Amazon now accepts EBT card payments


The e-commerce giant began letting needy families shop on its website with their federal benefits cards earlier this month

This is not the online retailer's first move to let participants in social safety net programs use their assistance to shop on Amazon's website.

Nancy Dalton — then Amazon's head of customer experience — announced in a Q&A with Chain Store Age last year that the e-commerce titan had launched a pilot program with the U.S. Department of Agriculture to let recipients of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) buy food items online in some states. Dalton is now the director of Amazon Access.

TANF and SNAP recipients can elect to receive their funds on an EBT card, which is used like a debit card.

Amazon's checkout now has an "EBT cash" option at checkout in eligible states.

The benefits can be used to pay for "select items," according to an undated announcement on Amazon's website.

Those items fall into "categories like electronics, toys, beauty and personal care, and home and kitchen," the spokesperson said.

Ineligible products include Prime memberships, alcohol, jewelry, firearms and tobacco, among other things. 

An EBT Card can also be used to pay for delivery fees, bag fees and gift boxing on Amazon, the announcement said.

The eligible states are Florida, Washington, New York, Alaska, Arizona, Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Kentucky, Missouri, North Carolina, New Mexico, Nevada, Oregon, Tennessee and West Virginia.

The brick and mortar stores Amazon Fresh and Whole Foods do not accept EBT payments, according to the announcement.


By Patrick Cooley on Nov 21, 2024
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