Washington residents on food assistance have lost $5.5 million to electronic benefit transfer — commonly known as EBT — card reader scams in the past two years. 

That’s according to the Washington State Department of Social and Health Services, which has tracked the scams since April 2022. The agency is taking steps to reimburse recipients for benefits they lose but described “an alarming surge in fraud.”

It began tracking the problem after officials noticed an uptick in incidents and reports, said Norah West, the agency’s spokesperson. With an upcoming round of reimbursements, West said the agency “did not receive authorization or funding” to replace cash benefits stolen before July 1, 2024.  

EBT card reader scams happen when a thief places a device on a retailer’s card-swiping machine, allowing them to copy card information and steal benefits. Most scams the agency recorded — about 22,000 transactions out of about 33,000 — happened out of state.

Out-of-state transactions are likely due to card cloning — where card data is used to make fake cards — not because people are taking their EBT cards out of Washington, West explained.  

The latest federal reimbursement dollars for states to replace stolen benefits are from spending legislation President Joe Biden signed in December 2022. The Department of Social and Health Services is also using state funding to replace some benefits.

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About $4 million of the $5.5 million in benefit losses in Washington were specifically from the federal Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, formerly known as food stamps. 

Scammers also stole from recipients of state food and financial assistance, cash assistance for people with disabilities and the federal Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program.

Affected households have lost nearly $600 in benefits on average, according to the Department of Social and Health Services, and about 9,000 people who receive food benefits or cash assistance from the government have been affected. 

The department says it’s replaced $3 million in food benefits and processed more than 8,000 claims. 

Claims for stolen EBT benefits must be reported to the department within 30 days of discovering the loss. Food benefits were authorized for replacement starting in August last year, and some retroactive replacement was available for them.

The department’s Office of Refugee and Immigrant Assistance has also launched a statewide education campaign to inform Washington’s refugee and immigrant communities about the risks of benefits fraud, with materials in 15 languages.

The reimbursement form is available online. To file a claim, residents should call 888-328-9271 first and then 877-501-2233 or visit a DSHS Community Services Office. Interpretation services are available. 

Washington State Standard is part of States Newsroom, the nation’s largest state-focused nonprofit news organization.