Audit: Kansas SNAP errors exceed federal limit

Kansas auditors say the state’s food assistance program exceeded the federal SNAP payment error threshold for three straight years.

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State News

January 22, 2026 - 2:50 PM

Sen. Mike Thompson, the Republican chairman of the Kansas Legislature’s joint auditing committee, says he worries about individuals who intentionally falsify financial information on SNAP applications to qualify for benefits from the food program. The Legislature’s auditors released a new report on the state’s high error rate for SNAP payments. Photo by Tim Carpenter/Kansas Reflector

TOPEKA — The Kansas Legislature’s auditors confirmed the payment error rate for a food assistance program in Kansas exceeded a federal threshold of 6% during three consecutive years, but the Kansas Department for Children and Families said intervention strategies lowered the rate to 5.5% in August.

The audit report issued to the joint House and Senate audit committee Wednesday echoed information DCF presented in July to the House Select Committee on Government Oversight, which was assigned the task of searching for waste in state government programs.

IN KANSAS, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program error rate didn’t surpass the 6% benchmark from 2007 to 2018. It was 5.9% in 2018 before surging to 7.1% in 2019. The government didn’t track SNAP error rates during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 and 2021.

The 18-page analysis by auditors focused on DCF’s struggle with error rates that fluctuated from 9.1% in 2022 to 12.1% in 2023 and 10% in 2024. In 2023 and 2024, auditors said, DCF attributed half the errors to their own staff and placed responsibility for the other half on program recipients.

“Kansas does not appear to be alone with these issues,” said auditor Heidi Zimmerman. “As of 2024, only eight states had payment error rates at or below the federal threshold of 6%. This suggests that other states are also facing some of the same challenges we are.”

Kansas’ overall 2025 mark for errors as a percent of total SNAP benefits distributed during the year wasn’t available to auditors.

Carla Whiteside-Hicks, director of economic and employment services for DCF, told legislators the state agency employed a consultant, Human Services Group, since October to help whittle down the error rate. The state was also taking part in a mandatory federal corrective action plan.

“We just received our confirmed SNAP error rates for the month of August and we had already come down to 5.5%,” she said. “That just indicates that we were on the right path, and we still are on the right path to be able to bring the error rate down.”

Accusation of fraud

Sen. Mike Thompson, the Shawnee Republican chairman of the Legislature’s audit committee, said he was concerned some applicants for SNAP weren’t being honest about personal information.

“To me, if that’s deliberate, that’s not error,” Thompson said. “That’s fraud.”

In Kansas, the average payment under SNAP for a family was about $360 per month. Benefits must be based on a household’s size and net income. Auditors said the most common error in Kansas was miscalculation of an applicant’s income. Discovery of SNAP payments made based on misreported income — most easily caught when DCF performed a six-month eligibility review — would be an example of a SNAP payment error.

The auditors said it was important to note that “not all errors are fraud” because fraud required deliberate misrepresentations, concealment or omission of information to gain a benefit.

THE SNAP application form runs 36 pages and contains more than 200 questions. In 2025, about 188,000 Kansans received SNAP aid each month.

Rep. Kristey Williams, an Augusta Republican, said she was struck by DCF’s decision not to provide auditors with access to SNAP applications submitted by Kansans. DCF said such a disclosure to auditors would violate U.S. law.

“Did you ascertain that or did they tell you they could not because of federal law?” Williams said.

Zimmerman, who presented the audit to legislators, said legal counsel advised no exception existed in federal law to allow personal SNAP information to be shared with a state’s auditors.

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