Poll Finding

Women’s Views of Abortion Access and Policies in the Dobbs Era: Insights From the KFF Health Tracking Poll

Published: Apr 5, 2024

Findings

Nearly two years after the Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization Supreme Court ruling overturned Roe v. Wade, eliminating federal constitutional protections for abortion, abortion is banned in 14 states and limited by gestational limits in 11 others. The latest polling from KFF finds that women in states where abortion is banned are more likely to report personal connections to people who have had difficulty accessing abortion services since the overturn of Roe. Recent research has documented that many women who live in states where abortion is banned have traveled to other states to secure abortions. This can be costly and require them to take time off from work, find childcare, and in some cases make multiple visits to get abortion services. There have also been reports of women who have been denied abortions even though they meet the state standards for exemptions. Previous reporting from the KFF Health Tracking Poll examines women’s views on abortion policy including by partisanship, which is one of the strongest predictors of these views. This analysis examines women’s views by geography—specifically whether they live in a state where abortion is currently banned, limited, or legal.

One in Seven Women in States With Abortion Bans Say They or Someone They Know Has Had Difficulty Accessing an Abortion

Eight percent of women overall, rising to one in seven (14%) women of reproductive age (ages 18 to 49), say they or someone they know has had difficulty accessing an abortion due to restrictions in their state since Roe was overturned. Women living in states where abortion is banned are twice as likely to report knowing someone who had difficulty accessing an abortion compared to women living in states where abortion is limited or legal. One in seven (14%) women living in states where abortion is banned say they or someone they know has struggled to access an abortion due to restrictions on abortions in their state, including one in five (21%) women ages 18-49 living in these states. Fewer women in states where abortion is limited by gestational periods (6%) or in states where abortion is legal past 22 weeks of gestation (7%) say they or someone they know has experienced such difficulties.

One in Seven Women in States With Abortion Bans Know Someone Who Has Had Difficulty Accessing an Abortion Post-Roe

While there are some small differences in levels of support for abortion restrictions between women living in states where abortion is banned and those living in other states, majorities of women across states—including in those with abortion bans—think abortion should be legal in all or most cases and support a range of policies that protect abortion access.

Regardless of whether abortion in their state is banned, restricted, or legal, a majority of women think abortion should be legal in all or most cases, including two-thirds (67%) of women in states where abortion is banned and seven in ten (71%) in states where abortion is limited by gestational limits. A larger majority (81%) of women in states where abortion is currently legal say abortion should be legal in all or most cases. One in four women living in states where abortion is banned think abortion should be “illegal in most cases,” as do one in five women living in states where abortion is limited by gestational limits (19%) and women living in states where abortion is legal (17%). A small share of women, regardless of their state’s laws, say abortion should be “illegal in all cases” (8% of women living in states where abortion is banned, 10% in states with limited abortion access, 2% in states with legal abortions available).

A Majority of Women in States Where Abortion Is Banned Say Abortion Should Be Legal in All or Most Cases

A majority of women, regardless of the abortion laws in their state, support laws such as protecting abortion access for women experiencing pregnancy-related emergencies such as miscarriages, protecting the right to travel to get an abortion, and guaranteeing a federal right to abortion.

Regardless of the type of abortion restrictions in their state, fewer than half of women support laws that restrict or criminalize abortion access, though there are some variations in the level of support for different policies. Among women living in states where abortion is banned, just under half support establishing a federal 16-week ban on abortions (45%), and four in ten support prohibiting clinics that receive federal funding from providing abortions or referring patients to abortion providers (40%) or making it a crime for health care providers to mail abortion pills to state with abortion bans (38%). One-third support a national ban on mifepristone, the abortion medication (33%).

Fewer women in states where abortion is legal support establishing a federal ban on abortion at 16 weeks (33% vs. 45% among women in states where abortion is banned), likely reflecting underlying political differences between women who live in these types of states. In fact, four in ten (38%) women living in states where abortion is banned or limited either are or lean Republican, compared to about three in ten (28%) women living in states where abortion is legal. The largest predictor of support for these policies is political partisanship, even among women. For a further exploration on these partisanship differences, see previous reporting on this survey.

