Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) Block Grant: A Primer

Updated March 25, 2025 (R48413)
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Summary

The Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) block grant provides federal grants to the 50 states, District of Columbia, and territories (collectively, "states"), as well as Indian tribes. TANF helps fund state-run programs of cash assistance for needy families with children, known historically as welfare programs. However, TANF is not a program focused solely on cash assistance, but a broad-purpose block grant that helps fund a wide range of benefits and services for both cash assistance and non-cash benefit families. These benefits and services include employment and training, child care assistance, short-term economic aid, state refundable tax credits, services for children at risk for removal from the home because of neglect or abuse, pre-kindergarten programs, and programs for youth. P.L. 119-4 funds TANF through the end of FY2025 (September 30, 2025).

Uses of TANF Funds, FY2023

Source: CRS, based on data from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).

TANF was created in the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996 (PRWORA, P.L. 104-193), also known as the 1996 welfare reform law. That law ended the New Deal program that provided dedicated federal funds for cash assistance for needy families with children (Aid to Families with Dependent Children [AFDC]) and related programs.

Though created nearly 30 years ago, TANF financing remains rooted in the amount of funding that was provided in the pre-PRWORA programs in the early to mid-1990s. TANF is funded by both federal and nonfederal dollars. Both the TANF basic block grant and the minimum amount of nonfederal dollars that must be spent are based on expenditures in the pre-PRWORA programs in the early to mid-1990s. In the mid-1990s, the number of families receiving cash assistance reached its historical peak (5.1 million in March 1994). TANF funding levels have not been adjusted for post-1996 circumstances, including inflation, shifts in state populations, or changes in those eligible for or receiving cash assistance.

TANF policy is responsive to the policy concerns around cash assistance for needy families that led to the enactment of PRWORA. These concerns included that cash assistance might provide disincentives to work and marriage, leading to long-term dependency on government benefits. The major requirements affecting families receiving assistance are the following:

States determine how these requirements apply to individual families receiving assistance.

Maximum TANF Cash Assistance for a Single Parent and Two Children, July 2022
(states with higher benefits in darker shade)

Source: CRS, based on data from the Welfare Rules Databook funded by HHS and maintained at the Urban Institute.

Federal law contains no rules regarding the dollar amount that makes a family needy or the benefits paid to needy families. Thus, states determine the financial eligibility rules for and the maximum cash assistance benefits paid to families. In July 2022, maximum paid cash assistance benefits ranged from $204 (Arkansas) to $1,151 (New Hampshire) per month. There is a regional pattern to the maximum benefits, with comparatively lower benefits in the South.

Under TANF, the decline in the number of families receiving assistance was coincident with a shift in spending toward the broader range of benefits, services, and activities that may be financed under the broad block grant. In FY1995, 71% of all expenditures in the pre-TANF program were on assistance. In FY2023, 26% of all TANF spending was on assistance. There are few TANF requirements and no performance standards around TANF benefits and services that are not assistance, which now represent (nationally) the majority of TANF expenditures.

Families Receiving Assistance and Expenditures by Category

Source: CRS, based on data from HHS.


Introduction

The Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) block grant provides federal grants to states and Indian tribes for a wide range of benefits and activities. It was created in the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996 (PRWORA, P.L. 104-193), also known as the 1996 welfare reform law. That law ended the cash assistance program for needy families with children—Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC)—and several related programs, folding their funding into the broad-purpose TANF block grant.

The TANF statute is Title IV-A of the Social Security Act of 1935, as amended.1 At the federal level, TANF is administered by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).2 However, it is the states and tribes that provide TANF benefits and services to families and individuals. TANF programs operate in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, Guam, and the U.S. Virgin Islands.3 Federally recognized Indian tribes may also operate TANF programs.

TANF helps fund state-run cash assistance programs for needy families with children. However, TANF is also a broad-purpose block grant that funds a wide range of benefits, services, and activities that seek to ameliorate the effects of, or address the root causes of, childhood economic and social disadvantage.

Most TANF requirements relate to when funds are used to provide assistance to families. Additionally, even though most of what falls under the term assistance represents cash assistance, there are other forms of aid that also technically meet the definition of assistance.4 There are fewer requirements for the wider range of benefits, services, and activities that may be financed by TANF.

TANF Funding

Though TANF was created almost three decades ago, the amount of funding provided for the block grant remains rooted in historical expenditures within the pre-TANF programs of the early to mid-1990s. The pre-TANF programs, the largest of which was AFDC, were matching grant programs and were funded by both federal and state dollars. Under these programs, the federal government reimbursed states for a percentage of their expenditures.5 There was no limit on federal funding for AFDC. State and sometimes local governments paid for the percentage of expenditures in the pre-TANF programs not financed by the federal government.

Likewise, TANF is financed through both federal and nonfederal dollars. The bulk of federal TANF funds are based on the federal share of pre-TANF program expenditures in the early to mid-1990s. TANF also requires a minimum amount of nonfederal dollars to be expended in the states, in what is known as the TANF maintenance of effort (MOE) requirement. The MOE is based on the state share of expenditures in the pre-TANF programs.

The Full-Year Continuing Appropriations and Extensions Act, 2025 (P.L. 119-4) funds TANF through the end of FY2025 (September 30, 2025).

The State Family Assistance Grant for State and Tribal Programs

The state family assistance grant to the 50 states, District of Columbia, and tribes totals $16.4 billion annually. (Funding for the territories is discussed separately below.) The allocations to each state are based on the peak of the federal share of expenditures in the pre-TANF programs during the FY1992 to FY1995 period.6 These allocations were established in PRWORA and were originally set to remain fixed through FY2002. However, because TANF has never been fully reauthorized or substantially modified since 1996, this fixed funding has been extended to this day without any adjustments for the number of families receiving assistance or other factors such as inflation and changes in state population.7

The state family assistance grant finances both state TANF programs and tribal programs. Tribes have the option to operate their own programs. Funding for a tribal program is based on FY1994 expenditures on pre-TANF programs in the area it serves. Grants to tribes reduce the state family assistance grant payable to the state that contains the areas served by the tribal programs.

State Family Assistance Grants by State

Table 1 shows the state family assistance grant by state for FY2023. It includes the following considerations:

Table 1. State Family Assistance Grants by State, FY2023

(dollars in millions)

State

State Family Assistance Grant Allocation

Tribal Grants

State Family Assistance Grant Payable to the State

Alabama

$93.007

$0.000

$93.007

Alaska

63.399

19.002

44.397

Arizona

221.686

22.279

199.407

Arkansas

56.546

0.000

56.546

California

3,721.496

87.381

3,634.115

Colorado

135.608

0.000

135.608

Connecticut

265.908

0.000

265.908

Delaware

32.184

0.000

32.184

District of Columbia

92.304

0.000

92.304

Florida

560.484

0.000

560.484

Georgia

329.650

0.000

329.650

Hawaii

98.578

0.000

98.578

Idaho

31.833

1.525

30.307

Illinois

583.126

0.000

583.126

Indiana

206.117

0.000

206.117

Iowa

131.091

0.533

130.558

Kansas

101.595

0.117

101.478

Kentucky

180.689

0.000

180.689

Louisiana

163.431

0.000

163.431

Maine

77.863

0.000

77.863

Maryland

228.342

0.000

228.342

Massachusetts

457.855

0.000

457.855

Michigan

772.794

0.000

772.794

Minnesota

267.101

7.531

259.569

Mississippi

86.481

0.000

86.481

Missouri

216.335

0.000

216.335

Montana

45.384

7.495

37.889

Nebraska

57.837

1.210

56.627

Nevada

43.832

0.069

43.762

New Hampshire

38.394

0.000

38.394

New Jersey

402.702

0.000

402.702

New Mexico

125.687

15.767

109.920

New York

2,434.869

0.000

2,434.869

North Carolina

301.242

0.805

300.438

North Dakota

26.313

0.000

26.313

Ohio

725.566

0.000

725.566

Oklahoma

147.525

9.517

138.008

Oregon

167.370

1.535

158.156a

Pennsylvania

717.125

0.000

717.125

Rhode Island

94.708

0.000

94.708

South Carolina

99.638

0.000

99.638

South Dakota

21.821

0.614

21.207

Tennessee

190.892

0.000

190.892

Texas

484.652

0.000

484.652

Utah

76.576

1.220

75.356

Vermont

47.197

0.000

47.197

Virginia

157.763

0.000

157.763

Washington

402.997

24.010

378.988

West Virginia

109.813

0.000

109.813

Wisconsin

317.138

4.292

312.846

Wyoming

21.710

3.281

18.429

Totals

16,434.255

208.183

16,218.393

Source: Congressional Research Service (CRS), based on data from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), Administration for Children and Families, Office of Family Assistance. Data provided to CRS via email.

