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Does Medicaid Cover Abortion? State-by-State Coverage in 2026

May 2, 2026


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Is Medicaid abortion covered? The brief response is it depends on your state. The Hyde Amendment is a rule that prohibits the expenditure of federal Medicaid funds to fund most abortions and it has been in effect since 1977 under the federal law. However, Medicaid is a program that is funded both at federal and state levels, and 21 states already operate state-only funds to fund abortion among Medicaid enrollees outside the limited federal exemptions. The remaining 30 states and the Washington, D.C abide by the Hyde rule.

This guide explains how abortion is covered by Medicaid in 2026, which states cover the procedure, and what you would owe in a state that does not, and how the recent change in Pennsylvania changed the map. This information is based on KFF, the Guttmacher Institute, the National Health Law Program, and CMS.

How Medicaid abortion coverage works

Medicaid is a federally-state health program on people with low incomes. The federal government contributes a significant portion of all Medicaid funds of each state and there are limits to federal funds. The largest abortion-related rule is the Hyde Amendment, an amendment to the federally-funded HHS appropriations bill which has been present since 1977.

Under the Hyde Amendment, federal Medicaid funds can only pay for abortion in three situations:

  • The pregnancy threatens the life of the pregnant person

  • The pregnancy resulted from rape

  • The pregnancy resulted from incest

That's it. Federal Medicaid will not pay any other abortions (such as in case of serious health conditions, fetal anomalies, or even at the demand of the patient).

There is one alternative to this to states. Since Medicaid is shared, a state can pay its own non-federal funds to cover abortions not under the exceptions of Hyde. 

State Medicaid abortion coverage in 2026

State Medicaid abortion coverage falls into three categories.

Category 1: States that use state funds to cover abortion (21 states)

More than the Hyde exceptions, these states finance abortion with their own dollars to cover abortion among Medicaid enrollees. The details on coverage are different, but the outcome remains the same: low-income residents of such states may resort to abortion under the Medicaid coverage.

This group consists of California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Montana, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and Alaska according to KFF April, 2026 tracker.

In 2024, Pennsylvania Medicaid came under abortion coverage following a state Supreme Court decision that invalidated the funding ban in place. It resulted in Pennsylvania becoming the fifth state (since the Dobbs decision) to extend Medicaid abortion coverage (following Colorado, Delaware, Nevada, and Rhode Island).

Category 2: States that follow the Hyde Amendment exactly (about 17 states + DC)

These states allow abortion to remain legal but restrict Medicaid coverage to the three Hyde exceptions only. About 5.5 million women of reproductive age covered by Medicaid live in these states.

This category includes Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Nebraska, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Ohio, South Carolina, Utah, Virginia, Wisconsin, Wyoming, and Washington, D.C. Some of these states allow abortion through 24+ weeks under their own laws, but Medicaid still won't pay outside the Hyde exceptions.

Category 3: States with abortion bans (13 states)

These states permit abortion to be legal but only limit Medicaid coverage to the three Hyde exceptions. These states have 5.5 million women of reproductive age who are covered by Medicaid.

This type covers Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Nebraska, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Ohio, South Carolina, Utah, Virginia, Wisconsin, Wyoming as well as, Washington, D.C. These states permit abortion up to 24+ weeks under their own laws, but Medicaid will continue to not cover it outside of the Hyde exceptions.

Quick reference: state Medicaid abortion coverage

Coverage type

Number of states

Examples

State funds expand Medicaid coverage

21

California, New York, Pennsylvania, Illinois

Hyde-only restrictions

17 + DC

Florida, Michigan, Ohio, Arizona

Total abortion bans (Medicaid moot)

13

Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Tennessee

Does insurance cover abortion if I'm not on Medicaid?

Does insurance cover abortion outside of Medicaid? It depends on the type of plan and the state.

ACA Marketplace plans: Federal law lets states decide whether marketplace plans can cover abortion. Six states do not offer any 2026 marketplace plans that cover abortion at all. Other states require coverage. Plans that include abortion coverage must use non-federal dollars to fund it (a workaround required by the ACA's Hyde-style restrictions).

Employer-sponsored insurance: Most employer plans include abortion coverage, though 10 states have laws restricting what private insurance can cover. Self-funded employer plans (used by most large employers) are generally not subject to state insurance laws.

Medicare and TRICARE: Both follow Hyde Amendment restrictions. Federal employees and military members and their dependents have similarly restricted coverage.

How much does abortion cost without insurance?

How much does abortion cost without insurance varies by type, gestational age, and region. According to Guttmacher Institute data and clinic surveys:

  • Medication abortion (pills) at a clinic: $300 to $800 self-pay

  • Medication abortion via telehealth: $150 to $300 self-pay

  • First-trimester surgical abortion: $500 to $1,500

  • Second-trimester surgical abortion: $1,500 to $3,000+

  • Procedures after 20 weeks: $3,000 to $10,000+

These are the most quoted abortion cost without insurance ranges by most clinics. Costs tend to be more expensive in the states that have fewer providers because of travelling, accommodation and absence of work.

In case you are unable to pay the procedure, abortion funds assist in paying the cost. The National Network of Abortion Funds has a statewide directory. A large number of funds also cover the cost of traveling, staying and child care.

Whenever you need to figure out which costs your plan does and does not cover, eligibility, and coverage overlap, a health companion app such as August AI can be a good way to organize your insurance information, jot down questions to ask your provider, and determine what is and isn’t covered by your plan before you schedule care.

Frequently Asked Questions

Whether Medicaid covers abortion depends entirely on which state you live in. Federal law (the Hyde Amendment) bans federal Medicaid dollars from paying for most abortions, with narrow exceptions for life endangerment, rape, and incest. About 21 states use their own funds to expand coverage beyond those exceptions. Pennsylvania became the most recent in 2024. The other 30 states and D.C. follow Hyde strictly, and 13 states have banned abortion entirely. Abortion costs without insurance run $150 to $300 for telehealth medication abortion and $500 to $1,500 for a first-trimester procedure. If you can't afford care, abortion funds and sliding-scale clinic options exist in most states. Check KFF's tracker or AbortionFinder.org to confirm your state's current coverage rules and find verified providers before booking.

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