In California, these safety-net programs are connected. Qualify for one, and you often qualify for several more. That happens because they share income rules, or because one program is a gateway to the next. Too many families claim just one and miss the rest. This guide shows how the programs stack, so once you’re in, the others take much less effort.
The short version
If you get CalFresh, Medi-Cal, or CalWORKs, you very likely qualify for a chain of others: energy and phone discounts (CARE, LifeLine), food for young kids (WIC), child care help, and tax credits. Many of these treat your existing enrollment as proof you qualify.
The one rule to remember: once you’re in one program, qualifying for the others is automatic, but enrolling in each is not. You still file a short application for each, you just usually skip re-proving your income.
Start with the gateway program that fits your income, then add the rest.
Who these benefits are for
These programs are for low-and-moderate-income Californians. The income limits are higher than most people expect, and you don’t need to already receive anything to start. If your income is at or below these rough monthly amounts for a family of four, you likely qualify for at least one gateway program, which then opens the others:
| Program (family of 4) | Rough monthly income limit |
|---|---|
| CalFresh (food) | about $5,360 |
| Medi-Cal (health, adults) | about $3,700 |
| WIC (if pregnant or a child under 5) | about $5,088 |
| Child care help | about $9,020 |
Smaller and larger households scale down and up. These are rough 2026 guides that update each year; the linked guides below have the exact limits by household size. The takeaway: if you’re a working or low-income Californian, you may qualify for more than you think, even if you get nothing today.
The gateway programs
Three programs open the most doors. If you can get into one of these, the others get much easier:
- CalFresh (food benefits) makes you categorically eligible for CARE/FERA energy discounts, California LifeLine phone discounts, and WIC.
- Medi-Cal (health coverage) does the same, and its income overlaps heavily with CalFresh.
- CalWORKs (cash aid) is the strongest gateway: it enrolls you in Medi-Cal automatically and opens Stage 1 child care, plus the same energy and phone discounts.
How the programs stack
What each gateway typically unlocks:
| If you have… | You likely also qualify for… |
|---|---|
| CalWORKs | Medi-Cal (automatic), CalFresh, Stage 1 child care, CARE/FERA, LifeLine, WIC (if pregnant or a child under 5) |
| CalFresh | CARE/FERA, LifeLine, WIC (if pregnant or a child under 5), and often Medi-Cal (overlapping income) |
| Medi-Cal | CARE/FERA, LifeLine, WIC (if pregnant or a child under 5), and often CalFresh |
| SSI | CARE/FERA, LifeLine (and CalFresh in California) |
On top of these, if you work and earn a low-to-moderate income, you can claim the CalEITC tax credit (plus the federal EITC), which doesn’t reduce any of the programs above, tax refunds don’t count as income for CalFresh or Medi-Cal and won’t cut your monthly benefit.
The one rule: enrolling still takes a short application
Where to start, based on your situation
- Very low or no income, with kids: start with CalWORKs, the strongest gateway, then it pulls you into Medi-Cal and child care.
- Low income, need food and health coverage: apply for CalFresh and Medi-Cal together at BenefitsCal.com, then add CARE, LifeLine, and WIC.
- Pregnant or have a child under 5: add WIC for nutrition support.
- Working but money’s tight: file your taxes and claim the CalEITC, even if you owe nothing.
- Everyone who qualifies above: turn on CARE/FERA (energy) and California LifeLine (phone), they take minutes once you’re already enrolled in a qualifying program.
How to apply for each (quick reference)
| Program | Where to apply | Guide |
|---|---|---|
| CalFresh / Medi-Cal / CalWORKs | BenefitsCal.com (one application), or call 1-877-847-3663 | CalFresh · Medi-Cal · CalWORKs |
| CARE / FERA (energy) | Your utility’s site (PG&E, SCE, SDG&E) | CARE/FERA |
| California LifeLine (phone) | CaliforniaLifeLine.com | LifeLine |
| WIC | myfamily.wic.ca.gov | WIC |
| CalEITC (tax credit) | File a state return (Form FTB 3514); free via CalFile or VITA | CalEITC |
| Cal Grant (college) | FAFSA (studentaid.gov) or CADAA (dream.csac.ca.gov) + your GPA, by March 2 | Cal Grant |
| Child care | Your county (CalWORKs) or a local AP agency | Child Care |
Each guide above has the exact income limits, documents, and steps for that program.
Quick answers
If I get CalFresh, do I automatically get CARE and LifeLine too?
You meet their eligibility requirement automatically, but you still submit each program’s short application (bringing your CalFresh proof) to start the discount.
Will signing up for more programs reduce my other benefits?
No. These programs are designed to work together; enrolling in one doesn’t cut another, and tax credits like CalEITC don’t count as income.
Where do I apply for several at once?
BenefitsCal.com handles CalFresh, Medi-Cal, and CalWORKs in one application. Energy (CARE), phone (LifeLine), and WIC are applied for through their own sites once you qualify.
What’s the single best first step?
Apply for the gateway that matches your income, CalWORKs if you have kids and very low income, otherwise CalFresh and Medi-Cal, then add the rest.
Bottom line
California’s safety net is a chain, not a list of unrelated forms. One gateway program, CalFresh, Medi-Cal, or CalWORKs, can make you eligible for energy and phone discounts, food for young children, child care, and tax credits, often using your existing enrollment as the proof.
Start with the gateway that fits your income, then claim each linked benefit one short application at a time. The eligibility for the linked benefits is already done; the only thing left is to collect what you’ve earned. Use the linked guides above for the exact income limits and steps for each program.