Getting useful answers from AI about benefits requires specificity: name the exact program and state, describe your precise situation rather than asking generally, and ask AI to explain which rule applies so you can verify it independently. Questions like 'Does my part-time job income count toward SNAP eligibility in California?' yield far better results than 'How do benefits work?', and asking for source citations helps you distinguish reliable guidance from plausible-sounding errors. AI works best as a starting point for your research, clarifying confusing rules quickly so you know what to investigate further with official sources.
"How do I get food benefits?" asked to an AI tool gives you generic information. "I'm 34, self-employed, living in Texas with one dependent, and I made $18,000 last year. Do I qualify for SNAP?" gives you an accurate, personalized answer. The difference is how you ask—and it matters.
This skill is called prompt engineering. It's not complicated, but it makes the difference between AI being useless and AI being your personal benefits advisor. The principle is simple: Give AI context. The more specific you are, the better the answer.
When you ask "Am I eligible for Medicaid?" AI doesn't know if you're in a state that expanded Medicaid, if you're a parent or childless adult, if you have a disability, your income, or your family status. So it gives generic information that might not apply to you. You walk away more confused than before.
But when you say "I'm a single parent in Louisiana earning $1,500/month with one dependent. Am I eligible for Medicaid?" AI can apply Louisiana's specific rules to your specific situation. It gives you a yes or no with reasoning.
Strong prompts follow a pattern. First, give context: where you are, your family situation, your income. Second, ask your specific question. Third, tell AI how you want the answer. That last part is crucial and often forgotten.
Example of a weak prompt: "How do I appeal a benefits denial?"
Example of a strong prompt: "I was denied SNAP in California because the office says my household size is wrong. I have 10 days to appeal. Create a step-by-step action plan for what I need to do, including: 1) What evidence I need to gather, 2) How to organize it, 3) A template for my appeal letter, 4) Where to submit it."
The second prompt gets you a usable action plan. The first gets you general information you still have to figure out.
Use these phrases to get better results:
After AI answers, you can follow up: "That's helpful, but can you focus more on [specific part]?" or "I didn't understand [part]. Explain it simpler." You're not starting over—you're refining. This is how you get from a generic answer to one tailored exactly to you.
Try this: Think of a benefits question you have right now. First, ask an AI tool vaguely: "What benefits am I eligible for?" Notice the generic answer. Then ask again with full context: "I'm [age], [family situation], living in [state], and my income is [amount]. What benefits am I eligible for? List each one with the income limit and requirements for my state specifically." Compare the answers and see the difference context makes.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.