Canned goods are the backbone of every food pantryFlorida — the shelf-stable calories that households can stretch across a week without refrigeration or much prep.
Pantry staple
3,100+ sites distribute canned goods every week
Shelf-stable
Safe well past the "best by" date if intact
Wide variety
Vegetables, fruit, proteins, and soups
Low-sodium on request
Many pantries stock reduced-sodium SKUs
What to bring
Reusable bags — cans are heavy; a typical box runs 20–30 lb.
A list of allergies or dietary restrictions (low-sodium, no pork, etc.) to share at intake.
A manual can opener if you do not own one — pantries sometimes give these away.
Transportation for the return trip — most sites cannot deliver a standard canned-goods box.
Find pantries with canned goods in Florida
Enter a ZIP or city to see the nearest verified pantries stocking canned goods, or tap a chip below to narrow this list.
Yes, in most cases. "Best by" is a quality date set by the manufacturer, not a safety date. A can is generally safe to eat as long as the can itself is intact — no bulges, no rust on the seam, no dents that cross a seam or expose raw metal. When in doubt, inspect, sniff, and discard anything that looks or smells off. The USDA publishes detailed guidance on canned-goods safety online.
Can I request low-sodium or low-sugar options?
At most pantries, yes — ask at intake. Feeding America has been increasing the share of "Healthy Eating Research"-aligned inventory (low-sodium, no-sugar-added, whole grains), and volunteers will often swap a standard can for a healthier variant if one is in stock. If you are managing diabetes, hypertension, or kidney disease, make that known; some sites have a dedicated medical-needs shelf.
Do I need to bring a can opener?
Check the pull-tab. Most cans at pantries now have pull-rings, but the older warehouse-donated stock may not. If you do not own a manual opener, ask — many pantries give them away or include one in a first-visit welcome bag. For dexterity issues, request an electric opener from a partner program like Meals on Wheels.
How much canned food will I get per visit?
The standard "household-of-four" pre-packed box contains roughly 15–25 cans alongside dry goods and produce, calibrated to last three to five days. Client-choice pantries let you pick your own allotment; the limit is usually expressed as points or pounds per household. Smaller households get proportionally less.
Can I donate canned goods I do not need back?
Yes — most pantries happily accept unopened, in-date donations. Check their posted donation hours (not always the same as distribution hours). Items most in demand: low-sodium vegetables, canned fruit in juice, tuna in water, and whole-grain soups. Items they usually cannot accept: anything opened, homemade, bulging, or past the date.
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