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Income Averaging for Seasonal and Gig Workers

Seasonal and gig workers often see dramatic income swings depending on the time of year or project availability, and benefit programs recognizing this typically allow averaging income across several months to reflect normal earning capacity rather than current circumstances. Knowing this option exists, requesting it explicitly, and providing pay records or 1099s covering the period your program specifies prevents unfair denials based on temporary low-income periods.

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Why It Matters

Federal SNAP policy allows caseworkers to average irregular or fluctuating income over a representative period rather than counting one unusually high pay period as the household baseline, which can significantly lower the income figure used to calculate benefits for gig workers, farmworkers, and seasonal employees.

Agencies do not always apply income averaging without a specific request, and workers often lose benefits during slow months because a single high-income period was used incorrectly. AI can help you calculate a defensible average from your pay records, identify the language from the Code of Federal Regulations that supports your request, and compose a written statement asking the agency to apply income averaging before your case is decided.

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