Skip to main content
Pantry counter with food pantries with paper goods

Food Pantries with Paper Goods

Paper goods means toilet paper, paper towels, tissues, and napkins — a category that is both high-volume and not SNAP-eligible.

Not covered by SNAP
A real gap in household budgets
680+ locations
Availability tied to corporate donation cycles
Quarterly restocks
Timing varies by food bank
Large households
Often qualify for extra allocation

What to bring

  • Household size info (intake may allocate based on household count).
  • A reusable bag with some room — toilet paper is bulky.

Find pantries with paper goods near you

Enter a ZIP or city to see the nearest verified pantries stocking paper goods, or tap a chip below to narrow this list.

Showing 50 of 92 verified pantries · filtered: free, no-ID.

Showing the top 50 of 92 matches. Use the search above for proximity results.

Common Questions

How much toilet paper will I get per visit?
Most pantries allocate 2–4 rolls per household per visit when stock is available. Larger households (5+ people) frequently qualify for a larger allocation — ask at intake. Special distribution days (sometimes called "hygiene days") double or triple the amount as a scheduled event.
Why are paper goods separate from hygiene?
At most pantries they are categorized together in practice, but the supply chains are distinct — paper goods come from P&G, Kimberly-Clark, and Georgia-Pacific, while soap, toothpaste, and shampoo come from different donor networks. When one chain is flowing and the other is dry, you may see one stocked and not the other.
Can I get tissues for allergy or cold season?
Facial tissue is less regularly donated than toilet paper, but most pantries keep a small stock for visitors specifically asking. Flu season and ragweed season bring higher demand; ask early in the season.