Since the Supreme Court’s 2022 Dobbs decision returned abortion regulation to individual states, the legal landscape has changed dramatically and continues changing. This page provides factual, state-by-state information about current abortion laws — where it is legal, where it is banned, what exceptions exist, and what the current trends are — without taking a political position on any of it.
From 1973 until June 2022, the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling in Roe v. Wade established a federal constitutional right to abortion before fetal viability (generally around 23–28 weeks). States could regulate but not ban abortion during the first two trimesters. In June 2022, the Court’s 6-3 decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization overturned Roe, holding that the Constitution does not guarantee a right to abortion. That decision returned full regulatory authority to the states, with no uniform federal standard. The result: a patchwork of laws that varies dramatically by state — from complete bans with criminal penalties to constitutional protections and no gestational limits at all. Abortion is not banned nationwide. There is no federal law prohibiting abortion. What is legal or illegal depends entirely on which state you are in.
The questions below represent what people are most commonly trying to understand about the current abortion law landscape — answered with factual information from the Guttmacher Institute, KFF, and state legal records.
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How many states have total abortion bans? 13 states have near-total bans as of early 2026 · Most include only a life-of-mother exception · Some add rape/incest exceptions with strict documentation requirements · Several states’ bans carry criminal penalties for providersAs of early 2026, 13 states enforce near-total abortion bans: Alabama, Arkansas, Idaho, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, and West Virginia. Missouri had a near-total ban that was overturned by a 2024 voter referendum restoring abortion rights up to viability, but ongoing litigation has prevented most clinics from resuming services. These 13 states collectively prohibit abortion in nearly all circumstances, with the most common exception being life endangerment of the pregnant person. Some include rape and incest exceptions with documentation requirements — such as requiring a police report — though these exceptions are rarely used in practice due to the procedural burden they impose. Providers who violate these bans face criminal penalties in most states, typically felony charges that can result in years in prison and large fines. Several of these states also prohibit providing abortion medication by mail to people within the state.
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What states ban abortion with no exceptions? No state currently has a fully enacted ban with literally zero exceptions · Arkansas has the most restrictive exceptions (life of mother only, no rape/incest) · Texas and Alabama also have no rape/incest exceptions · All current bans retain at minimum a life-of-mother exceptionWhile many states have extremely narrow exceptions, no state currently enforces an abortion ban with literally zero exceptions. The most restrictive group — states with no rape or incest exception and no fetal anomaly exception — includes Arkansas, Texas, Alabama, and several others. In these states, an abortion may only be performed to prevent the death of the pregnant person, and even then the criteria for what constitutes a sufficient life threat are often defined narrowly in law. Reports have emerged from multiple states of providers and hospitals delaying care in emergency situations out of fear of criminal prosecution, leading to cases where women with serious pregnancy complications had to travel out of state or wait until their condition worsened before receiving care. The KFF Policy Tracker documents that nearly all bans include exceptions falling into four general categories: preventing death, health risk, rape/incest, and lethal fetal anomaly — but the presence of an exception in law does not always mean it is usable in practice.
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What states allow abortion up to 9 months (throughout pregnancy)? No state explicitly permits abortion “up to 9 months” without restriction · 9 states plus D.C. have no gestational limit in law · In practice, very late abortions are rare and typically involve severe fetal anomalies or serious health emergencies · “No limit” does not mean “unrestricted in practice”The phrase “abortion up to 9 months” is commonly used in political debate and searching, but it doesn’t reflect how abortion law actually works in any state. As of 2026, nine states — Alaska, Colorado, Minnesota, Montana, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oregon, Vermont, and Wyoming (pending new legal challenges) — plus the District of Columbia have no statutory gestational limit on when abortion can legally occur. This does not mean abortions at very late stages are routinely performed. Abortions after viability (generally 22–24 weeks) represent less than 1% of all abortions nationally and typically involve complex situations — severe fetal anomalies incompatible with life, or serious maternal health emergencies. The absence of a legal gestational limit means providers in these states can use clinical judgment to handle these rare, complicated medical situations without fear of prosecution. States like California and New York permit abortion up to viability (approximately 23–24 weeks) with exceptions for health reasons after that point, and do not place absolute bans on later procedures when medically necessary.
