CalFresh Benefits: Updated Payment Schedule, Amounts and Changes to Apply from April

The CalFresh benefits are ready to be sent to millions of Californian households with a few things to know from this month and on

CalFresh Benefits: April Dates and Amounts

CalFresh Benefits: April Dates and Amounts

CalFresh benefit distribution in California for April 2026 follows a schedule tied to the last digit of a recipient’s case number. The California Department of Social Services outlines payment dates stretching from April 1 through April 10. Cases ending in zero get their deposit on the 1st, those ending in one receive it on the 2nd, and so on, with the digit nine slated for the 10th.

The program is “unique” to California, though it essentially mirrors the federal Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). Its purpose is to help low‑income individuals and families cover food costs.

Maximum monthly benefits in effect during April

Here’s the CalFresh schedule sumarized:

  • Case number ends in 0: April 1, 2026

  • Case number ends in 1: April 2, 2026

  • Case number ends in 2: April 3, 2026

  • Case number ends in 3: April 4, 2026

  • Case number ends in 4: April 5, 2026

  • Case number ends in 5: April 6, 2026

  • Case number ends in 6: April 7, 2026

  • Case number ends in 7: April 8, 2026

  • Case number ends in 8: April 9, 2026

  • Case number ends in 9: April 10, 2026

Maximum CalFresh benefits in 2026

The maximum allotment a household can receive was determined by the fiscal year 2026 Cost‑of‑Living Adjustment (COLA), which went into effect October 1, 2025, and stays in place until September 30, 2026. That update raised benefits by 2.1% compared with the prior year.

  • 1 person: $298 per month

  • 2 people: $546 per month

  • 3 people: $785 per month

  • 4 people: $994 per month

  • 5 people: $1,183 per month

  • 6 people: $1,421 per month

  • 7 people: $1,571 per month

  • 8 people: $1,789 per month

  • 9 people: $2,007 per month

  • 10 people: $2,225 per month

  • Each additional person: +$218

  • Minimum benefit (1–2 person households with very low income): $24 per month

Standard deductions applied to household income

In addition to the maximum allotments, the standard and housing deductions also reflect the annual COLA update. For households of one to three people, the standard deduction is $209; for four or five people, it’s $259; for six or more, it’s $299.

The cap on housing expenses for households without an elderly or disabled member was set at $744. Utility allowances come in three tiers: a standard utility allowance of $663, a limited allowance of $170, and a telephone allowance of $20. Resource limits for most households are $3,000; for those with an elderly or disabled member, the limit is $4,500.

Federal SNAP changes affecting CalFresh

H.R. 1, known as the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act,” was signed into law on July 4, 2025, and brought substantial shifts to SNAP, which CalFresh administers at the state level. Implementation began in November 2025 and continues through 2026, altering eligibility rules, work requirements, and administrative funding.

Starting November 1, 2025, a $20.01 state energy assistance payment—previously a route for households without separate heating or cooling costs to claim the standard utility deduction—was limited to households where at least one member is 60 or older or has a disability. Households outside those categories that had relied on that method saw their monthly benefit shrink, and some lost eligibility entirely.

Changes taking effect April 1, 2026

As of April 1, 2026, many lawfully present immigrants will no longer qualify for CalFresh. The new law removes eligibility for asylum seekers, refugees, individuals with parole status.

Are excepted those admitted as Cuban or Haitian entrants), people with withholding of removal, trafficking victims, certain Special Immigrant Visa holders from Iraq and Afghanistan who aren’t lawful permanent residents, and specific Afghan and Ukrainian nationals who entered under temporary designations. In counties like Kern, estimates suggest roughly 2,000 people could lose CalFresh solely because of this provision.

Expanded work rules beginning June 1, 2026

On June 1, 2026, the law broadens work requirements for able‑bodied adults without dependents (ABAWDs). The upper age limit rises from 54 to 64, meaning adults between 18 and 64 who don’t qualify for an exemption must show 20 hours a week (80 hours a month) of work, volunteering, training, or participation in employment programs. If they can’t meet that, benefits stop after three months within any 36‑month period.

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