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North Carolina WIC Program

Benefits, Eligibility & How to Apply

📅 Last reviewed: May 11, 2026 · Last updated: May 11, 2026

North Carolina WIC Agency Contact

Agency North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services
Address 1915 Health Services Way, Raleigh 27607

About the North Carolina WIC Program

259,420
Monthly Participants
Available
Online Application
Available
Telehealth
Agency Phone

Ready to apply for North Carolina WIC?

Apply online at www.ncdhhs.gov → or call 1-844-601-6881 to get started.

North Carolina WIC is administered by the NC Division of Child and Family Well-Being through county health departments, community and rural health centers, and community action agencies serving all 100 North Carolina counties. In early 2026, North Carolina updated its WIC food packages to allow for more choice and variety — and the state's WIC shopping guide was updated in January 2026 to reflect those changes.

One of North Carolina's more practical innovations for participants is the MyNCWIC Portal, which allows enrolled participants to manage appointments, upload documents, and complete some appointments by video conference without visiting a clinic in person. The portal is a participant management tool — not an application site — but once you're enrolled it significantly reduces clinic trips.

Who Qualifies for WIC in North Carolina

North Carolina WIC is open to pregnant women, postpartum women up to six months after pregnancy, breastfeeding women up to one year postpartum, infants, and children up to age five. Foster families with qualifying individuals may also be eligible. North Carolina explicitly notes that WIC is not included in the public charge test — participation cannot be used against applicants in immigration proceedings.

If you receive Medicaid, Work First Family Assistance (WFFA/TANF), or NC Food and Nutrition Services (FNS/SNAP), you automatically meet the income eligibility requirement and do not need to bring additional income documentation. For households not in those programs, the income threshold is 185% of the federal poverty level.

North Carolina has a particularly responsive application timeline: after submitting a referral form, a WIC clinic will contact you within 20 calendar days — but pregnant women, families with infants younger than six months, people experiencing homelessness, and migrant farmworkers are contacted within 10 calendar days.

The Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians operates its own WIC Program for EBCI members in western North Carolina — EBCI members can indicate their preference on the NC WIC Referral Form to be connected with EBCI WIC services directly. Tribal members of other communities who participate in the Food Distribution Program on Indian Reservations (FDPIR) should contact their local WIC office about adjunctive eligibility options.

What North Carolina WIC Provides

Benefits are issued on an NC eWIC card redeemable at authorized retail grocery stores and pharmacies statewide. Check with the store before using self-checkout for eWIC transactions — availability varies by retailer. When in doubt, use a staffed checkout lane.

North Carolina's food packages include milk, cheese, yogurt, tofu, soy-based beverage, eggs, cereal, whole-grain bread, brown rice, whole-wheat and soft corn tortillas, fruits and vegetables, 100% juice, dried or canned beans, peas, lentils, peanut butter, and chunk-light tuna or salmon for fully breastfeeding women. Infants also receive formula, cereal, fruits, vegetables, and meats for fully breastfed infants.

Every participant receives a Cash Value Benefit (CVB) for fruits and vegetables. All local NC WIC agencies provide breastfeeding aids including manual and electric breast pumps. Many local agencies also have breastfeeding peer counselor programs for mother-to-mother support. Nutrition education visits can be completed online through wichealth.org in many cases.

How to Apply for WIC in North Carolina

To apply, submit the NC WIC Referral Form online at ncdhhs.gov/ncwicreferral, call or text 1-844-601-6881, or text wic + your zip code (for example, wic27601) to that number to find your nearest WIC agency. You can also use the WIC County Directory on the NCDHHS website to look up your local agency directly. The first appointment is best done in person, but remote options may be available through your local WIC clinic.

Recertification in North Carolina

Pregnant women are certified through delivery. Breastfeeding women are certified up to one year postpartum. Postpartum non-breastfeeding women are certified for six months. Children are certified periodically. Your local WIC agency will notify you when recertification is due. Some recertification appointments can be completed via video conference through the MyNCWIC Portal — ask your local agency what's available.

