Starting **November 1, 2025**, food assistance rules will change for many people who rely on SNAP. Instead of being guaranteed, benefits will come with strict conditions. Able-bodied adults without dependents must prove they complete **80 hours of work, training, or volunteering every month**. If they cannot show those hours, they may lose their benefits after **three months within a three-year period**.
Supporters of the policy say it encourages independence, but critics argue it creates serious risks for people whose lives are already unstable. Many SNAP recipients work irregular jobs, face health challenges, or struggle with barriers that are not always visible. For them, meeting strict hour requirements can be difficult. As the article explains, **“that demand is not a nudge toward ‘self-sufficiency’ but a trapdoor.”**
The new rules will also apply to more people than before. Older adults could now face these work requirements up to age **65**, expanding the group affected. At the same time, some protections are being reduced. Certain groups who previously received automatic exemptions—such as people experiencing homelessness, veterans, and former foster youth—may lose those safeguards, making it harder for them to keep their food assistance.
Administrative challenges could make the situation even worse. If the federal government experiences a shutdown, SNAP processing could slow down. Approvals might be delayed and benefit renewals could stall, leaving families uncertain about whether help will continue. Even temporary interruptions can make it difficult for households already living paycheck to paycheck.
Beyond the policy details are the real people affected by them. SNAP benefits help millions buy basic groceries each month. When rules tighten or benefits disappear, families must make difficult choices about how to stretch limited resources.
As the article emphasizes, **“Behind every policy line is a kitchen table, a parent skipping meals, a veteran choosing between rent and groceries.”** The changes highlight a larger debate about the role of public assistance and how society supports people facing hardship. In the words of the piece, **“This isn’t just bureaucracy; it’s the politics of hunger, written into everyday lives.”**