Wisconsin Food Stamp Calculator

Enter Wisconsin household details for a clear benefit estimate. Compare deductions and income limits quickly. Use results to plan grocery support with care today.

Calculator Form

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Formula Used

Gross income equals earned income plus unearned income. Earned income receives a twenty percent deduction. The standard deduction depends on household size.

Adjusted income equals gross income minus earned, standard, dependent care, child support, and allowed medical deductions. Medical costs count only above thirty five dollars when an elderly or disabled member is selected.

Shelter deduction equals shelter costs minus one half of adjusted income. It is capped at $744 unless an elderly or disabled member is selected.

Estimated benefit equals maximum allotment minus thirty percent of net income. One and two person eligible households receive at least $24 in this estimate.

Example Data Table

Scenario Size Gross income Shelter costs Net income Estimated benefit
Single worker 1 $1,200.00 $830.00 $296.50 $209.00
Parent with child care 3 $2,400.00 $1,160.00 $941.50 $502.00
Senior household 2 $1,550.00 $1,070.00 $664.00 $346.00

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter the number of people who buy and prepare food together.
  2. Add monthly earned and unearned income before taxes.
  3. Enter care, support, medical, shelter, utility, and asset details.
  4. Select the special options when they apply to your household.
  5. Press Calculate to view the result above the form.
  6. Use the CSV or PDF buttons to save your estimate.

Wisconsin FoodShare Planning Guide

Why Estimates Matter

FoodShare estimates can feel confusing because several deductions work together. This calculator gives a careful starting point for Wisconsin households. It uses monthly income, household size, and common expenses. It then compares your numbers with current program limits.

Income and Deductions

The tool first adds earned and unearned income. Earned income may include wages, tips, and self employment income. Unearned income may include unemployment, Social Security, pensions, or support payments. The calculator subtracts the earned income deduction when wages are entered. It also subtracts the standard deduction for your household size.

Next, it reviews costs that may reduce countable income. Dependent care can count when needed for work, training, or education. Child support can count when it is legally owed and paid. Medical costs can count only for elderly or disabled members. The calculator applies only the amount above the monthly medical threshold.

Shelter and Benefit Estimate

Shelter costs are important. Rent, mortgage, taxes, insurance, and utilities may reduce net income. The calculator compares shelter costs with half of adjusted income. It then uses the excess amount. A shelter cap is applied unless the household has an elderly or disabled member. A homeless shelter option is also included for rough planning.

The final estimate uses the maximum allotment for the household size. It subtracts thirty percent of net income. That result is the estimated monthly benefit. Very small eligible one or two person benefits are raised to the minimum allotment. Negative results are shown as zero.

Important Limits

This page is only an estimate. It cannot decide your case. Wisconsin may review citizenship, residency, student rules, work rules, household composition, and other details. Actual benefits may change after verification. Always apply through official state channels when you need help. Keep pay stubs, rent records, utility bills, child care receipts, medical bills, and support payment proof ready.

Using Results

Use the result as a planning guide. Try several scenarios. Compare current income with expected income. Save or print the result for discussion with an agency worker. Review the warning messages carefully. They can show which limit may affect eligibility. A complete application is still the best way to know your exact FoodShare amount.

If your situation changes during the month, recalculate soon. Small changes can move the estimate in either direction quickly.

FAQs

Is this calculator an official FoodShare decision?

No. It is only an estimate. The state decides eligibility after reviewing your full application, proof, household details, and program rules.

What income should I enter?

Enter monthly income before taxes. Include wages, self employment income, Social Security, unemployment, pensions, support payments, and other countable income.

Why does the calculator ask about earned income?

Earned income can receive a twenty percent deduction. This can lower countable income and may increase the estimated benefit.

Can medical bills lower my estimate?

They can lower it when the household has an elderly or disabled member. This calculator deducts only the amount above thirty five dollars.

What shelter costs should I include?

Include rent, mortgage, taxes, insurance, utilities, and phone costs. Use monthly amounts. Keep proof for an official application.

Why is my benefit shown as zero?

Your income may exceed a screen used here. Your net income may also be too high after deductions. Apply to confirm.

Can one or two people receive a minimum benefit?

Yes, eligible one or two person households may receive a small minimum allotment. This calculator includes that planning rule.

Should I still apply if the estimate is low?

Yes. Apply when you need help. Real cases can include details this simple calculator cannot fully evaluate.

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Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.