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how late can you have an abortion in california

In California, abortion is legal later in pregnancy than in many other states, but there is a key cutoff: you generally cannot have an abortion after fetal viability , which is usually around 24 weeks of pregnancy, except in specific medical situations.

Below is a clear breakdown, plus some context and cautions.

Basic legal cutoff

  • California law protects the right to have an abortion before fetal viability.
  • Fetal viability is not a fixed week in the statute; it’s a medical judgment about when a fetus could survive outside the womb with medical support, typically around 24 weeks (sometimes 24–26 weeks).
  • After viability, abortion is allowed only when necessary to protect the life or health of the pregnant person , based on a physician’s clinical judgment.

So, in practical terms:

  • Up to about 24 weeks : Abortion is generally legal on request, subject to clinical and facility rules.
  • After about 24 weeks : You usually must have a serious medical indication (life‑ or health‑related) for a legal abortion, and this is decided case‑by‑case by qualified clinicians.

Medication vs. later procedures

  • Medication abortion (the “abortion pill,” usually mifepristone plus misoprostol) is typically used up to 10–11 weeks of pregnancy, depending on medical guidelines and the provider.
  • After that, abortion is usually done by procedural/surgical methods (such as dilation and evacuation) and may be offered into the second trimester and near viability, depending on the clinic’s gestational limits and expertise.

Each provider can set its own maximum gestational age (for example, some clinics may only provide care up to 12, 16, 20, or 23–24 weeks), even though state law allows abortion through viability.

Recent protections and trends

  • California has strengthened protections for abortion access in recent years, including adding explicit abortion rights to the state constitution (Prop 1, 2022).
  • Newer laws also focus on privacy and safety , like shielding data related to reproductive health care and supporting access to medication abortion, including AB 260 (2025), which expands protections around abortion medications and providers.
  • Additional bills (such as AB 1242 and related measures) aim to protect patients and providers in California from investigations or penalties by other states for legal abortions obtained in California.

These trends mean that, as of 2025–2026, California remains one of the most protective states for abortion access, within the viability/medical‑need framework.

What this means if you’re pregnant now

If you’re trying to understand “how late” in a real, personal situation, there are three separate questions:

  1. How far along is the pregnancy?
    • You need an ultrasound or at least a medical dating assessment to know your gestational age.
  2. What options are available at that gestational age?
    • Early: medication abortion may be an option.
    • Later: procedure in a clinic or hospital, with fewer locations as the weeks increase.
  1. Are there medical issues that could qualify after viability?
    • Serious risks to your life or health, or certain severe fetal conditions, may be relevant after viability, but this is very fact‑specific and must be evaluated by specialists.

Because clinics and hospitals each have their own limits and screening, the practical “latest” date can be earlier than what the law theoretically allows.

If you might be close to the limit

Time matters a lot if you are in the later second trimester. Consider:

  • Contacting a California abortion clinic or major hospital system and asking:
    • How far in pregnancy they provide care.
    • What they require for later‑gestation abortions (referrals, records, insurance, payment).
  • Reaching out to reputable organizations (like major Planned Parenthood health centers in California or well‑known reproductive health clinics) for factual, non‑judgmental counseling.
  • If you are from another state, asking specifically about:
    • Travel logistics.
    • Costs.
    • Any help with support resources; California has taken steps to protect out‑of‑state patients who come for legal abortions.

An example: someone at 13 weeks in Los Angeles could usually access either medication or procedural abortion at multiple clinics, while someone at 23 weeks might need a referral to a smaller set of high‑specialty providers or hospital‑based services, and at 26+ weeks would likely only qualify if there’s a serious medical indication, determined by specialists.

Important safety note

Because abortion law and clinic practices can change and are very time‑sensitive to your exact gestational age, you should:

  • Confirm details directly with a licensed health‑care provider or clinic in California.
  • Avoid relying solely on political forums, social media, or non‑medical blogs for decisions, though they can give general background.

If you’re personally facing this decision, consider talking both to a medical provider and, if you wish, a legal‑aid or reproductive‑rights organization in California so you fully understand your rights and the time frames that apply in your exact situation.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.