DoorDash has added SNAP and EBT payment capabilities at nearly 2,700 Kroger Family of Companies stores on its marketplace, opening online grocery delivery to millions of customers who use food benefits. The launch covers Mariano’s, Fred Meyer, Ralphs and Harris Teeter, and DoorDash is offering $0 delivery fees on the first order from the Kroger family of brands when consumers pay with an EBT card for a limited time.
Access to affordable food is fundamental, Mike Goldblatt said in a statement tied to the expansion, adding that the collaboration with Kroger marks an important step forward for SNAP access nationwide and helps millions of consumers shop more conveniently for the groceries their households rely on every day. The promotion runs through June 15, though other fees, including service fee, taxes and gratuity, still apply, and the offer is not valid for alcohol and is limited to one redemption per person.
The move extends DoorDash’s SNAP/EBT grocery delivery network with a major supermarket partner at a time when online food access remains uneven. As of the fourth quarter of 2025, DoorDash said more than 57,000 stores on its platform accepted SNAP/EBT payments, and today more than 4.5 million consumers have added their SNAP card to DoorDash. The company said SNAP users on the platform are twice as likely to live in food deserts as non-SNAP users.
Customers can search for Kroger or their local Kroger banners in the DoorDash app, add SNAP-eligible items to the cart and proceed to checkout, where the maximum SNAP-eligible subtotal is applied automatically. Shoppers can adjust that amount by selecting Apply SNAP Amount and editing the total, and eligible purchases include produce, meat, dairy, frozen foods and other essentials.
The new Kroger coverage adds more weight to DoorDash’s effort to make grocery delivery a practical option in urban, suburban and rural communities. For SNAP recipients, the answer to whether Kroger Doordash Snap Delivery is now available is yes, and it arrives with a limited-time fee break that makes the first order cheaper, if not entirely free.





