The Battle Over Mifepristone Access in 2026 - Families USA Skip to Main Content

The Battle Over Mifepristone Access in 2026

By Mackenzie Marshall,

03.10.2026

Mifepristone, commonly known as Mife, is a safe and effective medication approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) more than 25 years ago. It has been used by millions of patients in the United States. Its safety and effectiveness are supported by extensive clinical research and decades of real-world data, and reaffirmed by the nation’s leading medical authorities, including the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) and the American Medical Association (AMA).

Despite this overwhelming scientific consensus, Mifepristone is the focus of coordinated political and legal attacks aimed at restricting access to the medication. These challenges could make it more difficult, or even impossible, for patients to obtain timely care. They also raise broader concerns about political interference in the FDA’s longstanding authority to evaluate and approve medications based on science, not political or religious ideology.

FDA Review Under Political Pressure

Given sustained pressure from Republican lawmakers and anti-abortion advocates, some observers have questioned why the FDA has not accelerated its review of Mifepristone.

Understanding the stakes requires recognizing how widely used and broadly supported this medication has become. More than 7.5 million Americans have used Mifepristone, and medication abortion now accounts for more than 60 percent of abortions nationwide. Public opinion surveys consistently show that a majority of Americans support access to medication abortion. Polling indicates that 61% of voters support access to abortion medication, and 59% oppose nationwide restrictions on Mifepristone.

If the FDA were to expedite its safety review, publish its findings, and impose new restrictions — or if one of the ongoing lawsuits were to reach a judgment — the issue could quickly become a central debate during the midterm election cycle. A slower regulatory review process may therefore reflect not only procedural caution but also the political realities surrounding reproductive health policy in an election year.

Administration officials have stated that a review is underway, but that it could take “a year or more to conduct.”

While federal regulators and administration officials weigh their options, state lawmakers across the country continue to pursue other avenues to restrict access to medication abortion. Notably, a number of ongoing lawsuits could have sweeping consequences for patients, providers, and the future of medication regulation in the United States.

Targeted Legal Attacks on Mifepristone Access

There are multiple active lawsuits across the country seeking either to restrict access to Mifepristone or to protect continued access to the medication. These cases, have the potential for sweeping nationwide consequences.

Two lawsuits filed by Louisiana and Missouri seek to reinstate stricter dispensing requirements. If successful, these cases could restore earlier FDA restrictions that prohibited Mifepristone from being dispensed through pharmacies or by mail in any state. Patients would instead have to travel to a doctor’s office, hospital, or clinic to obtain mifepristone, even though it is safer than drugs like Viagra that patients can obtain through telehealth.

These changes would limit the ability of patients in states where abortion is significantly restricted or banned from obtaining the medication by mail from another state where it remains legal. And it goes one step farther to impose the same restriction on patients in states where abortion remains legal and protected. These barriers could force some patients to delay care or forgo it entirely, with particularly significant consequences for people living in rural communities who may not have easy access to a provider or hospital.

A separate lawsuit filed by Florida and Texas takes an even more aggressive approach. That case challenges the FDA’s original approval of mifepristone and subsequent decisions that expanded access to the medication. Unlike the other lawsuits, this case seeks to invalidate the FDA’s approval entirely — effectively ending access to Mifepristone nationwide.

Because medication abortion now accounts for the majority of abortion in the United States, a ruling that revokes approval would eliminate access to one of the most commonly used methods of abortion nationwide and could set a precedent allowing courts to overturn long-standing decisions made by experienced FDA scientists and safety experts.

Congressional Pressure on the FDA

Litigation is not the only threat to Mifepristone access. Members of Congress have also increased pressure on the FDA to revisit the medication’s approval and regulation.

Republicans in the Senate, led by Senator Bill Cassidy, Chair of the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee, have openly criticized the ongoing availability of the medication. In October of 2025, Chair Cassidy and several colleagues sent a letter to the FDA Commissioner objecting to the approval of a new generic form of Mifepristone and calling for a renewed safety review.

In January of 2026, Chair Cassidy also held a congressional hearing focused on the alleged safety concerns related to Mifepristone. Notably, Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrill testified at the hearing as she leads a lawsuit seeking to reinstate in-person dispensing requirements for Mifepristone.

Why This Matters for Health Care

Abortion is essential health care. It allows women and people of reproductive age the freedom to make decisions about their health and their futures — whether ending a pregnancy, managing a miscarriage, or receiving urgent, lifesaving care in an emergency room.

The debate over Mifepristone therefore extends far beyond a single medication. At its core, the conflict raises important questions about the role of scientific expertise in federal regulatory decisions and the extent to which political pressure should influence the approval and availability of medications.

What Can Health Care Advocates Do?

Policy and legal developments are evolving quickly. Health care advocates can play an important role in monitoring these developments and communicating their impact to their networks.

Stay Informed

Speak Out

Your voice matters! Ahead of the midterm elections and any further Congressional or administrative action:

  • Speak with your U.S. Senators and Representative to explain how changes to Mifepristone access would affect patients, providers, and your state’s health care system.
  • Hold your members of Congress accountable through coordinated letter campaigns, social media engagement, and direct outreach to congressional staff.
  • Add reproductive health priorities, including access to medication abortion, to your organization’s broader health policy agendas.
  • Encourage individuals in your network to share their experiences with trusted organizations, like your own organization or Families USA, so that their voices can be amplified through social media, advocacy materials, and outreach to members of Congress, while maintaining their privacy.

Broaden the Frame

This fight extends beyond a single medication. At its core, the debate raises fundamental questions about the role of scientific expertise in the federal regulatory process. When speaking publicly, emphasize the broader implications, including:

  • The impact on the FDA’s gold standard approval process and what political interference could mean for other medications that we all rely on.
  • The downstream effects on our health care systems and the ongoing affordability crisis.
  • The tension between sweeping federal or judicial action and the statement made by the Supreme Court Justices through the Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization decision, which positioned abortion regulation as an individual state-level decision. The outcome of these legal and political challenges could shape not only the future of abortion access in the United States but also the integrity of the nation’s science-based drug approval process.