digits of your case number backwards, then ignores the 10th digit. That backward pair determines your payday—00–03 get the first deposits, 96–99 close out the month. Confused? Pull out the approval letter: those two digits are printed near the top.
On average, a single enrollee gets $199, while the eight‑person cap tops out at $1,756. Higher figures apply only in Alaska and Hawaii. Remember, recipients must report any jump in income or assets so the Department of Children and Families (DCF) can recalculate the benefit. Failing to do so could trigger an overpayment claim later.
Full payment calendar for Florida SNAP recipients from July 1 through 15
Households in the first half of the roster won’t wait long. Check your pair and mark the date:
- 00–03: July 1
- 04–06: July 2
- 07–10: July 3
- 11–13: July 4
- 14–17: July 5
- 18–20: July 6
- 21–24: July 7
- 25–27: July 8
- 28–31: July 9
- 32–34: July 10
- 35–38: July 11
- 39–41: July 12
- 42–45: July 13
- 46–48: July 14
- 49–53: July 15
Once funds hit your EBT card, you can buy any SNAP‑eligible food at retailers, farmers markets, or approved online grocers. Why not check the balance before you shop?
Second‑half July SNAP deposit days for Florida households waiting until the 28th
Some families have to budget longer, but their dates are just as predictable:
- 54–57: July 16
- 58–60: July 17
- 61–64: July 18
- 65–67: July 19
- 68–71: July 20
- 72–74: July 21
- 75–78: July 22
- 79–81: July 23
- 82–85: July 24
- 86–88: July 25
- 89–92: July 26
- 93–95: July 27
- 96–99: July 28
Still thinking about applying? Low‑income Floridians can file online through MyACCESS or visit a local DCF partner site. The sooner you submit documents—proof of income, residency, and identity—the sooner you’ll know whether help is on the way.
Check those middle digits, circle your deposit day, and plan a grocery list that fits the month’s reality. Report changes, keep receipts, and use every dollar wisely—because every pantry, and every child, benefits when the plan comes together.