Title 8 › Chapter CHAPTER 14— - RESTRICTING WELFARE AND PUBLIC BENEFITS FOR ALIENS › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - ELIGIBILITY FOR STATE AND LOCAL PUBLIC BENEFITS PROGRAMS › § 1621
People who are not "qualified aliens," not nonimmigrants, and not paroled into the U.S. for less than one year are generally not allowed to get state or local public benefits. A state can make a different rule only by passing a law after August 22, 1996, that says those people may get benefits. "State or local public benefit" means things like grants, contracts, loans, professional or business licenses, and help such as retirement, welfare, health, disability, public or assisted housing, college aid, food help, unemployment, or similar programs paid for by a state or local government. The rule does not block emergency medical care for a sudden, life‑threatening condition, short-term in-kind disaster relief, public health services for shots and testing/treatment of communicable disease, or certain community-level in-kind services (like soup kitchens or short-term shelter) the Attorney General allows. Federal public benefits are not covered.
Full Legal Text
Aliens and Nationality — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
8 U.S.C. § 1621
Title 8 — Aliens and Nationality
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73