News12 New York
Where to Watch
Download the App
Local News
Crime
Weather
beWell
The East End
Crime Files

House passes measure allowing SNAP recipients to buy rotisserie chicken

According to the bill, the prices of rotisserie chickens are often priced far lower than their raw and uncooked counterparts, acting as a draw to get customers in the door, spending money on other, higher margin items.

Rob Flaks

Apr 30, 2026, 10:43 PM

Updated

Share:

More Stories

A long‑standing restriction on what families can purchase with federal food assistance may soon change. The U.S. House has approved a measure that would allow recipients of the SNAP program to buy cooked rotisserie chicken, a shift supporters say could make a meaningful difference for low‑income households.

According to the bill, the prices of rotisserie chickens are often priced far lower than their raw and uncooked counterparts, acting as a draw to get customers in the door, spending money on other, higher margin items.

The bill would allow the most vulnerable families access to those savings.

Currently, SNAP rules prohibit the purchase of any prepared or hot foods. The new bill creates a narrow exception for rotisserie chicken, which is often one of the least expensive ready‑to‑eat items in grocery stores.

Shoppers interviewed about the proposal expressed broad support.

“If they are on SNAP, they should be able to buy whatever — as long as it is food,” one shopper said.

Another added, “Groceries are so expensive and hot food so expensive — it’s good to have a hot meal in your diet.” A third shopper said, “Yeah, you want hot food, you buy hot food. I support that.”

Many were shocked to learn of the hot food restriction for SNAP recipients.

Food pantries also welcomed the change.

Many organizations say people turn to them specifically because they lack access to hot meals.

Sister Caroline Tweedy, director of the Bread and Life Center, said the current rules overlook the realities many low‑income residents face.

“People might be working and be at the poverty level and be able to accept SNAP, but they still don't have access to a kitchen because they might live in one room that they rent,” she said. Expanding access to hot foods, she added, “would be more efficient, in the long run.”

She says her center serves hundreds of hot meals a day, and welcomes the ability for recipients to have more options.

However, it's a desire for more choices for recipes that caused some to oppose the bill.

New York Rep. Grace Meng, whose district covers parts of Queens, voted against the measure because she is pushing for broader reform that would allow all hot foods to qualify for SNAP, not just rotisserie chicken.

Sister Caroline Tweedy tells News 12 she would support that bill, citing a need for variety in people's diets on SNAP and certain restrictions.

"Not everyone eats chicken, but we know how time-burdened families are, and they need a hot meal," she said. She says the bill would not change organizations like her ability to purchase hot and canned food in bulk, as despite serving those on SNAP, their funding source does not directly tie into the system's current Point of Sale restrictions.

The House‑passed bill now heads to the U.S. Senate for consideration.

More Stories

Top Stories

00:23
Trump

President Donald Trump to visit Hudson Valley this week

01:54
heat alert headlines HV

Heat Alert: Hudson Valley swelters before midweek storms and major cooldown

01:28
PLANE INCIDENT

Flight school aircraft overturns after takeoff in West Harrison

02:11
WC 5PM MON_DoorDashShooterClosingCase_ajc_2026-03-23-17-10-24

Shooter of lost DoorDash driver sentenced to 17 years in prison

01:46
WCHVAccusedDogKillerSG001

Opening statements begin in trial of man accused of killing small dog by throwing it into the street

01:41
RTWCHVMVRacistGraffitiJNash430pm_2026-05-18-16-47-22

Racist graffiti found at Mount Vernon school

01:37
RTWCHVRocklandLettersWLoveDCaruso430pm_2026-05-18-16-50-45

Rockland high school students spread kindness through 'Letters with Love'

00:40
0516fatalax_2026-05-16-13-33-46

State troopers identify person killed in 3-vehicle crash on Bear Mountain State Parkway

DEAL REACHED MONITOR copy

LIVE LIRR UPDATES: Deal reached between LIRR unions, MTA

00:17
5182026WCgun_2026-05-18-05-34-20

Man accused of pointing BB gun near elementary school

01:18
blaise ben's fresh

Port Jervis burger joint wins New York’s ‘Best Burger’ title

00:22
5182026CRAWFORDCHILDENDANGER_2026-05-18-05-38-18

Bus aide accused of abusing child with special needs in Crawford

02:02
Screenshot 2026-05-18 070258

Made in the Hudson Valley: Man spends 30-plus years sharing family's Italian culture through Tuscana Pasta Co.

01:50
5182026WCthecost_2026-05-18-08-09-28

The Cost Of: Cars

01:50
0515poughkeepsiedowntown_2026-05-15-18-20-53

Housing, bars and groceries: Poughkeepsie leaders plan to upgrade downtown through coveted state grant

02:15
5182026WCflappy_2026-05-18-07-00-10

Lake Peekskill mother with autism turns to art to cope with cancer diagnosis and inspire others

00:19
5182026RAMAPOCRASH_2026-05-18-05-37-47

Crash sends vehicle onto front lawn of home in Ramapo

01:31
Screenshot 2026-05-18 053939

Historic bath houses reopen at Oakland Beach ahead of holiday and as summer weather arrives

01:50
RTWCHVLorraineHansberryNameCWilkinson4pm_2026-05-17-16-14-50

Lorraine Hansberry Way: Renowned Croton playwright honored with street renaming 

02:29
RTWCHVEliotEngelMemorialCWilkinson10pm_2026-05-17-22-11-26

Memorial service honoring former U.S. Rep. Eliot Engel held at Lehman College

App StoreGoogle Play Store

info

Newsletter

Send Photos/Videos

Contact

About Us

News Team

News 12 New York

follow us

Twitter

Facebook

Instagram

more resources

Optimum Corporate

Optimum Service

Advertise on News 12

Careers

Content Removal Policy

© 2026 N12N, LLC

Privacy Policy

Terms of Service

Ad Choices