HomeStates Texas

Food Pantries & Free Meal Programs in Texas

Community food access points across Texas drawn from the USDA Food and Nutrition Service public dataset. Tap a city or county to see the actual addresses, ZIP codes, and store classifications. Always call before visiting — a two-minute phone call confirms the site is open today and saves a wasted trip.

110

Sites in directory

21

Cities & towns

7

Counties served

19

ZIPs covered

Counties in Texas

County hubs are the best starting point in metro areas — a single county often spans 30+ municipalities.

ZIP codes in Texas

Direct links to the dedicated page for each ZIP code with a recognized food access point.

Featured locations across Texas

Milan Bz Mart 2

308 E Pine St, Frankston, TX 75763 · Anderson County

Convenience Store
View details →

Diamond Sales 2

7824 Hwy 155 S, Frankston, TX 75763 · Anderson County

Convenience Store
View details →

Spring Market 713

440 E Pine St, Frankston, TX 75763 · Anderson County

Supermarket
View details →

Brookshire Brothers Express 112

1111 N Highway 287, Grapeland, TX 75884 · Anderson County

Super Store
View details →

Flowers Bakery Outlet 50000341

107 W Palestine Ave, Palestine, TX 75801 · Anderson County

Convenience Store
View details →

Kroger 431

325 E Spring St, Palestine, TX 75801 · Anderson County

Super Store
View details →

Aldi 75108

2117 S Loop 256, Palestine, TX 75801 · Anderson County

Supermarket
View details →

Brookshire Food Store 30

2107 S Loop 256, Palestine, TX 75801 · Anderson County

Supermarket
View details →

Walmart Supercenter 345

2223 S Loop 256, Palestine, TX 75801 · Anderson County

Super Store
View details →

Mr. D's

3209 W Oak St, Palestine, TX 75801 · Anderson County

Convenience Store
View details →

Ordones Groceries 1

712 N Cottage Ave, Palestine, TX 75801 · Anderson County

Convenience Store
View details →

Murphy Usa 7681

2217 S Loop 256, Palestine, TX 75801 · Anderson County

Convenience Store
View details →

Solid Rock African Mart

214 W Oak St, Palestine, TX 75801 · Anderson County

Convenience Store
View details →

Casey's 4838

440 W Oak St, Palestine, TX 75801 · Anderson County

Convenience Store
View details →

Jj's Fastop #105

2110 Crockett Rd, Palestine, TX 75801 · Anderson County

Convenience Store
View details →

Tristar 19

1009 W Palestine Ave, Palestine, TX 75801 · Anderson County

Convenience Store
View details →

Tristar 20

411 E Palestine Ave, Palestine, TX 75801 · Anderson County

Convenience Store
View details →

East Texas Beef Processors

513 Old Elkhart Rd, Palestine, TX 75801 · Anderson County

Specialty Store
View details →

Jj's Fastop 107

1220 E Palestine Ave, Palestine, TX 75801 · Anderson County

Convenience Store
View details →

7-eleven Inc. 42580

803 W Oak St, Sanderson, TX 75801 · Anderson County

Convenience Store
View details →

Oxxo 132

101 N Main St, Andrews, TX 79714 · Andrews County

Convenience Store
View details →

Allsups 206

800 N Main St, Andrews, TX 79714 · Andrews County

Convenience Store
View details →

E-z Mart 4330

1201 Ne Mustang Dr, Andrews, TX 79714 · Andrews County

Convenience Store
View details →

Love's Travel Stop 539

1201 S Main St, Andrews, TX 79714 · Andrews County

Convenience Store
View details →

E-z Mart 4452

510 Andrews St, Andrews, TX 79714 · Andrews County

Convenience Store
View details →

Showing 25 of 110 sites — pick a city or county above to narrow the list.

Food insecurity in Texas at a glance

Texas currently has approximately ~3.5 million residents enrolled in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), with WIC serving roughly 670,000+ moms & kids. The estimated overall food insecurity rate in the state hovers around 12%, in line with the national average of about 13% according to recent USDA Economic Research Service data. Behind these numbers are real households making weekly trade-offs between groceries, rent, gas, prescriptions, and child care — and the community pantries listed on this page exist to take the food side of that calculation off the table for as many of those households as possible.

The Texas HHSC administers SNAP for residents of Texas. Most applicants can apply online, by mail, or in person at a county office; a decision typically arrives within 30 days, faster (within 7 days) for households facing immediate emergency need. Visit the official Texas SNAP page to begin an application or check your case status. If you would rather have a live conversation, dial 211 from any phone for free, multilingual, confidential routing to a local benefits navigator who can walk you through the application step by step.

How to actually use this Texas directory

If you have a specific neighborhood in mind, the city tile above is the right starting point. If you live in a major metro — anywhere from Angelina County to a smaller suburban county — the county hub is more useful because it surfaces every site within driving distance, regardless of which little municipality each one technically sits in.

Once you find a candidate site, the pantry detail page tells you whether it is a traditional pantry, a SNAP-authorized grocer, a farmers market, or a co-operative. Each category has different expectations:

  • Pantries hand out free groceries, no payment required. Most ask only for a piece of mail with your address.
  • SNAP-authorized retailers accept your EBT card alongside cash and credit. They are not free distribution sites.
  • Farmers markets on the SNAP retailer list typically take EBT for fresh produce and often double your dollars through state Double Up Food Bucks programs.
  • Co-operatives and combination grocers are full-service stores that accept SNAP and frequently host community meal events.

What to bring with you to a Texas pantry

Different sites have different rules, but the universal items are: a piece of mail with your current address (utility bill, lease, or even a piece of forwarded mail works), a couple of reusable bags or a small cooler, and a friendly attitude. Most pantries will not ask for income documentation, photo ID, or a Social Security number — and if a site does, that requirement is the exception, not the rule. Households experiencing homelessness can still receive food at virtually every pantry; staff understand that the proof-of-address requirement is meant to define the service area, not to gatekeep.

If this will be your first pantry visit, our step-by-step visiting guide covers what to expect from arrival to leaving with a box of groceries — typically a 15-to-30-minute trip including a short intake conversation. The eligibility primer answers the most common nervous question (the answer is usually "yes, you qualify").

Don't see a pantry close enough in Texas?

This directory pulls from the USDA SNAP retailer dataset. Many small church-run pantries and mutual aid groups don't appear in federal data. For local routing to the absolute nearest pantry, dial 211 from any phone — it's a free, confidential, multilingual social services line that knows every food resource in your county. You can also text FOOD to 304-304 for an automated lookup, or call the USDA National Hunger Hotline at 1-866-3-HUNGRY (1-866-348-6479), English and Spanish, weekdays 7am–10pm Eastern.