NH · Food Pantry Directory

Food Pantries in Alton, NH

10 verified food pantries and food assistance locations in and around Alton. Listings include hours, contact info and eligibility notes where available.

Alton Community Services

Alton Community Services

11C Village Centre, Alton, NH, 03809 · (603) 875-2273

fresh fruits, vegetables, meats, and baked goods, as well as non-perishable food items.Hours:Saturday 8:00 am to 11:00 am By appointment.For more information, please call.

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Barnstead Thrift Shop and Food Pantry

Barnstead Thrift Shop and Food Pantry

134 Suncook Valley Parkway, Rt. 28, Barnstead, NH, 03218 · (603) 435-6302

Thrift Shop Hours: Thursday, Friday, and Saturday 9:00am - 3:00pm Food Pantry Hours: Saturday 10:00 - 12:00pmClosed, the Saturday after Thanksgiving, the week between Christmas, New Year, Town of Barnstead annual town meeting and annual school district meeting. We will close in case of blizzard. All notice will be posted on Facebook.Over ten years ago, Elaine Swinford saw the need…

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L.I.F.E. Ministries

L.I.F.E. Ministries

264 S Main Street, Wolfeboro Falls, NH, 03896 · (603) 569-0202

Provides a food pantry. Documentation Required: Proof of income Pantry Hours: Wednesday 10:00am - 12:00pm, 5:00pm - 7:00pmFor more information, please call. ...

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Wakefield Community Food Pantry

Wakefield Community Food Pantry

1500 Wakefield Road, Sanbornville, NH, 03872 · (603) 522-3094

Provides a food pantry. Serves: Wakefield and Brookfield. Documentation Required: Proof of residency - utility bill with Wakefield or Brookfield address Requirements: Proof of residency required on initial visit.Hours:Wednesday10:00am - 1:00pm; 5:00pm - 7:00pmFor more information, please call. ...

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Getting food assistance in Alton

Alton, like every American city, has a patchwork of community-based and faith-based organizations working to keep food on people's tables. The pantries listed above are the ones we have verified through public directories, but there are usually more — most cities have informal church pantries, mutual aid groups, and weekend community fridges that never get formally listed. If the sites above are closed or out of food on the day you visit, ask staff for a referral to other nearby distributions; pantry workers usually know the rest of the local network by heart.

Beyond pantry walk-ins, the most important step you can take is enrolling in any federal nutrition program you qualify for. SNAP alone provides an average of about \$190 per person per month — significantly more food value than even a generous pantry visit. WIC covers pregnancy through age five with specific food packages and free lactation support. School-age kids can eat free at school; many Alton-area districts also send weekend food bags home through BackPack programs.

Always call a pantry before you go. Hours change frequently around holidays, weather events, and when staff turn over. Bring photo ID and proof of address if you have them, your own bags or a wheeled cart, and a sense of how many people are in your household — pantries pack boxes by family size.

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