USDA FARA 2019 Census ACS SD

Grant County, SD

USDA Food Access Research Atlas indicators for Grant County, SD: low-access share, SNAP participation, no-vehicle households, and the Census ACS context that shapes them. Verify with USDA ERS → · Census ACS →

Food access and food desert data

Grant County, SD has a population of 8K, with 21.7% of residents living in low food access areas. SNAP participation stands at 5.5%, and the poverty rate is 9.8%. 491 residents are both low-income and live far from grocery stores, a key food desert indicator.

The USDA Economic Research Service Food Access Research Atlas flags 1 of Grant County's 2 census tracts as low-access, covering 1,635 residents of a 8K total population. That translates to a county-wide low food access share of 21.7%, which measures how many people live more than one mile from the nearest supermarket in urban settings or more than ten miles in rural settings. Because South Dakota classifies tracts using the same distance thresholds the USDA applies nationwide, Grant County's figure is directly comparable to peer counties and to the state benchmark.

The food desert signal strengthens when distance is stacked with income. In Grant County, 368 residents are flagged as low-income and more than one mile from a supermarket (the urban threshold), while 123 meet the low-income, ten-mile rural threshold. Those overlapping conditions are the precise combination the USDA uses to designate a food desert tract. Layered context includes a median household income of $70,851, a poverty rate of 9.8%, and SNAP participation covering 167 households — roughly 5.5% of the county — drawn from the Census Bureau American Community Survey five-year estimates.

Transportation is the hidden variable behind most food access gaps. About 5.3% of Grant County households report no vehicle available, meaning any measured distance to a supermarket translates into a real trip on foot, by transit, or by asking for a ride. Group quarters residents — 3.3% of the population — are counted separately because their food access patterns follow an institution rather than a household. The county's low-access share sits near or below the typical U.S. county, but tract-level variation can still produce pockets of food desert conditions inside otherwise well-served areas.

Census Tracts

2

USDA-tracked tracts in this county

Year

2019

USDA Food Access Research Atlas vintage

Source

USDA ERS

Food Access Research Atlas

Grant County — USDA Food-Access Tier Breakdown

Census tracts inside Grant County grouped by USDA distance-and-income classification. Severe tracts meet the low-income, low-access threshold (1mi urban or 10mi rural).

Food access tier distribution for Grant County, SD USDA-defined food-access tiers: 1 census tracts adequate (within distance threshold), 1 limited, 0 severe (low-income low-access food desert). Total 2 tracts evaluated. 1 tracts adequate (50.0%) 1 tracts limited (50.0%) ≤1mi urban / ≤10mi rural edge of threshold low-income · low-access Adequate 50% Limited 50% Severe 0% Food-access tier distribution — Grant County, SD
Source: USDA Economic Research Service Food Access Research Atlas · 2022 vintage

Grant County — Low-Access vs. Nearby Counties

Share of population in low-income, low-access tracts compared to neighbouring counties.

Low-Access Population Share

Low-Access Population Share Horizontal bar chart of the top 5 items by value (%). Low-Access Population Share Top 5 1. Grant County 21.7% 2. Aurora County 2.9% 3. Beadle County 31.7% 4. Bennett County 72.4% 5. Bon Homme County 22.3% Source: USDA Economic Research Service Food Access Research Atlas
SNAP participation in Grant County 5.5%

SNAP enrolled in approximately 5.5% of households — versus a U.S. county-level median in the 12-15% band.

8K
Population
21.7%
Low Food Access
5.5%
SNAP Participation
9.8%
Poverty Rate

Food Access Details

USDA Food Access Research Atlas indicators for Grant County
Indicator Value
Census Tracts2
Low Access Tracts1
Low Access Population1,635
Low Access Percentage21.7%
Low-Income, Low Access (Urban >1mi)368
Low-Income, Low Access (Rural >10mi)123

Demographics & Assistance

Census ACS demographic and SNAP data for Grant County
Indicator Value
Population7,533
Median Household Income$70,851
Poverty Rate9.8%
SNAP Households167
SNAP Participation Rate5.5%
Households Without Vehicle5.3%
Group Quarters Population3.3%

Transportation & Access Barriers

Households Without Vehicle 5.3%
Low-Income, Low Access (Urban >1mi) 368
Low-Income, Low Access (Rural >10mi) 123
Group Quarters Population 3.3%

Economic Context

Median Household Income $70,851
Poverty Rate 9.8%
SNAP Participation Rate 5.5%
SNAP Households 167

Nearby Counties in South Dakota

Compare Grant County vs Aurora County →

Frequently Asked Questions

What percentage of Grant County has low food access?
21.7% of the population in Grant County, SD lives in areas with low food access, meaning they are far from a supermarket or large grocery store.
What is the SNAP participation rate in Grant County?
5.5% of households in Grant County participate in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), covering 167 households.
What is the poverty rate in Grant County?
The poverty rate in Grant County, SD is 9.8%, with a median household income of $70,851.
How many census tracts in Grant County have low food access?
1 out of 2 census tracts in Grant County are classified as having low food access, affecting 1,635 people.
What percentage of Grant County households lack a vehicle?
5.3% of households in Grant County do not have access to a vehicle, which can compound food access challenges.
Is Grant County considered a food desert?
Grant County has 1 low-access census tracts. The USDA defines food deserts at the census tract level based on distance to supermarkets and income levels.

Data Sources & Methodology

Source: USDA Economic Research Service Food Access Research Atlas — food desert and low-access indicators. Source: U.S. Census Bureau American Community Survey (ACS) 5-Year Estimates — demographics, income, poverty, SNAP participation, and vehicle access. Low food access is defined as living more than 1 mile (urban) or 10 miles (rural) from a supermarket. Data year: 2022.

Disclaimer: This information is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute professional advice. Data is sourced from the USDA Economic Research Service Food Access Research Atlas. Consult a qualified professional before making decisions based on this data.

All federal data sources used on this page