San Bernardino, CA92408
Food Pantries with Hygiene & Personal Care
Hygiene and personal care products are the quietly critical category — SNAP benefits cannot be used to buy any of them, so pantries are often the only reliable source.
SNAP does not cover these
Pantry is often the only source
2,200+ locations
Hygiene is a recognized priority category
Mixed sizes
Travel sizes to full retail bottles
Period products included
Tampons, pads, period underwear at many sites
What to bring
- Photo ID and proof of address — hygiene limits are usually per-household.
- A list of specific items your household needs (razors, dental floss, deodorant type).
- Questions about period products, incontinence supplies, and adult diapers if relevant.
Find pantries with hygiene & personal care near you
Enter a ZIP or city to see the nearest verified pantries stocking hygiene & personal care, or tap a chip below to narrow this list.
Showing 50 of 2,064 verified pantries.
San Bernardin
4.9(435)
Food bank Free Bilingual
Bridgeport
5.0(45)
Bridgeport, NJ08014
Food bank Free

Wylie
4.8(284)
Wylie, TX75098
Non-profit organization Free SNAP Help
Charlottesvil
4.8(283)
Charlottesville, VA22901
Food bank Free No ID Bilingual
Showing the top 50 of 2,064 matches. Use the search above for proximity results.
Where these pantries are: most verified listings stocking hygiene & personal care are in California (144) , New York (141) , Washington (115) , Pennsylvania (100) , and Ohio (98) . Browse the full resource hub to narrow by program.
Common Questions
Why do food pantries distribute hygiene items?
Because no federal food-assistance program covers them. SNAP explicitly excludes soap, toothpaste, shampoo, toilet paper, diapers, feminine hygiene products, and detergent. WIC covers only infant formula and specific food items. For low-income households, that leaves a monthly "hygiene gap" of $40–$80 — a gap pantries have increasingly filled over the last decade.
Are period products (tampons, pads) available?
At most mid-sized and larger pantries, yes. State-level menstrual-equity funding in more than 20 states now subsidizes period products for food banks, so availability has improved substantially since 2020. If your pantry does not have them, ask — they may direct you to a specific "menstrual supply" distribution partner in the area.
Can I get toilet paper from a food pantry?
Often, yes — toilet paper is one of the most in-demand hygiene items, and Feeding America partners with paper-goods manufacturers on regular donation cycles. Expect 2–4 rolls per household per visit at most pantries; larger allocations appear during TEFAP or special-distribution days. Check paper-goods-specific pages for locations near you.
Are adult incontinence supplies available?
Sometimes — it is a growing but still-inconsistent category. Pantries serving senior populations or disability-specific programs are most likely to stock adult diapers, bladder pads, and wipes. Ask your local Area Agency on Aging or 211 for dedicated incontinence-supply banks if your pantry does not carry them.

