a. Oregon's state family assistance grant payable to the state was reduced by both the tribal grants shown in the table and a penalty that reduced its grant by $7.7 million.

Implications of Nearly 30 Years of Fixed Funding

Basing today's state family assistance grant on funding in the pre-TANF programs of the early to mid-1990s has two major implications:

Figure 1 compares the TANF state family assistance grants by state in FY2023 with federal funding for AFDC and related programs in FY1995, relating it to the estimated number of poor children in each state in those two years. FY1995 federal funding for AFDC is adjusted for inflation to reflect FY2023 dollars. The shading, which reflects comparatively higher spending per poor child in darker blue and lower spending in lighter blue, shows variation in the grant in FY1995 compared to FY2023.

The figure shows that funding per poor child was generally lower in FY2023 than it was in FY1995. Inflation has reduced the value of the national average grant by about 50%. Partially offsetting that was that the number of children living in poverty was lower nationally in 2023 than in 1995. The figure also shows that the regional patterns of grants per poor child were similar in FY2023 to what they were in FY1995, with comparatively lower grants per poor child in the South both historically and today. Some states in the Mountain West have lower grants per poor child today resulting from population growth in those states.

In FY2023, the national average state family assistance grant per poor child was $1,436. The state family assistance grant per poor child ranged from $353 in Texas to $4,099 in Vermont.

Figure 1. Federal Funding Per Poor Child for FY1995 (AFDC) and FY2023 (TANF)

Source: CRS, based on data from HHS, the U.S. Census Bureau, and the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Notes: Constant FY2023 dollars were computed using the Consumer Price Index for all Urban Consumers (CPI-U). Child poverty data are from the Census Bureau's Small Area Income and Poverty Estimates (SAIPE) for 1995 and 2023.

Figure 2 shows the percentage change in the federal grants per poor child in TANF in FY2023 compared to AFDC in FY1995. For the nation as a whole, grants per poor child declined 35%. This represents the net effect of the reduced value of the grant because of inflation, partially offset by a decline in the number of children in poverty. At the state level, the percentage change in the grant per poor child ranged from a reduction of 72% in Nevada to an increase of 8% in West Virginia. The factors affecting this number are the changes in the number of children in the state between 1995 and 2023 and the change in the poverty rate in the state. Nevada saw a relatively large increase in its child population over the last three decades; West Virginia lost population.

Figure 2. Percentage Change in Federal Funding Per Poor Child between FY1995 (AFDC) and FY2023 (TANF)

Source: CRS, based on data from HHS, the U.S. Census Bureau, and the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Notes: Constant FY2023 dollars were computed using the Consumer Price Index for all Urban Consumers (CPI-U). Child poverty data are from the Census Bureau's Small Area Income and Poverty Estimates (SAIPE) for 1995 and 2023.

As will be discussed in the "Minimum Amount of Nonfederal Spending Required by TANF: Maintenance of Effort (MOE)" section, the minimum amounts of nonfederal funding under the TANF MOE were also determined based on mid-1990s expenditures, and those spending levels have also remained relatively unchanged over the past 30 years.

TANF Contingency Funds

Fixing the basic TANF federal grant at a set level without any adjustments for changes in economic circumstances has led to concerns that funding might be inadequate during economic downturns. PRWORA established a $2 billion TANF contingency fund to provide extra funding for economically needy states.8 The original $2 billion in this fund was depleted in early FY2010. Since then, Congress has provided appropriations that continue the TANF contingency fund. Beginning in FY2017, the annual appropriation for it has been $608 million. States are eligible for TANF contingency funds if they meet two criteria.

Since the economic downturn associated with the global financial crisis of 2008, most states have had a higher number of SNAP participants in each year than in FY1994 or FY1995. Thus, most states have qualified for contingency funds on economically needy grounds every year since the crisis—regardless of the economic circumstance of the year.10 However, only those that met the higher spending requirement and applied for contingency funds actually received them. In FY2024, 15 jurisdictions (Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Delaware, the District of Columbia, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, South Carolina, Texas, and Washington) received contingency funds.

Special Financing Rules for the Territories

Puerto Rico, Guam, and the U.S. Virgin Islands receive a TANF state family assistance grant based on the same formula as the 50 states and District of Columbia.11 Thus, the territories' family assistance grant is based on the federal share of spending in pre-TANF programs in the early to mid-1990s. Prior to PRWORA, the AFDC program's funding was capped in the territories (though it was not in the 50 states and District of Columbia). The cap on AFDC funding was part of an overall federal limitation on funding for public assistance programs.

PRWORA raised the cap on overall federal funding for public assistance in Puerto Rico, Guam, and the U.S. Virgin Islands.12 However, TANF grants were based on historical levels of funding based on the pre-PRWORA cap. To allow these jurisdictions to receive additional funding for TANF activities under the new cap, PRWORA established an extra matching grant (§1108(b) of the Social Security Act) for the territories if spending from their own funds exceeds FY1995 levels.13

Certain Tribes May Receive Funds for Work Programs

Tribes that operated employment and training programs under pre-TANF law are entitled to funds to operate tribal work programs.14 The amount these tribes receive is the same amount they received under pre-TANF law in FY1994. The total amount of funding for tribal work programs is $7.5 million.

Defunct Federal TANF Grants

The grants described in this report that provide funding to the states, territories, and tribes in FY2025 have in the past been supplemented by other funds—some temporary in nature to address specific needs, and others that have also expired or been repealed.

Bonus Funds. PRWORA, while giving states flexibility, had a number of provisions to hold them accountable for their performance in meeting TANF's statutory goals. These accountability provisions included two "bonus funds"—one for states with reduced out-of-wedlock pregnancy rates and a second that provided bonuses for states with "high" levels of performance in meeting TANF's statutory goals. The bonus for reduced out-of-wedlock pregnancies was funded at up to $100 million per year and up to five states could receive funds; the "high-performance" bonus provided an average of $200 million per year to states that qualified for it. FY2005 was the last year for which states received TANF bonus funds.

Supplemental grants. These grants were provided to states that were thought to be disadvantaged by the fixed funding amounts embodied in the state family assistance grant: (1) those that had relatively high population growth and (2) those that had historically low AFDC and related program grants relative to poverty in the state. In total, 17 states qualified for supplemental grants: Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Louisiana, Mississippi, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, North Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and Utah. Funding for TANF supplemental grants was discontinued after June 30, 2011.

