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8 locations · 4 municipalitiesFood Pantries in Bond County, Illinois
Every USDA-recognized food access point in Bond County — pantries, SNAP retailers, farmers markets that accept EBT, and grocery cooperatives — gathered into one easy-to-scan list. Whether you live in the county seat or one of the smaller surrounding municipalities, the county view is usually the fastest way to find a site within a 10-mile radius.
Total sites
Cities & towns
State
State food-insecurity rate
Cities in Bond County
All food access locations in Bond County
Casey's General Store 1781
111 W Harris Ave, Greenville, IL 62246
Convenience StoreCasey's General Store 1937
990 E Beaumont Ave, Greenville, IL 62246
Convenience StoreCc Food Mart 5
1600 S State Route 127, Greenville, IL 62246
Convenience StoreGreenville Motomart
608 S 3rd St, Greenville, IL 62246
Convenience StoreCapri Iga
224 E Harris Ave, Greenville, IL 62246
Super StoreCasey's General Store 3554
1930 Us Route 40, Mulberry Grove, IL 62262
Convenience StoreR2 Enterprises
407 W Johnson St, Pocahontas, IL 62275
Convenience StoreSorento Food Mart Llc
202 S Main St, Sorento, IL 62086
Convenience StoreAbout food assistance in Bond County
Bond County is one of the 6 counties in Illinois with at least one federally recognized food access location. The dataset on this page covers the locations that the USDA Food and Nutrition Service has authorized to participate in SNAP — that includes traditional pantries, supermarkets that double as community lifelines in food-insecure ZIPs, neighborhood grocers that stock fresh produce in areas otherwise served only by convenience stores, and farmers markets that accept EBT during their season.
Statewide, Illinois has approximately ~1.95 million residents enrolled in SNAP and 160,000+ moms & kids served by WIC. That works out to roughly one in 7 residents experiencing some form of food insecurity in a given year, per USDA Economic Research Service data. The pantries on this page form the visible front line of the response, but they sit inside a much larger network: a regional Feeding America food bank distributes pallets of donated and purchased food to most of these sites, the state agency administers the EBT program that lets recipients shop at the SNAP retailers listed here, and a constellation of mutual-aid groups, churches, and senior centers fills the gaps between formal sites.
What to expect at a Bond County pantry
Most pantries in this county follow a consistent intake pattern: you sign in at the door (a piece of mail or a verbal address is usually enough), wait for a brief check-in conversation, and either receive a pre-packed box of staples or walk a short "client choice" aisle picking the items your household will actually eat. The whole visit typically takes 15 to 30 minutes. There is no income test at most neighborhood pantries, no shame, and no questions about why you are there — though some sites attached to specific religious or fraternal organizations may have stricter service area rules. Always call ahead to confirm hours and any rules unique to that site.
Pair the pantry with these programs
Households that combine a pantry visit with the federal benefit programs go further on the same monthly grocery budget. The Illinois DHS handles SNAP and WIC enrollment for Illinois residents. Read our explainers on SNAP / EBT, WIC for new mothers and young children, free school meals, and senior nutrition programs including Meals on Wheels. The official state SNAP application portal is the fastest path to enrollment.
Help finding the closest pantry in Bond County
If none of the locations above are within a reasonable travel distance, dial 211 from any phone for free, multilingual, confidential routing to the nearest food resource. The 211 hotline is operated by United Way and updated continuously, so it knows about church-run pantries and small mutual-aid groups that don't appear in federal data. You can also text FOOD to 304-304 or call the USDA National Hunger Hotline at 1-866-3-HUNGRY.