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Which states have the strictest abortion laws? Strictest bans (near-total, life-of-mother exception only or very narrow): Texas, Idaho, Tennessee, Arkansas, Mississippi · Texas additionally imposes civil liability — private citizens can sue providers and those who assist · Alabama criminalizes abortion without rape/incest exceptions · Criminal penalties for providers in all near-total ban statesAmong the 13 states with near-total bans, several stand out for particularly narrow exceptions or especially severe enforcement mechanisms. Texas enforces both a criminal ban and a civil enforcement mechanism (modeled on SB 8, the “vigilante” law) under which private citizens can sue providers and anyone who assists a person in obtaining an abortion — potentially for up to $10,000 per lawsuit. Texas has no rape or incest exception. Idaho’s ban carries criminal penalties for providers and has no rape exception, though incest is addressed under narrow circumstances. Tennessee and Mississippi similarly have no rape or incest exceptions. Alabama has no rape or incest exception and also has an exception for the physical health of the mother — but it is one of the few states that also includes a mental health provision within that exception, making it slightly different from similarly restrictive states on paper, though enforcement varies. Texas, Idaho, and Louisiana have also passed laws attempting to restrict interstate travel for abortion, though the constitutionality of those provisions is being challenged in courts.
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In which states is abortion still fully legal? Legal throughout pregnancy or to viability in ~25 states + D.C. · States with constitutional protections include California, Colorado, Michigan, Vermont, and more · 9 states have no gestational limit · It is legal in all states to travel to a state where abortion is legal to obtain oneRoughly 25 states and the District of Columbia protect abortion access through state law as of 2026. Within this group, several tiers exist. At least nine states have no statutory gestational limit — meaning there is no point in pregnancy at which abortion is categorically prohibited by state law (these include Colorado, Oregon, and Vermont, among others). Many others protect abortion up to the point of fetal viability (approximately 23–24 weeks from last menstrual period), with health or life exceptions after that — including California, New York, Illinois, Washington, and Massachusetts. Following a wave of ballot measures after the Dobbs decision, states including Michigan, California, Vermont, Ohio, and Arizona have added abortion rights to their state constitutions, making these protections harder to remove through future legislation alone. It is currently legal in all 50 states for a person to travel to a different state to obtain an abortion that is legal there, regardless of what the laws in their home state say about abortion.
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Is there a federal abortion ban — could abortion become illegal nationwide? No federal abortion ban exists as of 2026 · No federal law protecting abortion exists either · Congress has the constitutional authority to pass either · Multiple federal proposals have been introduced but none passed · States’ rights framework from Dobbs remains the current legal standardAs of mid-2026, there is no federal law banning abortion in the United States, and there is no federal law protecting abortion access either. The regulatory authority rests with individual states under the Dobbs framework. Congress has the constitutional authority to pass a federal abortion ban or a federal protection for abortion access — legal scholars debate the exact mechanisms and scope, but the authority exists in principle under the Commerce Clause and Spending Clause. Proposals for a national abortion ban at various gestational limits have been introduced in Congress, and proposals for a national protection for abortion access have also been introduced. None have passed as of 2026. The political arithmetic in Congress has made passage of either type of legislation difficult. States continue to act as the primary regulatory bodies, which is why the law differs so dramatically between, say, Texas and Colorado. Whether a federal law will be passed in any direction remains a live political and legislative question.
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Is medical abortion (the pill) legal in all 50 states? Mifepristone is FDA-approved and legal to prescribe nationwide · However, 13 states ban its use within state borders in line with their overall abortion bans · Telehealth and mail delivery of abortion pills across state lines is the focus of active legal battles · Some states have “shield laws” protecting providers who mail pills to other statesMifepristone — the primary medication used in medication abortions — remains FDA-approved as of 2026. A 2024 Supreme Court ruling preserved FDA approval of mifepristone nationwide, rejecting an effort to remove it from the market. However, the FDA’s nationwide approval of a drug does not override state law: in the 13 states with near-total abortion bans, using mifepristone for abortion is still prohibited by state law, regardless of the drug’s federal status. The active legal frontier is around telehealth prescribing and mail delivery of abortion pills. Some providers in states with protective laws (California, Colorado, Massachusetts, and others) are prescribing and mailing pills to patients in ban states, relying on state “shield laws” that protect those providers from extradition or lawsuits under other states’ laws. Multiple legal challenges are working through the courts regarding whether one state can prosecute a provider in another state for prescribing pills that are then mailed across state lines. The legal outcomes of these cases are not yet settled.