Welfare-to-Work Grants. In 1997, President Clinton proposed additional funding on the presumption that the basic TANF block grant provided insufficient funding for the increased emphasis on moving cash assistance recipients to work. Congress accepted the proposal in the Balanced Budget Act of 1997 (P.L. 105-33), providing $3 billion over two years (FY1998 to FY1999) to augment TANF funds with special welfare-to-work grants. These grants were administered through the Department of Labor (DOL) rather than HHS (where TANF is administered) and at the state and local level through the workforce system. Additionally, funding was split between formula grants to states (and then passed through to local workforce boards) and competitive grants. No new welfare-to-work funding was provided after FY1999.

Emergency Funds. There were two temporary grants that provided additional funding in response to economic downturns. The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA, P.L. 111-5) appropriated $5 billion for FY2009 and FY2010 to a temporary Emergency Contingency Fund (ECF). This was partially in response to the anticipated depletion of the regular contingency fund and partially to address that the contingency fund had sometimes been insufficient for responding to changes in economic circumstances. The ECF provided additional funds to states that increased spending on basic (cash) assistance, short-term emergency aid, and subsidized employment.

Pandemic Funds. The American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 (P.L. 117-2) established within TANF a temporary $1 billion fund to help offset the economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. Allocations were made to states, tribes, and territories (including American Samoa and the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands) according to a statutory formula to help them finance short-term, nonrecurrent benefits.

Minimum Amount of Nonfederal Spending Required by TANF: Maintenance of Effort (MOE)

The pre-TANF programs were matching grants that financed benefits partially with nonfederal dollars. Likewise, TANF is partially funded by nonfederal dollars. Federal law requires a minimum amount of nonfederal spending on TANF-related populations and activities for each state, known as the MOE requirement. If a state does not meet the MOE requirement, its state family assistance grant is reduced dollar-for-dollar by any shortfall in nonfederal expenditures relative to its MOE required spending.15 Under TANF, nonfederal spending includes expenditures by state or local governments, as well as the value of third party (e.g., charity) donations.

The minimum amount of nonfederal dollars that must be spent in a state under the TANF MOE requirement is based on its state share of expenditures in its pre-TANF programs in FY1994. The minimum MOE thresholds are either 80% or 75% of historical state spending, and they may vary from year-to-year. There are two factors that affect these MOE thresholds:

Table 2 shows the minimum dollars that must be spent to meet the MOE requirement by state for FY2023. It shows the minimum MOE spending thresholds at both 80% or 75% of historical state spending. The historical state spending amount in the table is reduced for any funds provided to tribes. It then shows whether the state met its FY2023 work standard and the resulting MOE spending threshold (minimum state spending) for FY2023. For example, the table shows that Alabama met its work standards in FY2023; therefore, its MOE amount equaled 75% of historical state spending. On the other hand, California did not meet its work standard; therefore, its MOE amount equaled 80% of historical state spending.

Table 2. Minimum Nonfederal Spending Required to Meet the TANF Maintenance of Effort Requirement: FY2023

(dollars in millions)

State

Minimum Nonfederal Spending at 80% of Historical Spending

Minimum Nonfederal Spending at 75% of Historical State Spending

State Met FY2023 Work Standard?

Final MOE (Minimum Nonfederal Spending for FY2023)

Alabama

$41.828

$39.214

Yes

$39.214

Alaska

36.559

34.274

Yes

34.274

Arizona

91.176

85.478

Yes

85.478

Arkansas

22.228

20.839

Yes

20.839

California

2,840.532

2,662.999

No

2,840.532

Colorado

88.396

82.871

Yes

82.871

Connecticut

195.649

183.421

Yes

183.421

Delaware

23.222

21.771

Yes

21.771

District of Columbia

75.146

70.449

Yes

70.449

Florida

392.921

368.363

No

392.921

Georgia

184.926

173.369

Yes

173.369

Hawaii

75.893

71.150

Yes

71.150

Idaho

13.891

13.023

Yes

13.023

Illinois

458.761

430.088

Yes

430.088

Indiana

121.094

113.526

Yes

113.526

Iowa

65.825

61.711

Yes

61.711

Kansas

65.790

61.678

Yes

61.678

Kentucky

71.913

67.418

Yes

67.418

Louisiana

59.109

55.415

Yes

55.415

Maine

40.026

37.524

No

40.026

Maryland

188.763

176.965

Yes

176.965

Massachusetts

382.877

358.948

Yes

358.948

Michigan

499.753

468.518

Yes

468.518

Minnesota

186.322

174.677

Yes

174.677

Mississippi

23.173

21.724

Yes

21.724

Missouri

128.129

120.121

Yes

120.121

Montana

13.995

13.121

Yes

13.121

Nebraska

29.899

28.031

Yes

28.031

Nevada

27.145

25.449

Yes

25.449

New Hampshire

34.256

32.115

Yes

32.115

New Jersey

320.171

300.160

Yes

300.160

New Mexico

34.839

32.661

Yes

32.661

New York

1,833.150

1,718.578

Yes

1,718.578

North Carolina

164.015

153.764

No

164.015

North Dakota

9.674

9.069

Yes

9.069

Ohio

416.887

390.831

Yes

390.831

Oklahoma

61.119

57.299

Yes

57.299

Oregon

97.503

91.409

Yes

91.409

Pennsylvania

434.267

407.126

Yes

407.126

Rhode Island

64.392

60.367

No

64.392

South Carolina

38.322

35.927

Yes

35.927

South Dakota

9.096

8.527

Yes

8.527

Tennessee

88.331

82.810

Yes

82.810

Texas

251.441

235.726

Yes

235.726

Utah

26.547

24.888

Yes

24.888

Vermont

27.253

25.550

Yes

25.550

Virginia

136.718

128.173

Yes

128.173

Washington

272.909

255.852

Yes

255.852

West Virginia

34.446

32.294

Yes

32.294

Wisconsin

178.067

166.938

Yes

166.938

Wyoming

9.657

9.054

No

9.657

Totals

10,988.002

10,301.252

10,520.723

Source: CRS, based on data from HHS.

Figure 3 shows the regional pattern of the minimum nonfederal spending requirement per poor child under the TANF MOE. The regional pattern is the same as that for federal grants per poor child, with MOE thresholds in the South and Mountain West tending to be lower than in other regions. The minimum nonfederal spending requirements ranged from $134 per year per poor child in Mississippi to $2,714 per year per poor child in the District of Columbia.

Figure 3. Minimum Nonfederal Spending Required Under the TANF Maintenance of Effort (MOE) Requirement Per Poor Child: FY2023

(in dollars)

Source: CRS, based on data from HHS and the U.S. Census Bureau.

Broad Flexibility in the Use of TANF Funds

TANF is a broad purpose block grant that permits states and tribes to use funds to provide a wide range of benefits, services, and activities with the general aim of ameliorating the effects, or addressing the root causes, of childhood economic disadvantage. The broad purpose of TANF governs the use of federal TANF funds as well as what types of expenditures may count toward the MOE.

The statutory purpose of TANF "is to increase the flexibility of states" to achieve four statutory goals:

In general, states have the authority to use federal TANF funds "in any manner that is reasonably calculated to accomplish" the TANF statutory purpose.17 Additionally, states may count toward the MOE requirement funds spent to achieve the statutory purpose of the block grant.

This broad authority allows states to use TANF funds and count nonfederal spending on activities far broader than cash assistance (statutory goal 1) toward meeting the MOE requirement. In addition to assistance, TANF and MOE dollars fund activities such as employment services, job training, subsidized jobs, refundable tax credits to families with children made by the state, youth activities, activities related to preventing children from entering foster care, pre-Kindergarten, child care subsidies, and responsible fatherhood and healthy marriage programs (including media campaigns). It also allows states to use TANF funds for a population of needy families with children that is broader than that which receives cash assistance.

Figure 4 shows how federal and nonfederal (MOE) dollars were used in FY2023. Of the total $33.9 billion used, basic assistance (mostly cash assistance) totaled $8.3 billion, about one-fourth of the total.

