TL;DR

If You're in Crisis Right Now

If you're facing immediate need, no food, nowhere to sleep tonight, utilities being shut off, start here before reading the rest of this page.

Benefits You May Qualify For

Government assistance programs exist for situations exactly like this. Many people who qualify don't apply because they don't know they're eligible, or feel embarrassed about using these programs. These programs exist because this is what they're for.

SNAP (food assistance)

SNAP, commonly called food stamps, provides a monthly benefit loaded onto an EBT card that works like a debit card at most grocery stores. Eligibility is based on income and household size. A single adult working part-time often qualifies.

You can check your eligibility and apply at benefits.gov or through your state's human services website. Search "apply for SNAP [your state]." Many states now allow online applications and interviews by phone.

Medicaid

If you don't have health insurance and your income is low, you may qualify for Medicaid, which provides free or very low-cost health coverage. Eligibility varies by state. In states that expanded Medicaid under the ACA, single adults with income up to 138% of the federal poverty level qualify. Check eligibility at healthcare.gov or your state's Medicaid office.

If you lost a job and lost insurance with it, you have 60 days from losing coverage to enroll in a Marketplace plan through healthcare.gov. Losing job-based coverage is a qualifying life event that opens a special enrollment window.

Utility assistance (LIHEAP)

The Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) helps with heating and cooling bills. It's run at the state level, so eligibility and benefit amounts vary. Apply through your state's LIHEAP office. Search "LIHEAP [your state]" or call 211 for local contacts. Funds are often limited and distributed seasonally, so apply as soon as you know you need help rather than waiting until you're shut off.

WIC

If you're pregnant, recently gave birth, breastfeeding, or have children under five, WIC provides monthly benefits for specific nutritious foods, as well as referrals to healthcare and support services. Contact your local health department or search "WIC [your state]."

Emergency rental assistance

Many counties and cities have emergency rental assistance programs, especially for people facing eviction. Availability and eligibility vary widely by location. Call 211 or search "emergency rental assistance [your county]" to find programs near you. Apply early. These programs often have waitlists or limited funding.

Other programs worth knowing

When You Can't Pay Everything

When income doesn't cover all your bills, the order in which you pay matters. This is triage, not a permanent plan, and some of these decisions have consequences. They're manageable ones. Others aren't.

Pay in this order

1. Rent or mortgage first. Losing housing creates cascading problems that are harder to recover from than any other financial shortfall. Pay this before anything else.

2. Utilities: heat and electricity. These affect your ability to live and work. Call the utility company before you miss a payment. Most have hardship programs and cannot shut off service without notice.

3. Food. If SNAP doesn't cover your needs, food banks exist for exactly this. Use them.

4. Transportation to work. If you need a car to keep your job, insurance and fuel come before credit cards and medical bills.

5. Everything else. Credit cards, medical bills, student loans, and subscription services are lower priority than keeping yourself housed, warm, fed, and employed. Credit card companies can work with you. Medical providers will negotiate. Student loans have deferment options. None of these will remove you from your home.

Negotiating With Creditors and Providers

Most creditors and medical providers would rather work with you than lose the payment entirely. Calling before you miss a payment almost always goes better than calling after.

Medical bills

Hospital bills are among the most negotiable expenses that exist. A few things most people don't know:

Credit cards

If you can't make your minimum payment, call your card issuer before you miss it. Most have hardship programs that temporarily reduce your interest rate or minimum payment. These aren't advertised. You have to ask. Say you're experiencing financial hardship and ask what options are available. The answer is often better than you'd expect.

Student loans

Federal student loans have several options that pause or reduce your payments without damaging your credit:

Contact your loan servicer or visit studentaid.gov to explore these options. Don't just stop paying. That leads to default, which has serious consequences.

Utilities

Call before you're shut off. Most utility companies are required to offer payment plans and have programs for customers in hardship. Ask specifically about a "low-income rate" or "budget billing." They may also be able to connect you to LIHEAP or other assistance programs you aren't aware of.

Free Resources Worth Knowing

A Note on Shame

Most financial hardship isn't the result of bad decisions. It's the result of wages that haven't kept up with costs, medical events that nobody budgets for, job losses that weren't voluntary, and systems that weren't designed to make this easy to navigate. The programs on this page were created because these situations are common and because people need help that isn't their fault to need.

Using a food bank, applying for SNAP, or calling 211 doesn't say anything negative about your character. It says you're dealing with a difficult situation and you're trying to handle it. That's the right move.

Disclaimer: Program availability, eligibility requirements, and benefit amounts change frequently and vary by location. Verify current details through official program websites or by calling 211.