A Majority of Women in States Where Abortion Is Banned Support Laws Protecting Access to Abortion

The issue of abortion access is likely to emerge in multiple forms in the November 2024 election. A number of states are moving forward with ballot initiatives to protect abortion rights at the state level. In addition, KFF polling shows that one in eight voters (12%) say abortion is the most important issue to their vote, largely comprised of adults who say abortion should be legal and support protections for abortion access. Notably, one in five women of reproductive age in states where abortion is banned say that either they or someone they personally know has had difficulty obtaining an abortion. Support for abortion protections including a federal guarantee to the right to abortion is robust among women, regardless of where they reside. While substantial minorities of women in states with abortion bans support some restrictions on abortion access, two-thirds of women living in these states think abortion should be legal in all or most cases, suggesting a disconnect between what women in these states support and the policies their state lawmakers have enacted.

Methodology

This KFF Health Tracking Poll was designed and analyzed by public opinion researchers at KFF. The survey was conducted February 20-28,2024, online and by telephone among a nationally representative sample of 1,316 U.S. adults in English (1,226) and in Spanish (90). The sample includes 1,036 adults (n=51 in Spanish) reached through the SSRS Opinion Panel either online (n=1,011) or over the phone (n=25). The SSRS Opinion Panel is a nationally representative probability-based panel where panel members are recruited randomly in one of two ways: (a) Through invitations mailed to respondents randomly sampled from an Address-Based Sample (ABS) provided by Marketing Systems Groups (MSG) through the U.S. Postal Service’s Computerized Delivery Sequence (CDS); (b) from a dual-frame random digit dial (RDD) sample provided by MSG. For the online panel component, invitations were sent to panel members by email followed by up to three reminder emails.

Another 280 (n=39 in Spanish) interviews were conducted from a random digit dial telephone sample of prepaid cell phone numbers obtained through MSG. Phone numbers used for the prepaid cell phone component were randomly generated from a cell phone sampling frame with disproportionate stratification aimed at reaching Hispanic and non-Hispanic Black respondents. Stratification was based on incidence of the race/ethnicity groups within each frame.

Respondents in the phone samples received a $15 incentive via a check received by mail, and web respondents received a $5 electronic gift card incentive (some harder-to-reach groups received a $10 electronic gift card). In order to ensure data quality, cases were removed if they failed two or more quality checks: (1) attention check questions in the online version of the questionnaire, (2) had over 30% item non-response, or (3) had a length less than one quarter of the mean length by mode. Based on this criterion, no cases were removed.

The combined cell phone and panel samples were weighted to match the sample’s demographics to the national U.S. adult population using data from the Census Bureau’s 2023 Current Population Survey (CPS), September 2021 Volunteering and Civic Life Supplement data from the CPS, and the 2023 KFF Benchmarking survey with ABS and prepaid cell phone samples. The demographic variables included in weighting for the general population sample are sex, age, education, race/ethnicity, region, civic engagement, frequency of internet use, political party identification by race/ethnicity, and education. The sample of registered voters was weighted separately to match the U.S. registered voter population using parameters above plus recalled vote in the 2020 presidential election by county quintiles grouped by Trump vote share. Both weights account for differences in the probability of selection for each sample type (prepaid cell phone and panel). This includes adjustment for the sample design and geographic stratification of the cell phone sample, within household probability of selection, and the design of the panel-recruitment procedure.

The margin of sampling error including the design effect for the full sample is plus or minus 3 percentage points and for registered voters is plus or minus 4 percentage points. Numbers of respondents and margins of sampling error for key subgroups are shown in the table below. For results based on other subgroups, the margin of sampling error may be higher. Sample sizes and margins of sampling error for other subgroups are available by request. Sampling error is only one of many potential sources of error and there may be other unmeasured error in this or any other public opinion poll. KFF public opinion and survey research is a charter member of the Transparency Initiative of the American Association for Public Opinion Research.

For this report, states are grouped into three categories: states where abortion is banned, states with gestational limits between 6 and 22 weeks LMP, and states where abortion is legal beyond 22 weeks LMP. For more information on state categorizations, see KFF’s Abortion in the United States Dashboard.

GroupN (unweighted)M.O.S.E.
Total1,316± 3 percentage points
Total women686± 5 percentage points
Women in states where abortion is banned (14 states)177± 10 percentage points
Women in states where abortion is limited (11 states)192± 9 percentage points
Women in states where abortion is legal (25 states and DC)309± 7 percentage points
 
Women ages 18-49380± 7 percentage points