Figure 4. Uses of TANF Funds: FY2023

Source: CRS, based on data from HHS.

Rules Specific to the Use of Federal Funds

In addition to the general authority to use federal TANF funds to accomplish the block grant's statutory purpose, there are two main additional uses of federal TANF funds:

TANF-funded activities to achieve the third and fourth goals of TANF's statutory purpose—reducing the incidence of out-of-wedlock pregnancies and promoting two-parent families—are not limited to needy families. They can be provided to the population as a whole, without a test of economic need, and to families that do not have children.

Additionally, states may reserve unused TANF dollars without a fiscal year limit. This permits states to accumulate balances of unused grants.20 These balances may only be used within TANF; states cannot transfer unused grants to either CCDF or SSBG. At the time TANF was created, the ability to reserve funds was seen as a way of saving for unanticipated expenditures, such as increases in benefits that might accompany an economic downturn. At the end of FY2023, the total of accumulated unused funds for the 50 states and District of Columbia was $7.7 billion.

Rules Specific to Counting Nonfederal Dollars Toward the MOE Requirement

The rules that govern what nonfederal dollars may be counted toward the MOE relate to two basic questions:

Eligible Families

Aside from expenditures on some responsible fatherhood and healthy marriage activities, nonfederal dollars must be spent on TANF-eligible families. The main requirement regarding these families is that they must meet a test of economic need, which is established by their state. The tests may be different than the tests for assistance and may be different for various activities.

Statute also gives states some additional leeway in defining the needy families that may be served with MOE dollars versus federal dollars. It allows states to use MOE dollars for families that have exceeded TANF's five-year time limit on assistance (see the "The TANF Time Limit" section). It also allows states to serve lawfully present noncitizens who were made ineligible for federally funded TANF assistance through PRWORA's overarching restrictions on benefit eligibility for noncitizens.21

Qualified Expenditures

Qualified expenditures may be from either state funds, local funds, or the value of cash and donated services from third parties, such as charities in a state. The ability to count the value of cash and donated services from third parties stems not from the TANF statute but from the applicability of a general rule governing federal grants that allows cost-sharing requirements to be met by the value of donated services from third parties.22 This is particularly consequential in TANF, which is a broad-purpose block grant that helps finance a wide range of benefits, services, and activities rather than a program that finances a specific benefit, service, or activity.23

All state or local expenditures for eligible families on activities that were funded by the pre-TANF programs consolidated into TANF (i.e., cash assistance, emergency aid, child care, and employment and training services) may count as qualified expenditures toward the state's MOE requirement. However, expenditures on activities that were not funded in pre-TANF programs must exceed FY1995 levels in order to be counted as a qualified expenditure toward the MOE requirement. For example, pre-Kindergarten programs were not a part of the pre-TANF programs consolidated into TANF. For expenditures on pre-Kindergarten to count as qualified expenditures toward the MOE requirement, only spending above the FY1995 level (not adjusted for inflation) would be considered.

There are some expenditures that are not countable toward the MOE requirement, such as state and local matching funds used for Medicaid and other matching programs. The exception to the rule prohibiting the counting of spending in other matching programs is for certain child care expenditures, which may be double-counted toward meeting both CCDF and TANF nonfederal spending requirements.

Healthy Marriage and Responsible Fatherhood Activities Counted Toward the MOE Requirement

The exception to the requirement that qualified expenditures be for "eligible families" is for activities related to responsible fatherhood and healthy marriage.24 Individuals and families benefitting from these activities need not be subject to a test of financial need. These activities include public advertising campaigns on the value of marriage and skills needed to increase marital stability, education in high schools on the value of marriage, marriage education and skills training, divorce reduction programs, marriage mentoring programs, programs to reduce disincentives to marriage in need-tested aid programs if part of a healthy marriage program, activities to promote responsible parenting, and activities to help foster economic stability by helping fathers improve their economic status.

Furthering State Flexibility: Limitation on Federal Regulatory Authority

TANF's purpose of increasing flexibility is reinforced by a statutory limitation on federal regulation of state behavior under the block grant:

No officer or employee of the Federal Government may regulate the conduct of States under this part or enforce any provision of this part [Part A, Title IV of the Social Security Act, or TANF] except to the extent expressly provided in this part [TANF].25

When HHS proposed its first TANF regulations in 1997, it developed a framework for how it would address this limitation on federal regulation. Under this framework, HHS said it would promulgate regulations in instances where

Most TANF requirements apply when federal or MOE funds are spent on assistance to needy families with children. Fewer rules apply to the broader range of benefits and services that may be funded by either TANF or MOE dollars.

The Focus of Most Federal TANF Policy: Assistance

That most TANF policy, expressed in its requirements and prohibited uses of funds, relates to assistance (discussed further below) reflects the policy concerns around AFDC that led to the enactment of PRWORA and the creation of TANF.27 AFDC provided assistance in the form of monthly checks (cash) to needy families with children, and this form of aid has historically been called welfare. Those who sought changes that culminated in PRWORA were concerned that providing cash to needy families with children, most often those headed by single mothers, led to some families being dependent on government benefits for long periods of time, provided a disincentive to work, and helped foster or support out-of-wedlock births and family breakup. As shown in Figure 5, PRWORA was debated and enacted immediately following the period when the number of families receiving AFDC was at its historical peak. The figure shows the number of families receiving assistance from AFDC and TANF for 1959 to 2023.

Figure 5. Number of Families Receiving Assistance from TANF and AFDC: 1959-2023

Source: CRS, based on data from HHS.

In current TANF policies put in place by PRWORA, there are notable requirements around work and job preparation, as well as a federal TANF time limit on how long certain families may receive assistance.

The Definition of Assistance

The term "assistance" is used throughout the TANF statute but not defined there. HHS, in regulation, defined it as follows:

The term "assistance" includes cash, payments, vouchers, and other forms of benefits designed to meet a family's ongoing basic needs (i.e., for food, clothing, shelter, utilities, household goods, personal care items, and general incidental expenses).28

As a block grant, most of the TANF policies and requirements that apply to families receiving assistance in statute are worded as applying to the states rather than individual families and recipients. For example, TANF's work requirements and the five-year time limit apply to states. There is flexibility in how states translate these requirements as they apply to individuals and families. For other program elements, such as financial eligibility and benefit amounts provided as assistance, the statute is generally silent and such policies are wholly determined by states.

Most of what constitutes "assistance" is traditional cash assistance. However, there are other benefits financed by TANF that meet the definition of assistance in regulation. TANF requirements generally apply to all benefits that meet the regulatory definition of assistance.

Federal Eligibility Rules for Assistance

Federal TANF law restricts the provision of assistance to "needy" families with a dependent child or a pregnant individual. 29The limitation to needy families means that assistance must be provided to those families who have met a test of financial need (as determined by the state; see the next section). The statute also defines "dependent child" as one under age 18, or age 18 if in secondary, vocational, or technical school.

In addition, states are required to abide by restrictions in noncitizen eligibility put into law through PRWORA, which prohibits federally funded TANF assistance receipt by certain noncitizens who arrived in the United States after August 22, 1996, for the first five years after arrival. States have the option to provide assistance using state MOE dollars to noncitizens who are legally in the United States and ineligible for federally funded TANF assistance because of PRWORA's restrictions.

Traditional Cash Assistance

As discussed, most TANF assistance is in the traditional form of cash assistance. States have generally continued their cash assistance programs to needy families with children, albeit in modified form, under TANF. AFDC was considered an entitlement to individuals: those who met state-determined eligibility standards were legally entitled to benefit.30 TANF statute explicitly states that TANF is not an entitlement for individuals.

