Claims

1103 Intentional Program Violation


Overview

After an error has been determined to not be an inadvertent householdClosed People who buy and prepare food together. Spouses, parents, and children who live together are usually counted as the same household. error, an Intentional Program Violation (IPV)Closed An individual(s) determined to have intentionally: 1. Made a false or misleading statement, or misrepresented, concealed, or withheld facts. 2. Committed any act that constitutes a violation of the Food and Nutrition Act, SNAP Regulations, or any state statute relating to the use, presentation, transfer, acquisition, receipt, or possession of SNAP benefits. must be reviewed by the eligibility worker.

 

Fraud prevention begins with careful explanation of appropriate policy and regulations to the applicantClosed An individual who submits an application for assistance under the SNAP program. or participantClosed A person who is eligible for benefits under SNAP, even if that person is not currently receiving benefits because the amount is too low, or the person is under a sanction or disqualification. and an explanation of how these policies relate to the individual participant.

Areas in which participant fraud most often occur are:

  1. Unreported or misrepresented income.

  2. Unreported or misrepresented household composition.

  3. Unreported excess property or resources; and,

  4. Duplicate cases in which a recipient receives benefits from more than one state at the same time.

Be particularly wary of inconsistencies in documentation or interview information in these areas.

 


References: 7 CFR 273.1

Revised: 5/16/2025