514.2 Eligible Students

Federal Exemptions

To be included in the SNAP household, a student must meet at least one of the following criteria:

7 CFR § 273.5(a)

 

7 CFR § 273.5(b)(1)

NOTE:  Verification is required when the unfitness is not evident to the CAO.  Verification may be, but is not limited to, either proof that the student gets a disability benefit or a statement from a physician or a licensed or certified psychologist.

7 CFR § 273.5(b)(2)  

 7 CFR § 273.5(b)(8)

7 CFR § 273.5(b)(9)

7 CFR § 273.5(b)(10)

 

 7 CFR § 273.5(b)(7)

7 CFR § 273.5(b)(5)

NOTE:  Earnings do not have to be countable for a student to be eligible. For example, a student with excluded earnings from a temporary census job may qualify as an eligible student.

NOTE:  An unpaid internship does not fulfill the requirements for SNAP eligibility.

 

7 CFR § 273.5(b)(6)

 NOTE:  work study earnings are not countable as income.

 7 CFR § 273.5(b)(3)

 7 CFR § 273.5(b)(11)

Pennsylvania’s Expansion

If a student does not meet a Federal Exemption as listed above, to be included in the SNAP household, a student must meet at least one of the following criteria as part of Pennsylvania’s expansion to SNAP student eligibility:

 

Name of Community College

Refer to KEYS?

Bucks County Community College

no

Butler County Community College

no

Community College of Allegheny County

no

Community College of Beaver County

no

Community College of Philadelphia

no

Delaware County Community College

no

Harrisburg Area Community College

yes

Lehigh Carbon Community College

no

Luzerne County Community College

no

Montgomery County Community College

no

Northampton Community College

no

Pennsylvania Highlands Community College

no

Reading Area Community College

no

Westmoreland County Community College

no

 

7 CFR § 273.5(b)(11)(iv)

514.21 Ineligible Students

Students who are enrolled at least half-time in an institution of higher education and do not meet one of the above requirements are ineligible for SNAP.

Students who meet one of the requirements above and buy a meal plan that gives them more than half of their weekly meals are ineligible for SNAP.

“More than half” means a meal plan that provides 11 or more meals per week. Because meal plans vary among IHEs, the CAO should review each student’s circumstances and may need to ask the student for clarification if it is unclear how many meals per week they receive from a meal plan.

7 CFR § 273.1(b)(7)(vi)

Example 1: Mary attends Millersville University and has the 150 Block meal plan, which includes 150 meal swipes per semester plus $250 flex dollars. 150 meals over a 15-week semester would be 10 meals per week, and $250 in flex would be about $16-17 per week. The CAO is not sure how the flex money is spent and asks Mary. Mary states she purchases one meal per month with the flex dollars and spends the rest on some snacks for studying. This meal plan covers less than half of her meals, so her meal plan does not make her ineligible.

Example 2: Justin attends Mansfield University and has the 14 weekly with $250 Flex plan. Because this plan covers 11 or more meals per week, Justin is ineligible.

Example 3: Francisco attends Slippery Rock University and has the Semester 75 plan, which includes 75 meals per semester plus $100 flex dollars. 75 meals over a 15-week semester would be 5 meals per week and $100 in flex would be about $6-7 per week. This meal plan covers fewer than 11 meals per week, so Francisco’s meal plan does not make them ineligible.

The CAO should not count meals which a student receives irregularly through student-to-student donation programs like Swipe Out Hunger toward the 11 or more meals calculation.

514.22 Enrollment Status

A student’s enrollment begins on the first day of the institution of higher education's term.   

A student's enrollment ends upon graduation, suspension, expulsion, dropping out, or not intending to register for the next normal school term.   

A student who was enrolled during the spring term and intends to enroll for the fall term is considered enrolled during summer vacation, even though he or she is not attending school. Summer school is not considered a normal school term.

Enrollment status continues when a student graduates from an institution of higher education and intends to enroll in a new course of study for the next normal school term. 

7 CFR § 273.5(c) 

Example:  A student who graduates with their bachelor's degree in June and intends to enroll in graduate school in the fall is considered enrolled during summer vacation.

Updated April 24, 2023, replacing March 1, 2012