In general, traditional cash assistance benefits are provided on Electronic Benefit Transfer (EBT) cards. Similar to debit cards, EBT cards may be used to draw cash via Automated Teller Machines (ATM) or for purchases made using point-of-sale terminals. In general, this means the traditional TANF assistance benefit is cash that can be used to purchase any good or service. 31 This differs from some other need-tested benefits that restrict assistance to certain necessities, such as Medicaid (medical assistance), SNAP (food assistance), and subsidized rents (housing assistance).

States Determine the Test of Financial Need to Be Eligible for Assistance

The financial tests to determine if a family is needy and eligible for assistance is determined by states. Figure 6 shows the maximum monthly earnings a single parent with two children could have and receive TANF cash assistance in July 2022 (the most recent data available). States develop the income levels and income counting rules used to determine eligibility for assistance. States often disregard a portion of earnings when determining initial eligibility for cash assistance. Families with unearned income, such as Social Security, may face different income thresholds. The figure shows an example of a family whose sole source of income is earnings.

The figure also shows the relationship between the maximum earnings to receive TANF cash assistance and the federal poverty level (FPL) for a family of three in 2022. (The FPL shown is for the lower 48 states and District of Columbia; the FPL is higher in Alaska and Hawaii.) There is not necessarily a relationship between a metric such as FPL and the decisions states made in setting their TANF income eligibility thresholds. In July 2022, all but two states (Minnesota and California) had income eligibility thresholds for cash assistance below the federal poverty level. In that month, 30 states had income eligibility thresholds for cash assistance of less than 50% of the federal poverty level.

The figure shows the maximum earnings to enter TANF cash assistance as an applicant. In most states, the maximum earnings to leave TANF cash assistance are higher as states disregard more earnings for those who find a job or increase earnings while receiving TANF assistance.

Figure 6. Maximum Earnings a Single Parent with Two Children May Have and Be Eligible to Enter TANF Cash Assistance, by State: July 2022

Source: CRS, based on data from Ilham Dehry, Sarah Knowles, and Katie Shantz et al., Welfare Rules Databook: State and Territory TANF Policies as of July 2022, HHS, Administration for Children and Families, Office of Planning, Research and Evaluation, OPRE Report 2023-327, December 2023.

Notes: Wisconsin is not shown because families with earnings are generally ineligible for assistance in that state. Federal Poverty Level (FPL) shown is for the lower 48 states and District of Columbia. The FPL is higher (reflecting higher cost of living) in Alaska and Hawaii.

States may also limit financial eligibility based on assets held by a family, and most states do have asset limits. In July 2022, nine states (Alabama, Colorado, Hawaii, Illinois, Louisiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, Ohio, and Virginia) eliminated such asset tests for their TANF assistance programs.32

States Determine the Amount of Assistance Provided to Families

There are no federal rules regarding the benefit amount payable to families; benefit levels are set by the states. Figure 7 shows the maximum monthly TANF cash assistance benefits for a single parent with two children by state in July 2022. Maximum cash assistance benefits ranged from $204 (Arkansas) to $1,151 (New Hampshire) per month.

Figure 7. TANF Maximum Cash Assistance Benefits for a Single Parent with Two Children, By State: July 2022

Source: CRS, based on data from Ilham Dehry, Sarah Knowles, and Katie Shantz et al., Welfare Rules Databook: State and Territory TANF Policies as of July 2022, HHS, Administration for Children and Families, Office of Planning, Research and Evaluation, OPRE Report 2023-327, December 2023.

Work and Job Preparation

A statutory goal of TANF is to end dependence on government assistance, in part through work and job preparation. This allows TANF and MOE funds to be spent on a wide range of activities, including subsidized employment, job search, and a range of job training and education activities for needy parents.

There are a number of policies in statute that focus on work and job preparation as it relates to adult assistance recipients.

Numerical Performance Standards

The TANF work participation standards are numerical performance measures computed in the aggregate for each state. The work standards are the main performance measure in TANF and are meant to enforce the notion that states should operate their programs in such a way as to have a certain percentage of their recipients working or engaging in job preparation activities.

Statutory Targets and Credits Against Them

Statute sets nominal standards that specify numerical targets of 50% of all families and 90% of two-parent families considered to be engaged in work. However, those targets are reduced by the caseload reduction credit, which allows states to either wholly or partly meet their work standard through reductions in the number of families receiving assistance.33 This means that numerical targets are different by state, and may be different for the same state in different years. The post-caseload reduction credit standard is the state's effective standard—the percentage of families that must be engaged in work or activities for the work standard to be met.

The caseload reduction credit measure for a given fiscal year measures the change in the number of families receiving assistance in the immediately preceding fiscal year from the base year. Beginning in FY2026, the base year will be FY2015.34 Thus, in FY2026 the caseload reduction credit will be based on the change in the number of families receiving assistance from FY2015 to FY2025. Figure 8 illustrates the calculation of the caseload reduction credit for a hypothetical state for FY2026. This state experienced a decline of 25% in the number of families receiving assistance between FY2015 and FY2025. It thus received a caseload reduction credit of 25 points, reducing its effective work standard from 50% to 25%.

Figure 8. Example of How the Caseload Reduction Credit Would Reduce a State's Work Participation Standard: FY2026

Source: CRS, based on TANF statute, Section 407(b)(3) of the Social Security Act.

The Work Participation Rate

The effective work participation standard is then compared with the state's work participation rate (WPR). The WPR is calculated as a percentage. It is computed by dividing the number of TANF assistance families considered as engaged in work by the total number of TANF families receiving assistance who are included in the calculation (some TANF families receiving assistance are excluded).35

Federal statute has detailed rules for determining whether or not an individual is considered as engaged in work. Under these statutory rules, an individual must either be working at a job or in a job preparation activity for a minimum number of hours per week in a month to be counted as engaged in work. The rules limit the ability to count job search and educational activities toward the WPR. Hours of work or participation in job preparation must be verified in order to count.

A state that does not meet both of its numerical performance standards is at risk of being penalized by a reduction in its block grant.36 The penalty for not meeting the performance standards can be waived for reasonable cause, and states can also avoid the penalty if they come into compliance with the standards through a corrective compliance plan. Though the numerical work standards and the rules for computing them do not apply to individual recipients, they have guided states in establishing the work requirements that apply to individual recipients.

Pilot Program to Base Performance Standards on Outcomes

P.L. 118-5 established a pilot to allow up to five states to have their work programs assessed using different performance measures as an alternative to WPR. The alternative performance measures reflect labor market outcomes for TANF adults after they leave assistance. The alternative performance measures are employment rates, wages, and "other indicators of family stability and well-being."37 States that operate pilots are not required to meet the work participation standard or verify hours of activity. In November 2024, under the Biden Administration, five states were selected to operate pilot programs: California, Kentucky, Maine, Minnesota, and Ohio.38 On March 10, 2025, under the Trump Administration, HHS announced it ended pilot participation for those selected states.39 The states previously selected for the pilot would not have to meet work participation standards for FY2025. HHS said it would issue a new solicitation of proposals from interested states that will "outline its expectations for participation in the pilot program."40

Other Federal TANF Provisions That Relate to Work and Job Preparation

States are required to assess each recipient who is an adult (age 18 or older) or has not completed high school and is not attending secondary school.41 The assessment must be made within 90 days of determination of the recipient's eligibility for assistance. States have the option to develop an Individual Responsibility Plan (IRP) setting forth employment goals for the individual, the obligations of the individual, and the services the state will provide the individual to be able to obtain and keep employment.

