Texas SNAP Calendar 2026: Texas households relying on food assistance benefits are checking their calendars closely this week, as a fresh wave of SNAP payments loads onto Lone Star Cards between June 15 and June 21, 2026. If you’re trying to figure out exactly when your benefits arrive, understanding the Texas EDG number system is the key to predicting your deposit date with confidence.
Unlike some states that issue all benefits on a single day, Texas distributes SNAP benefits across nearly the entire month, spreading the financial and administrative load over a multi-week window. According to the Texas Health and Human Services Commission, the Texas SNAP payment schedule is based on the last two digits of a household’s Eligibility Determination Group, or EDG, number, and this system determines specific deposit dates spread across the first 28 days of each month.

This means two neighbors applying for benefits around the same time could still end up with completely different deposit dates, simply because their EDG numbers differ. Your EDG number functions like a built-in scheduling code that the state uses to stagger millions of monthly payments efficiently.
Who Gets Paid Between June 15 and June 21?
For households whose SNAP case was approved more recently, the payment window shifts later in the month. If your SNAP case was approved on or after June 1, 2020, your benefits load between the 16th and the 28th of the month, with your exact date based on the last two digits of your EDG number.
This is the group most relevant to the June 15–21 window. As a practical example, a household with an EDG number ending in 72 would have benefits loaded on the 21st of each month. Households falling within this broader range, meaning anyone with an EDG ending in roughly 60 through 72, would see their Lone Star Card funded sometime between the 16th and 21st.
Texas SNAP Calendar 2026
| Last digits of EDG Number [1, 2] | Deposit Dates (Each Month) |
| 00 to 03 | 1st |
| 04 to 06 | 2nd |
| 07 to 10 | 3rd |
| 11 to 13 | 4th |
| 14 to 17 | 5th |
| 18 to 20 | 6th |
| 21 to 24 | 7th |
| 25 to 27 | 8th |
| 28 to 31 | 9th |
| 32 to 34 | 10th |
| 35 to 38 | 11th |
| 39 to 41 | 12th |
| 42 to 45 | 13rd |
| 46 to 48 | 14th |
| 49 to 53 | 15th |
What Time Do Benefits Actually Load?
Texas also has a fairly predictable loading time that recipients should know to avoid unnecessary worry. Texas SNAP benefits are typically loaded onto Lone Star Cards at midnight on the scheduled deposit date, meaning funds are usually available by 12:01 a.m., allowing cardholders to use their card at stores, ATMs, or online retailers starting early that same morning.
While this midnight loading pattern applies to the vast majority of cases, it isn’t always perfectly instantaneous. Occasionally there can be a brief delay of a few hours before funds actually appear on the card. If you check your balance early in the morning and don’t see your deposit yet, this is normal and not necessarily a cause for concern.
What If Your Card Shows No Balance?
It’s natural to feel anxious when you’re counting on your SNAP deposit and don’t see it appear right away. However, the guidance here is straightforward: if your card shows no balance by mid-morning on your scheduled date, it’s recommended to wait until later in the day before contacting HHS.
This advice exists because minor processing delays are common and usually resolve themselves within the same day. Contacting the Texas Health and Human Services Commission (HHSC) too early often just adds unnecessary call volume without speeding up your actual deposit.
Do Holidays or Weekends Affect Your Payment Date?
One major difference between Texas and many other state SNAP programs is how holidays and weekends are handled. In Texas, holidays and weekends generally do not change your deposit date, meaning benefits load as scheduled even when government offices are closed.
This is a meaningful distinction from programs like Social Security, where weekend and holiday conflicts often shift payment dates earlier. For Texas SNAP recipients, you can rely on your scheduled date holding firm regardless of what day of the week it falls on.
Income Requirements to Qualify for Texas SNAP
Beyond timing, many readers searching for SNAP payment dates are also trying to determine whether they qualify in the first place. Texas uses a specific income testing structure to determine eligibility.
Texas uses a gross income test set at 200% of the Federal Poverty Level for most households under Broad-Based Categorical Eligibility, commonly referred to as BBCE. However, certain households face an additional layer of scrutiny.
Households with an elderly or disabled member that exceed 200% of the Federal Poverty Level must instead meet a net income test set at 100% of the Federal Poverty Level, and must also have assets below $5,000. These thresholds are reviewed annually, so applicants should always verify current figures directly with HHSC before assuming their eligibility status.
It’s also worth noting that most households ultimately receive less than the maximum allotment, since benefit amounts are calculated and reduced based on each household’s net income rather than issued as a flat amount to everyone.
How Texas SNAP Compares to Other States This Month
Texas isn’t operating in isolation. Across the country, similar EBT deposit schedules are running in parallel throughout June. Most states will send SNAP benefits sometime between June 1 and June 28, 2026, with payments typically arriving after midnight or early in the morning.
Interestingly, not every state spreads payments across the full month the way Texas does. Some states, including Alaska, Vermont, Rhode Island, and North Dakota, often deposit benefits all at once on June 1, a stark contrast to Texas’s rolling, EDG-based distribution model.
This state-by-state variation matters for families who may have moved between states or who are helping relatives in different parts of the country navigate their own benefit timelines.
Finding Your Exact EDG Number
If you’re unsure of your own EDG number and therefore can’t pinpoint your exact payment date, this information is typically included on official approval documentation sent by HHSC when your case was first established. Recipients who can’t locate this paperwork can contact the Texas HHSC directly to confirm their EDG number and corresponding deposit date.
Given that the June 15–21 window specifically applies to relatively higher-numbered EDG accounts among the post-2020 approval group, double-checking your exact number ensures you’re not left guessing whether your deposit has already landed or is still pending.
What SNAP Benefits Can and Cannot Be Used For?
For households new to the Lone Star Card system, understanding spending restrictions helps avoid declined transactions at checkout. SNAP benefits are designed strictly for grocery and food-related purchases, excluding hot prepared foods meant for immediate consumption, alcohol, tobacco products, and non-food household items.
Texas SNAP funds work at most major grocery retailers, many farmers markets, and increasingly through select online grocery delivery platforms that have been approved for EBT transactions.
Planning Around Your Payment Date
For families counting on these funds to manage weekly grocery budgets, knowing your specific deposit window well in advance allows for better financial planning. Since the June 15–21 period captures a meaningful portion of mid-to-late EDG households, marking your specific date on a calendar and setting a balance-check reminder for that morning can help you stay organized without unnecessary stress.
For Texas households with an EDG number that places them within the June 16–21 distribution window, particularly those approved on or after June 1, 2020, benefits should load onto your Lone Star Card right around the expected date, typically by 12:01 a.m. Texas’s holiday-resistant scheduling means you can count on consistency even around weekends or federal closures. If your deposit doesn’t appear by mid-morning on your scheduled date, give it until later in the day before reaching out to HHSC, since most delays resolve on their own within hours.

