After Roe Fell:
U.S. Abortion Laws by State
On June 2022, the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, allowing states to ban abortion. Use this tool to explore the abortion laws, restrictions, and protections across the U.S. Last updated Feb. 2026.
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Map Key
Expanded Access
The right to abortion is protected by state statutes or state constitutions, and other laws and policies have created additional access to abortion care.
Hostile
The right to abortion is threatened with aims to ban abortion, with no legal protections and high risk of enforcing old or new ban.
Protected
The right to abortion is protected by state law but there are limitations on access to care.
Illegal
The right to abortion is banned entirely and enforced with criminal penalties.
Not Protected
The right to abortion is accessible but not safeguarded by state law, with potential for future bans post-Roe.
About the Map
Initially, this tool provided an overview of what could happen to abortion rights in the fifty states, the District of Columbia, and the five most populous U.S. territories if the U.S. Supreme Court were to limit or overturn Roe v. Wade, the landmark Supreme Court ruling from 1973 that established abortion as a fundamental right. Now rebranded as U.S. Abortion Laws by state, this digital tool describes the abortion policy of the U.S. states, the District of Columbia, and the five most populous U.S. territories, which requires careful legal analysis of constitutions, laws, regulations, and court decisions. This online tool charts how these governments are responding to the reversal of Roe.
Methodology
To determine into which category to place each state, D.C., and the U.S. territories, we first examined whether the right to abortion is protected under state, territory, or D.C. law (“Protected”); if it is, we looked to see whether the state, territory, or District of Columbia enacted laws or policies that enhanced access to abortion care (“Enhanced Access”). If abortion is not protected by state or territory law (“Not Protected”), we then looked to see if the government enacted laws or policies to restrict or prohibit access to abortion care (“Hostile”). Finally, we examined states that have criminalized abortion and prohibited it entirely (“Illegal”). Based on our analysis, we then placed each state, territory, and the District of Columbia into one of these five categories, which exist along a spectrum from “Expanded Access” to “Protected” to “Not Protected” to “Hostile” and, finally, to “Illegal.”
The laws and policies identified as creating enhanced access to abortion include public funding and the requirement that abortion be included in private insurance coverage, unrestricted access for young people, the breadth of health-care practitioners who provide abortion care, and protections for clinic safety and access. We assessed hostility and illegality based on abortion bans (pre-Roe, trigger, gestational, reason, method, SB8 copycats, and criminalization of self-managed abortion) and abortion restrictions (TRAP, parental involvement, consent, and physician-only laws). While these bans and restrictions generally have exceptions, this tool does not list them in detail because those exceptions do not provide meaningful access and usually are difficult to utilize. Unless otherwise noted, all bans and restrictions discussed are in effect.
Findings
Today, abortion is protected by state law in 25 states and the District of Columbia and is at risk of being severely limited or prohibited in twenty-six states and three territories.
States Where Abortion Is Protected
Expanded Access
The “Expanded Access” category means that the right to abortion is protected by state statutes or state constitutions, and other laws and policies have created additional access to abortion care.
Protected
Moving across the spectrum, the “Protected” category means that the right to abortion is protected by state law but there are limitations on access to care
States Where Abortion Is Not Protected
Not Protected
The “Not Protected” category means that abortion may continue to be accessible in these states and territories, but would be unprotected by state and territory law. In some of these states, it is unclear whether the legislature would enact a ban now that Roe has been overturned, but concern is warranted.
Hostile
The “Hostile” category means that these states and territories have expressed a desire to prohibit abortion entirely. These states and territories are extremely vulnerable to the revival of old abortion bans or the enactment of new ones, and none of them has legal protections for abortion.
Illegal
Finally, after the Supreme Court overruled Roe v. Wade, states that ban abortion entirely and enforce those bans through criminal penalties are characterized as “Illegal.”
What Did Roe v. Wade Protect Besides Abortion?
Since Roe, the Supreme Court has repeatedly reaffirmed that the Constitution protects for abortion as an essential liberty, which is tied to other liberty rights to make personal decisions about family, relationships, and bodily autonomy. It’s important to understand all of the Rights the Roe v. Wade had protected before it was recently overturned.
Roe v. Wade was Overturned and Reproductive Rights are At Risk
By overturning Roe v. Wade, which for nearly 50 years protected the federal Constitutional right to abortion, the the Supreme Court gave states total leeway to restrict abortion or prohibit it all together. Almost half the states are likely to enact new laws as restrictive as possible or seek to enforce current, unconstitutional laws prohibiting abortion. We are seeing states divide into abortion deserts, where it is illegal to access care, and abortion havens, where care continues to be available. Millions of people living in abortion deserts, mainly in the South and Midwest, are forced to travel to receive legal care, which results in many people simply being unable to access abortion for a variety of financial and logistical reasons. It is critical that “Not Protected” states create a state right to abortion, and that the “Protected” states enact laws and policies that move them into “Expanded Access.”
References
- Bonnie Steinbock, Preventing Sex-Selective Abortions in America: A Solution in Search of a Problem, The Hasting Center (2017) ↩︎
- See, e.g., ACOG, Increasing Access to Abortion (Nov. 2014, reaffirmed 2019); National Abortion Federation, Clinical Policy Guidelines for Abortion Care (2018)
↩︎ - See, e.g., Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 22, § 1598(1). Law was amended to allow physician assistants and advanced practice nurses to also perform abortions. See H.P. 922, 129th Leg., 1st Reg. Sess. (Me. 2019); Wash. Rev. Code § 9.02.110; Wash. Att’y Gen. Op 2004 No. 1 (2004); Wash. Att’y Gen. Op 2019 No. 1 (2019). ↩︎
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