States are required to financially sanction a family with a member who refuses to comply with its work requirements without good cause.42 States are free to determine the sanction amount, and whether to reduce or terminate benefits for families that fail to comply with work requirements (i.e., a full-family sanction). States also determine what constitutes "good cause" for not complying with work requirements. Those with good cause are not sanctioned. States are prohibited from sanctioning a family with a single parent with a child under age six if the refusal to comply with work requirements is because the parent cannot find affordable child care.43

The TANF Time Limit

States may not use federal TANF funds to provide assistance to a family containing an adult or minor child household head who has already received a cumulative five years (60 months) of federally funded assistance.44 The time limit does not apply to families where assistance is provided only on behalf of children being cared for by nonparent relatives (e.g., grandparents, aunts, uncles) if those nonparent relatives do not receive assistance for themselves. It also does not apply to families where parents are ineligible noncitizens or if states have made parents receiving disability benefits ineligible for benefits under state rules.

The federal five-year time limit is a prohibition on states' use of federal TANF funds, not a direct limitation on how long a particular family may receive assistance. States may continue benefits for assistance families with an adult or minor child household head beyond five years through the following:

As with most TANF requirements, it is the states that determine how time limits are applied to individual families. In July 2022, 32 jurisdictions had adopted the federal five-year time limit as their own, ending assistance to families after 60 months. Other jurisdictions have established a range of differing time limits. Three jurisdictions (California, New York, and the District of Columbia) effectively do not have a time limit that ends benefits entirely for families.

Some states have time limits shorter than the 60 months allowed by federal law and end benefits to families sooner. Table 3 provides a categorization of state time limits as they were in effect in July 2022. Families in nine states faced time limits at 24 months. In five of those states, families may regain eligibility after a period of time, though cumulative time receiving federally funded TANF assistance cannot exceed 60 months. In Massachusetts, families faced a time limit at 24 months in a 60-month period but did not have a total, lifetime 60-month cap. The shortest time limit was in Arizona: TANF assistance ends for families after receipt of 12 months of assistance in a lifetime.

Table 3. TANF Time Limits by State, July 2022

Time Limit

Number of Jurisdictions

Jurisdictions

No lifetime limit

3

CA, NY, DC

60 months in a lifetime

32

AL, AK, CO, GU, HI, IL, IN, IA, KY, LA, ME, MD, MN, MS, MT, NE, NH, NJ, NM, NC, ND, OK, OR, PA, PR, RI, SD, TN, VT, WA, WV, WY

48 months

4

FL, GA, MI, WI

45 months

1

MO

36 months

2

DE, UT

24 months/60-month limit

5

LA, NV, NC, SC, VA

24 months/no lifetime limit

1

MA

24 months in a lifetime

3

AR, ID, KS

21 months

1

CT

Tiered time limit depending on work experience and education: 12, 24, or 36 months; 60-month lifetime limit

1

TX

12 months

1

AZ

Source: CRS, based on Ilham Dehry, Sarah Knowles, and Katie Shantz et al., Welfare Rules Databook: State and Territory TANF Policies as of July 2022, HHS, Administration for Children and Families, Office of Planning, Research and Evaluation, OPRE Report 2023-327, December 2023.

Child Support Requirements

Child support is a cash payment made by a noncustodial parent to a parent that has custody of a child when a child's parents have either divorced or never married. Historically, many families receiving assistance have been headed by a single mother, and child support has been viewed as an alternative to federal and state assistance for financially supporting the children in single-parent families.

The Child Support Enforcement (CSE) program (Title IV-D of the Social Security Act) originally focused on recouping the costs of assistance paid by the federal government and states under AFDC from the noncustodial parent.45 The CSE program has since evolved to facilitating child support payments for families that never received assistance, but it still functions to recoup the cost of assistance. Families receiving TANF assistance are required to assign, or legally turn over their rights to, child support paid by noncustodial parents as reimbursements to the federal government and state for assistance payments.

States have the option to pass through child support to families receiving assistance; that is, have that child support be additional income to the family rather than being retained by the state. The cost of the pass-through is either borne entirely by the state (and can be counted toward the TANF MOE) or covered by limited federal cost sharing with the state for child support passed through up to a certain dollar amount.

Families receiving TANF assistance must cooperate with the state in establishing the paternity of a child and in its procedures for establishing and modifying legal orders that the noncustodial parent pay child support.46 Federal law requires states to penalize families who do not cooperate with child support enforcement requirements by cutting their benefits at least 25%. States can penalize families by more than that amount or even end assistance for failure to cooperate with child support enforcement requirements.

Special Provisions for Victims of Sexual Harassment and Domestic Violence

Federal law requires states to certify that applicants and recipients of TANF assistance are notified of help available to victims of sexual harassment and survivors of domestic violence, sexual assault, and stalking. States must also certify that caseworkers and other state personnel are trained

Federal law provides for an optional certification that a state has procedures in place to screen for and identify victims of domestic violence, refer such victims to supportive services, and waive certain program requirements.48 The program requirements that may be waived include work requirements applied by the state to the individual, the time limit on assistance receipt, and cooperation with child support enforcement rules.

Though a state may waive certain program requirements for victims of domestic violence, federal law does not exclude them from the TANF WPR standard calculation or the 20% limit on hardship cases that exceed the five-year time limit. However, HHS regulations allow a state to provide victims of domestic violence with a federally recognized good cause domestic violence waiver, and provide that a state would have reasonable cause for failing the requirements if that failure was due to providing such waivers.49

Under HHS regulations, a federally recognized domestic violence waiver must identify program requirements that are being waived, be granted based on an individualized assessment, and be accompanied by a services plan. These waivers must be reassessed at least every six months.

Other Prohibitions on Receipt of Assistance

In addition to prohibitions noted previously (e.g., restrictions on benefits for noncitizens), federal law also prohibits states from using federal TANF funds to provide assistance to the following persons and families:

States may use MOE funds to assist these families and individuals.

PRWORA also provides that persons convicted of a drug-related felony may be denied assistance under TANF unless the state affirmatively opts out of this provision.51 PRWORA also gives states explicit permission to drug test applicants or recipients of TANF assistance and deny them aid if they fail the test.52

Nontraditional Forms of Assistance

Much of TANF policy is focused on when states provide assistance to families with children, and it reflects the policy concerns around AFDC that led to the enactment of PRWORA. However, the definition of "assistance" is broad enough to include benefits that were not a part of AFDC. For example, some states use MOE funding to provide earnings supplements to working parents who either left the traditional cash assistance program or lower-income parents who never had a connection to the traditional cash assistance program. These are usually small amounts paid either as a transitional or ongoing benefit.

An example of such earnings supplements is that some states increase SNAP benefits if a family meets the criteria for being counted as engaged in work toward the TANF work participation standard. This increase in SNAP is TANF-funded (nonfederal dollars counted toward the MOE) and meets the definition of assistance. Providing a TANF-funded benefit to working parents that meets the definition of assistance can help a state meet its TANF work standard. Beginning with FY2026, a state must pay a benefit of at least $35 per month for such an earnings supplement to get credit for that family toward its work standards.

Additionally, some states provide nutrition assistance funded by nonfederal dollars counted toward the MOE to families who are legally present but made ineligible for SNAP by PRWORA's restrictions on noncitizens receiving federally funded assistance.

Data Reporting on Families and Individuals Receiving Assistance

TANF law requires states to provide information on those who receive assistance.53 States must provide aggregate (state-level) counts of these families and individuals. They must also provide detailed information on either the full caseload or a sample of the caseload for families and individual recipients. The family- and individual-level information that states must report includes basic demographic information (e.g., age, sex, educational attainment), the work activities hours of adults,54 and the financial circumstances of the families and individuals.