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Can a pregnancy at 22 weeks be legally terminated somewhere in the US? Yes — abortion at 22 weeks is legal in several states · 22 weeks is before the standard viability threshold (23–24 weeks) in most legal frameworks · States with no gestational limits or viability-based limits (CA, CO, NY, IL, WA, OR and others) would permit this legallyAt 22 weeks of pregnancy (measured from the last menstrual period), a fetus has not yet reached the standard viability threshold that most state laws use as a cutoff. Fetal viability is generally placed at 23–24 weeks in law, with the medical understanding that survivability outside the uterus improves significantly from that point but remains limited before 22–23 weeks. In states that ban abortion after viability — including California, New York, Illinois, Washington, and many others — a 22-week abortion would be legal, because 22 weeks is before viability under those laws. In states with no gestational limit (Colorado, Oregon, Vermont, etc.), it would be legal regardless. In states with 6-week bans or near-total bans, it would not be. About 1% of abortions nationally occur after 21 weeks, and according to the Guttmacher Institute these later procedures most commonly involve people who faced delays in obtaining care earlier, those who received a serious fetal diagnosis later in pregnancy, or people with health complications. Access varies widely by geography, and not all providers in states where these procedures are legal offer them.
This table reflects the general legal status in each state as of 2026. Laws change through legislation and court rulings — always verify with official state sources or AbortionFinder.org for the most current status before making decisions.
| State | Current Status | Limit / Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Alabama Ban | Near-total ban | Life/health exception only; no rape/incest exception |
| Alaska Legal | No gestational limit | State constitution protects abortion access |
| Arizona Legal | Legal to viability | Prop 139 (2024) added constitutional protection |
| Arkansas Ban | Near-total ban | Life of mother only; no rape/incest exceptions |
| California Legal | Legal to viability; exceptions after | State constitution protects the right |
| Colorado Legal | No gestational limit | No statutory limit; broad access |
| Connecticut Legal | Legal to viability | Shield law protects out-of-state providers |
| Delaware Legal | Legal to viability | Statutory protection in place |
| D.C. Legal | No gestational limit | No restrictions based on gestational age |
| Florida 6 Weeks | Banned after ~6 weeks | Exceptions for life, health, rape/incest (with documentation), fetal anomaly before 15 weeks |
| Georgia 6 Weeks | Banned after ~6 weeks | Exceptions for life, health, fetal anomaly, rape/incest (reported, before 20 weeks) |
| Hawaii Legal | Legal to viability | Statutory protection |
| Idaho Ban | Near-total ban | Life of mother only; incest exception under 14 weeks with law enforcement report |
| Illinois Legal | Legal to viability | Strong statutory and policy protections; major destination for neighboring state residents |
| Indiana Ban | Near-total ban | Exceptions for life, health (before viability), fetal anomaly, rape/incest (before 12 weeks) |
| Iowa 6 Weeks | Banned after ~6 weeks | Exceptions for life, health, fetal anomaly, rape/incest (with report) |
| Kansas Legal | Legal to 22 weeks | State constitution protects the right; 22-week limit in statute |
| Kentucky Ban | Near-total ban | Life of mother only; no rape/incest exception |
| Louisiana Ban | Near-total ban | Life of mother, health exception; no rape/incest exception |
| Maine Legal | Legal to viability | Exceptions after viability for health of mother |
| Maryland Legal | Legal to viability | Constitutional protection added via 2024 ballot measure |
| Massachusetts Legal | Legal to ~24 weeks | Exceptions for health and life after limit |
| Michigan Legal | Legal to viability | Prop 3 (2022) added state constitutional protection |
| Minnesota Legal | No gestational limit | State Supreme Court has recognized state constitutional right |
| Mississippi Ban | Near-total ban | Life and rape exceptions; no fetal anomaly exception |
| Missouri Legal* | Legal to viability (in flux) | 2024 Amendment 3 restored rights but litigation delays clinic access |
| Montana Legal | Legal to viability | State constitution recognized right; ongoing legal battles |
| Nebraska 12 Weeks | Banned after 12 weeks | Exceptions for life, health, rape/incest, fetal anomaly |
