About 12 Million Households Receive Both Medicaid and SNAP. The Reconciliation Bill Puts Them At Risk
Estimates predict the recently passed reconciliation bill will cut Medicaid coverage for about 10.5 million people by 2034 (PDF) and lower Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits for all families. On their own, these cuts will cause hardship for the families who rely on these programs, and their communities will face increased pressure on local services, charitable organizations, and health care providers.
But many families receive benefits through both programs, meaning the cuts will cause those families to lose health insurance and necessary nutrition assistance. Using 2019–23 five-year American Community Survey (ACS) data, I find that most households reporting SNAP benefit receipt also report at least one person with Medicaid or Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) health coverage. I also find that about one-third of households receiving Medicaid or CHIP report SNAP participation.
Overall, the ACS data show nearly 32 million households receiving Medicaid, about 15 million receiving SNAP benefits, and 12 million receiving benefits from both programs between 2019 and 2023. However, because surveys are known to undercount Medicaid and SNAP enrollment relative to administrative data, the true counts may be higher. If, using the ACS data, we assume an average household size of 2.5 people, there are roughly 30 million people receiving benefits from both programs.
By: Jonathan Schwabish
July 28, 2025
Read the full story here: Urban Institute
Author Profile
Latest entries
Democratic Socialism04/29/2026Why socialist Cuba is more democratic than the U.S
Buffalo East Side History Project04/24/2026Reimagine Buffalo’s East Side for the People Living There
Economic Development04/24/2026“Colossus Failure”: Elon Musk’s Data Centers Face Lawsuit for Polluting Black Neighborhoods in Memphis
City of Buffalo04/14/2026No Democracy — A Step Backward