Since October 1, 2024, states have been required to report on employment outcomes for those who left TANF assistance. The labor market outcomes include the rates of employment and amount of earnings after leaving assistance programs as well as the percentage of youth (under age 24) without a high school diploma who are either attending a high school or equivalency program or who obtained a high school or equivalent credential within one year of leaving a TANF assistance program.55

The Increasing Importance of TANF Benefits, Services, and Activities That Are Not Assistance

Though TANF may be best known for helping fund state assistance programs, it is a broad-purpose block grant that helps finance a range of benefits and services that seek to achieve its statutory purpose. Receipt of benefits, services, or activities not considered assistance does not trigger that family's inclusion in the state's work participation standard. Months of receipt of benefits not considered assistance do not count toward the TANF 60-month time limit. Families receiving only TANF benefits that are not considered assistance do not have to assign their child support right to the states. There are no federally prescribed performance measures or metrics that evaluate the use of TANF funds for benefits that are not considered assistance.

There is limited reporting on the number of families served by TANF funds used for benefits not considered assistance. States must provide the total number of families or recipients served for all programs financed with MOE funds. However, they are not required to report on the number served with federal TANF dollars if the benefit is not considered assistance.56

The decline in the number of families receiving assistance has been accompanied by a shift in TANF spending from assistance to other activities—the activities with comparatively few requirements, limited reporting, and no performance metrics. In FY1995, the number of families receiving AFDC assistance was near its historical high of 5 million. In that year, 71% of the dollars that were consolidated into the TANF block grant and MOE requirement were spent on assistance. In FY2023, the number of families receiving assistance was near 1 million.57 In that year, assistance accounted for 26% of all TANF dollars.

The fixed nature of the block grant and its broad allowed uses of funds gave states the ability to use the savings from having lower numbers receiving assistance to be shifted to other allowable uses of TANF funds. TANF funds transferred to other block grants (either the CCDF or the SSBG) are governed by the rules of the receiving block grant. As discussed previously, other TANF dollars not transferred and not spent on assistance come under few federal rules. Figure 9 shows the decline in the number of families receiving assistance and compares the composition of expenditures in AFDC (FY1995) and TANF (FY2023).

Figure 9. Families Receiving Assistance and Expenditures by Category: FY1995 and FY2023

Source: CRS, based on data from HHS.

Administrative Costs

The TANF statute limits administrative expenses at 15% of federal grant funds used and 15% of nonfederal dollars counted toward the MOE. The statute excludes from this limit costs associated with information technology needed for tracking and monitoring recipients (e.g., for the TANF time limit and work participation standards).58

The statute does not define administrative costs; rather, HHS regulations provide this definition. The regulations include as administrative costs activities associated with program eligibility determinations as well as preparation of state plans, budgets, and schedules. They exclude from administrative costs activities associated with providing services such as screening and assessments, development of plans for individual recipients (e.g., IDPs), case management, work supports, and diversion.59

Tribal TANF

Federally recognized Indian tribes and certain Alaskan Native organizations have the option to operate their own TANF programs for needy families with children.60 Tribes may opt in and out of running their own programs at any time.

Tribes seeking to operate TANF programs must submit plans to the HHS Secretary for approval. The Secretary, with the participation of the tribes, establishes work requirements and time limits for each tribe operating its own TANF program. Tribal programs are not subject to the same work participation standards and five-year time limit on use of federal funds as are state TANF assistance programs.

TANF Research

The TANF statute sets aside from the state family assistance grant appropriation 0.33% of its total ($54.7 million) for research, evaluation, and technical assistance. This amount may fund both HHS-initiated and state-initiated evaluations of TANF, a catalogue of approaches and evidence of their effectiveness in moving assistance recipients to work, and Census Bureau research to assess the outcomes of policies on the economic well-being of low-income families with children. Over time, TANF and other research funding has examined the status of those who left assistance, strategies to serve individuals with known barriers to employment success, job retention services, job search strategies, and subsidized employment.


This report benefitted from the contributions of Patrick Landers, Alice Choi, Abigail Kolker, and Mary Daniels of CRS's Domestic Social Policy Division. CRS Visual Information Specialist Amber Wilhelm helped design the data visualizations in the report.

Footnotes

1.

The TANF statute is at https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/COMPS-11001/pdf/COMPS-11001.pdf. There are two sets of grants that are in the TANF statute but considered separate programs. The first is the child care entitlement to the states; the second is the healthy marriage and responsible fatherhood programs. These grants are not discussed in this report. For a discussion of the child care entitlement to the states, see CRS In Focus IF10511, Child Care Entitlement to States: An Overview. For a discussion of issues related to responsible fatherhood programs, see CRS Report RL31025, Fatherhood Initiatives: Connecting Fathers to Their Children.

2.

TANF implementing regulations promulgated by HHS can be found at 45 C.F.R. Part 260.

3.

American Samoa is also eligible to receive TANF funding but has opted not to do so. Section 1101(a)(1) of the Social Security Act designates the 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, Guam, the U.S. Virgin Islands and American Samoa as "states" for the purposes of TANF. Thus, this report will generally use the term "states" to refer to these jurisdictions.

4.

Most TANF requirements and much of TANF data are collected on families receiving assistance. In this report, the term "assistance" is used when a requirement is discussed or data are used that capture all assistance. When describing states' cash assistance programs, the distinction will be made that the information is for cash assistance specifically.

5.

The percentage varied by state, as expenditures were matched based on the Medicaid matching rate, also known as the Federal Medical Assistance Percentage (FMAP). A jurisdiction's FMAP depends on its per-capita income in relation to the national average per-capita income. States with relatively low per-capita incomes received a higher matching rate. For a discussion of the FMAP, see CRS Report R43847, Medicaid's Federal Medical Assistance Percentage (FMAP).

6.

Under the original state family assistance formula set in PRWORA, the national total grant to states and each state's individual grant were based on the federal share of expenditures in the AFDC, Emergency Assistance (EA), and Job Opportunities and Basic Skills (JOBS) Training programs. The formula entitled each state to the greatest of three amounts: (1) the average federal share of expenditures in these programs for FY1992 through FY1994; (2) the federal share of expenditures for these programs in FY1994, adjusted for states that amended their EA programs in FY1994 or FY1995; or (3) the federal share of expenditures for these programs in FY1995. States that amended their EA programs in FY1994 or FY1995 would have their EA expenditures increased by the amount the federal share of their expenditures exceeded that of FY1994. The current statutory language (§403(a)(1) of the Social Security Act) says that the state family assistance grant is based on a state's share of total grants in FY2002. However, those FY2002 allocations were based on the original formula. Thus, the amount states currently receive is still based on that original formula.

7.

Extensions of TANF's spending authority since then have maintained these allocations through FY2026. Beginning in FY2017, the allocations were reduced by 0.33% for each state, totaling $54.7 million nationally, to help fund TANF-related research.

8.

The contingency fund is found at Section 403(b) of the Social Security Act.

9.

For the TANF contingency fund, current-year child care expenditures are excluded from both current-year spending and from the historical state expenditures in determining whether the state met 100% of FY1994 expenditures and whether expenditures above that amount are matched.

10.

In April 2024, a month during a year associated with economic growth, 48 jurisdictions qualified for TANF contingency funds. See https://www.acf.hhs.gov/ofa/data/states-qualifying-counting-six-additional-weeks-job-search-and-job-readiness.

11.

See Section 403(a)(1) of the Social Security Act.

12.

The programs subject to the cap in addition to TANF are the grants to the territories for programs aiding needy aged individuals, blind individuals, and individuals with disabilities that operate there in lieu of Supplemental Security Income (SSI) and the Title IV-E foster care and permanency program.

13.

The matching rate for Section 1108(b) funds is 75%. These funds may also be used as an enhanced match for Title IV-E programs in the territories.

14.