| Nevada Legal | Legal to ~24 weeks | Constitutional amendment in progress (requires 2nd voter approval) |
| New Hampshire Legal | Legal to 24 weeks | No statutory right but practical access |
| New Jersey Legal | No gestational limit | Strong statutory protection |
| New Mexico Legal | No gestational limit | No restrictions; major destination for Texas residents |
| New York Legal | Legal to viability | Exceptions after viability; constitutional amendment in progress |
| North Carolina Legal | Legal to 12 weeks generally | Rape/incest exception to 20 weeks; fetal anomaly to 24 weeks |
| North Dakota Ban | Near-total ban | Enforcement reinstated late 2025; exceptions for rape, incest, life/health |
| Ohio Legal | Legal to viability | Issue 1 (2023) added constitutional protection |
| Oklahoma Ban | Near-total ban | Life of mother only; criminal penalties for providers |
| Oregon Legal | No gestational limit | No restrictions; broad access |
| Pennsylvania Legal | Legal to 24 weeks | Exceptions after viability for life/health |
| Rhode Island Legal | Legal to viability | Statutory protection codified after Dobbs |
| South Carolina 6 Weeks | Banned after ~6 weeks | Exceptions for life, health, rape, incest, fetal anomaly |
| South Dakota Ban | Near-total ban | Life of mother only; voters rejected a broader exception measure in 2024 |
| Tennessee Ban | Near-total ban | Life/health exception; no rape/incest exception |
| Texas Ban | Near-total ban | Life of mother only; civil enforcement (SB 8) mechanism; no rape/incest exception |
| Utah 18 Weeks | Banned after 18 weeks | Exceptions for life, health, rape, incest, fetal anomaly |
| Vermont Legal | No gestational limit | Article 22 of state constitution explicitly protects “personal reproductive autonomy” |
| Virginia Legal | Legal to ~25 weeks | Legal battles and potential 2026 ballot measure ongoing |
| Washington Legal | Legal to viability | Strong statutory protections; shield laws for providers |
| West Virginia Ban | Near-total ban | Exceptions for life, rape/incest (before 8 weeks), fetal anomaly |
| Wisconsin Legal | Legal to 22 weeks | Court decisions have allowed abortion access despite contested law |
| Wyoming Legal* | Legal to viability (in flux) | State constitution protects right per Jan 2026 court ruling; 6-week ban signed but blocked |
State abortion laws are subject to legislative changes, court rulings, and ballot measures. Several entries above are marked as “in flux” because ongoing litigation or pending legislation could change the legal status within weeks. For the most current information specific to your state, use the official resources listed in the footer of this page.
Use the buttons below to find reproductive health clinics, Planned Parenthood locations, women’s health centers, and legal aid organizations near you. Buttons use your location to update the map below.
- Abortion is not banned nationwide. There is no federal ban. The law depends entirely on which state you are in.
- Traveling to another state for legal abortion care is legal in all 50 states as of 2026, regardless of your home state’s laws.
- Mifepristone remains FDA-approved nationwide, but state laws in ban states still prohibit its use for abortion within state borders.
- All ban states retain at minimum a life-of-mother exception. No state currently enforces an absolute zero-exception ban. However, how “life-threatening” is defined and applied in practice varies significantly.
- The legal landscape is changing actively. Ballot measures, court decisions, and legislation are altering this map regularly. Always verify the current status of your state’s law before making healthcare decisions.
- For current, state-specific legal status, the most reliable sources are AbortionFinder.org, Guttmacher Institute (guttmacher.org), and KFF (kff.org) — all of which maintain regularly updated databases cross-referenced with actual state statutes and court orders.
This page provides factual, informational content about abortion laws in the United States, based on publicly available legal records, policy research, and reporting from sources including the Guttmacher Institute, KFF, the Center for Reproductive Rights, and state legal databases. It does not advocate for any political position on abortion. Laws change rapidly through legislation and court decisions — always verify your specific state’s current law through official sources before making any healthcare or legal decision. This page has no affiliation with any clinic, advocacy organization, political organization, or government body.