North Carolina WIC Across 100 Counties

North Carolina's WIC program spans all 100 counties, from the densely populated Research Triangle and Charlotte metro to rural Appalachian mountain counties and coastal plain communities.

📋
Eligibility

Income at or below 185% FPL. Automatic eligibility with Medicaid, SNAP, or TANF.

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Benefits

Monthly food benefits loaded to your WIC EBT card plus nutrition education and breastfeeding support.

Frequently Asked Questions — North Carolina WIC

Submit the NC WIC Referral Form online at ncdhhs.gov/ncwicreferral, call or text 1-844-601-6881, or text your zip code to that number (format: wic + zip code, for example wic27601) to find your nearest WIC office. A WIC clinic will contact you within 20 calendar days — or within 10 days if you are pregnant, have an infant under 6 months, are experiencing homelessness, or are a migrant farmworker.

If you receive Medicaid, Work First Family Assistance (WFFA/TANF), or NC Food and Nutrition Services (FNS/SNAP), you automatically meet WIC's income requirement and do not need to bring additional income documentation. Bring your current enrollment documentation to your appointment instead.

The MyNCWIC Portal (myncwic.ncdhhs.gov) is an online portal for enrolled North Carolina WIC participants to manage appointments, upload documents, and complete some appointments by video conference. It is not an application site — you must first enroll through the referral process, then create an account using an NCID login.

Self-checkout availability for NC eWIC transactions varies by store. When in doubt, use a staffed checkout lane. If you have questions about a specific store, contact your local WIC agency.

North Carolina uses the federal WIC income threshold of 185% of the federal poverty level. For a household of four, that is approximately $4,957 per month or $59,478 per year in gross income, effective July 1, 2025 through June 30, 2026. If your household receives Medicaid, Work First Family Assistance, or NC Food and Nutrition Services, you automatically qualify regardless of income.

North Carolina WIC Income Limits 2026

Household Size Annual Gross Income Monthly Gross Income
1 $28,953 $2,413
2 $39,128 $3,261
3 $49,303 $4,109
4 $59,478 $4,957
5 $69,653 $5,805
6 $79,828 $6,653
7 $90,003 $7,501
8 $100,178 $8,349
Each additional person add $10,175 add $848
Effective July 1, 2025 through June 30, 2026. Figures are 185% of the federal poverty guidelines for the 48 contiguous states, the District of Columbia, and U.S. territories (including Guam). Alaska and Hawaii residents see higher income limits. Source: USDA FNS Federal Register notice 2025-03576 (90 FR 11598).

Automatic Income Eligibility in North Carolina

If you receive any of these programs, you automatically meet WIC's income requirement in North Carolina and do not need to bring additional income documentation:

  • Medicaid
  • Work First Family Assistance (WFFA) — North Carolina's TANF program
  • NC Food and Nutrition Services (FNS) — North Carolina's SNAP/food stamps program

Bring your current enrollment documentation to your WIC appointment. North Carolina uses the program names "Work First Family Assistance" and "Food and Nutrition Services" — make sure you bring documentation for either of these rather than federal program names if that's what appears on your card or letter.

The Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians operates its own WIC Program in western North Carolina. Tribal members of other communities who participate in the Food Distribution Program on Indian Reservations (FDPIR) should contact their local WIC office about adjunctive eligibility options.

WIC Is Not Public Charge

North Carolina explicitly states that WIC is not included in the public charge test. If you are a non-citizen, participating in WIC cannot be used against you in immigration proceedings. NC DHHS publishes a fact sheet on WIC and public charge available in English and Spanish at ncdhhs.gov/ncwic.

What Counts as Income

North Carolina WIC counts all gross household income before taxes, including wages, self-employment income, Social Security, child support, alimony, unemployment benefits noted on your unemployment letter or notice, and other income sources. Housing assistance and tax refunds are not counted.

WIC Programs in Nearby States

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