New Mexico SNAP One-time food Payment: New Mexico is starting a new food help program after federal SNAP rules changed in 2026. Because of these new rules, many immigrants who are legally living in the state will no longer get federal food money. The state says around 19,485 people will lose SNAP help during the year when they renew their benefits. To help these families, New Mexico will give a one-time payment using state money so they can still buy food for a short time.
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State-funded Payment to cover sudden SNAP loss
With support from Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham, state lawmakers approved $12 million in a special session held in October. This money will be used to give temporary food help to people who lose SNAP because of the federal changes. Each household will get a single payment based on a part of what they used to receive from SNAP. The goal is to reduce the shock of losing food support. Families are told to keep their EBT cards because the state payment will be added to the same card.
Who can get this Help and Who Cannot?
Only people who were already getting SNAP and then lose it during renewal can qualify for the state payment. They must still complete the renewal process so the state can review their case. If approved, the payment will be sent later and will cover losses starting from January 1, 2026. Each family that qualifies will get a notice explaining the approval.
The problem began after a federal law called H.R. 1 started on January 1, 2026. This law reduced the types of immigration status that allow SNAP benefits. Because of this, some people who were earlier allowed to get SNAP may now lose it. This includes some refugees and others who were allowed into the country for urgent humanitarian reasons.
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“Federal changes do not change the importance of completing your SNAP renewal on time,” said New Mexico Health Care Authority Secretary Kari Armijo. “Renewal keeps people connected, helps us determine eligibility accurately, and allows state-funded assistance to reach families faster. No one should assume they can no longer get help—renewing is how we make sure support continues during this transition.”
People who apply for SNAP for the first time on or after January 1, 2026 and do not meet the federal immigration rules will not get this state-funded help.
The program is only meant to support current SNAP users who are affected by the new law.