See Section 412(a)(2) of the Social Security Act. For a listing of tribes that receive these grants, see https://www.acf.hhs.gov/ofa/grant-funding/native-employment-works-grantees-and-funding.

15.

Technically, the TANF MOE requirement is a penalty, in that HHS penalizes states by reducing the state family assistance grant for those that do not meet the required minimum amount of nonfederal spending. The MOE provision is at Section 409(a)(7) of the Social Security Act.

16.

Section 401(a) of the Social Security Act.

17.

Section 404(a)(1) of the Social Security Act.

18.

Section 404(d) of the Social Security Act. In that section, the maximum transfer to SSBG is 4.25%, but annual appropriation bills have specified that the maximum transfer to SSBG is 10%.

19.

Section 404(a)(2) of the Social Security Act.

20.

TANF is subject to the Cash Management Improvement Act (CMIA). See discussion at 64 Federal Register 17821, April 12, 1999. The CMIA requires that outlays from the federal government be timed to coincide with expenditures made at the state level. Therefore, unused grant awards remain with the federal Treasury until used for state expenditures.

21.

Section 409(a)(7)(B)(i)(IV) of the Social Security Act.

22.

HHS, Administration for Children and Families, Office of Family Assistance, Clarification that third party cash or in-kind may count toward a State's or Territory's TANF Maintenance of Effort (MOE), TANF-ACF-PA-2004-01, December 1, 2004, https://www.acf.hhs.gov/ofa/policy-guidance/tanf-acf-pa-2004-01-clarification-third-party-cash-or-kind-may-count-toward.

23.

U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO), Temporary Assistance for Needy Families: Update on States Counting Third-Party Expenditures toward Maintenance of Effort Requirements, GAO-16-315, February 10, 2016, https://www.gao.gov/products/gao-16-315. The GAO report provides some examples of such activities that could have their value counted toward the MOE, such as the value of food provided by food banks in the state and the value of after-school activities provided by the YMCA and the Boys and Girls Clubs.

24.

Section 409(a)(7)(B)(i)(V) of the Social Security Act. The statute allows states to count toward the MOE requirement expenditures for the TANF purposes' goals of reducing out-of-wedlock pregnancies and promoting the formation and maintenance of two-parent families. HHS interpreted this provision to apply only to activities allowable under the healthy marriage and responsible fatherhood competitive grants. See HHS, "Reauthorization of the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) Program," 73 Federal Register 6817, February 5, 2008.

25.

Section 417 of the Social Security Act.

26.

HHS, "Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF)," 62 Federal Register 224, November 20, 1997, p. 62127.

27.

For a discussion of the debate leading up to the enactment of PRWORA, see CRS Report R44668, The Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) Block Grant: A Legislative History.

28.

45 C.F.R. §260.31(a)(1).

29.

Section 408(a)(1) of the Social Security Act.

30.

A series of administrative and court rulings resulted in AFDC being considered a legal entitlement. A legal entitlement is an obligation of government and eligible beneficiaries have a legal recourse if it is not paid. See CRS Report RS20129, Entitlements and Appropriated Entitlements in the Federal Budget Process. For a discussion of how AFDC became to be viewed as an entitlement, see CRS Report R44668, The Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) Block Grant: A Legislative History.

31.

Federal law requires states to maintain policies and practices to prevent TANF assistance funds from being used in an EBT transaction in liquor stores, casinos or gaming establishments, and strip clubs. States must prevent TANF cash withdrawals at ATMs in such establishments, and prevent purchases using TANF assistance on EBT cards at point-of-sale terminals in such establishments.

32.

Ilham Dehry, Sarah Knowles, and Katie Shantz et al., Welfare Rules Databook: State and Territory TANF Policies as of July 2022, HHS, Administration for Children and Families, Office of Planning, Research and Evaluation, OPRE Report 2023-327, December 2023, p. 31, https://wrd.urban.org/sites/default/files/documents/2024-02/2022%20Welfare%20Rules%20Databook%20%2812%2022%202023%29.pdf.

33.

In addition to receiving credit toward its work standard for fewer families receiving assistance, under a regulatory provision at 45 C.F.R. §261.43(a)(2) a state can count as caseload reduction a calculated number of families assisted with any nonfederal dollars spent in excess of that state's MOE requirement. This excess MOE credit can further reduce the percentage of families that must be engaged in work to meet the standards.

34.

From FY2007 through FY2025, the base year for determining the caseload was FY2005. Prior to FY2007, the base year for determining the caseload reduction credit was FY1995. The Fiscal Responsibility Act (FRA, P.L. 118-5) changed the base year for determining the credit effective with the FY2026 standards.

35.

Excluded from the calculation are all families where relatives other than parents (e.g., grandparents, aunts, uncles) care for assisted children. Noncitizens who are ineligible for TANF assistance are also excluded, as are some families subject to a financial sanction for failure to meet work requirements, and, at the option of the state, (1) single parents with an infant (this exclusion is limited to 12 months in a lifetime), (2) individuals receiving disability benefits, and (3) those caring for an individual with a disability.

36.

The statutory penalty for failing to meet the work standard is 5% of the state family assistance grant payable to the state for the first year that the standard is not met. The penalty escalates for each subsequent year the standard is not met, to a maximum of 21%; however, HHS may reduce the penalty based on the "degree of noncompliance." Section 409(a)(3) of the Social Security Act.

37.

Section 411(e)(1) of the Social Security Act.

38.

For more information, see https://www.acf.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/documents/ofa/work-family-wellbeing-pilot-statement.pdf.

39.

HHS, Administration for Children and Families, Welfare Pilot Projects to Start Anew, March 10, 2025, https://acf.gov/media/press/2025/welfare-pilot-projects-start-anew.

40.

See HHS, Administration for Children and Families, https://acf.gov/sites/default/files/documents/ofa/pilot-program-new-direction.pdf.

41.

Section 408(b)(1) of the Social Security Act.

42.

Section 407(e) of the Social Security Act.

43.

Section 407(e) of the Social Security Act.

44.

Section 408(a)(7) of the Social Security Act.

45.

For an overview of the CSE program, see CRS In Focus IF10113, The Child Support Services (CSS) Program.

46.

Section 408(a)(2) of the Social Security Act.

47.

Section 402(a)(8) of the Social Security Act.

48.

Section 402(a)(7) of the Social Security Act.

49.

See regulations at 45 C.F.R. §260.50-260.59.

50.

Section 408(a)(9) of the Social Security Act.

51.

This provision is not in TANF law, but is in Section 115 of PRWORA.

52.

This provision is not in TANF law, but is in Section 902 of PRWORA.

53.

Section 411 of the Social Security Act.

54.

States operating pilot work programs as authorized by the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023 (P.L. 118-5), do not have to report on hours of work for adult recipients.

55.

Section 411(f) of the Social Security Act, as added by the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023 (P.L. 118-5).

56.

The reporting of the number of families served by MOE funds is required by HHS regulation at 45 C.F.R. §265.9(c). HHS believed it had the authority to require this by regulation because the TANF MOE is technically a penalty and its regulatory framework allowed HHS to regulate in cases where HHS is required to impose a penalty for failure to meet a requirement.

57.

A combination of fewer families eligible for assistance and a lower rate of receipt of TANF assistance among those eligible is estimated to have resulted in this decline. For more information, see CRS Report R47503, Temporary Assistance for Needy Families: The Decline in Assistance Receipt Among Eligible Individuals.

58.

Section 404(b) of the Social Security Act.

59.

45 C.F.R. §263.0(b). The description of the definition of "administrative costs" as a general framework can be found in the preamble to TANF regulations. See HHS, "Temporary Assistance for Needy Families Program," 64 Federal Register 17809-17814, April 12, 1999.

60.

Section 412 of the Social Security Act.