Changeflow GovPing Government & Legislation Federal Funding to Crisis Pregnancy Centers
Routine Notice Added Final

Federal Funding to Crisis Pregnancy Centers

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Published April 1st, 2026
Detected April 1st, 2026
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Summary

The GAO reviewed federal funding to crisis pregnancy centers (CPCs) from fiscal years 2018 through 2024. The Department of Health and Human Services directly obligated at least $34 million in federal funds across 16 CPCs for reproductive health-related services. The total amount of federal funding to CPCs remains unknown due to challenges identifying these organizations in government spending data.

What changed

The GAO conducted a Q&A review examining federal funds awarded to crisis pregnancy centers (CPCs) from 2018-2024. The report found that HHS obligated at least $34 million to 16 CPCs for reproductive health-related services including pregnancy testing, education, and infant supplies. However, this likely underestimates total obligations because CPCs are not easily identified in USAspending.gov compared to other organizations like hospitals. No standard definition of CPCs exists, and estimates of total CPCs in the U.S. range from 2,400 to 2,800.

The report is informational and does not mandate specific compliance actions or establish new regulatory requirements. Healthcare organizations and HHS grantees reviewing this report should note that CPCs are generally nonprofit, faith-based organizations that do not perform or refer clients for abortion services but encourage parenting and adoption. The GAO's findings may inform future discussions about transparency in federal grant awards and tracking of reproductive health-related funding.

Source document (simplified)

GAO-26-108137 Published: Mar 02, 2026. Publicly Released: Apr 01, 2026.

Fast Facts

Crisis pregnancy centers provide certain free or low-cost services. These include pregnancy testing, education, and infant supplies. They also encourage adoption as an alternative to abortion. These centers are usually nonprofit organizations funded by private sources, but some receive federal dollars.

This Q&A reviews federal funds awarded to these centers from 2018-2024. While the total amount is unknown because these organizations are not easy to identify in government spending data, we did find that $34 million was awarded by the Department of Health and Human Services to 16 such centers.

Infant supplies available at a crisis pregnancy center

A crisis pregnancy center room with infant supplies, such as clothing, toys, and diapers.

Highlights

What GAO Found

The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) provides grant awards to organizations that support its mission to enhance the health and well-being of all Americans. This includes funding to engage in reproductive health-related activities, such as pregnancy testing and education that crisis pregnancy centers (CPC) offer. CPCs, also called pregnancy help organizations or pregnancy resource centers, are generally nonprofit, faith-based organizations that provide certain reproductive health-related services, encourage parenting and adoption, and do not perform or refer clients for abortion services.

GAO found there is no standard definition of a CPC, and differing perspectives exist regarding their characteristics and total number. For example, in 2025, stakeholder estimates in the U.S. ranged from about 2,400 to 2,800 CPCs. Stakeholders reported the majority of CPC funding comes from private sources—such as individuals and nongovernmental organizations. The total amount of federal funds obligated to CPCs is unknown because CPCs are not easily identified in USAspending.gov—the official government-wide source of public data on U.S. spending— compared to some other organizations, such as hospitals.

For those CPCs GAO was able to identify, GAO found that HHS directly obligated at least $34 million in federal funds across 16 CPCs to provide reproductive health-related services, from fiscal years 2018 through 2024. However, this analysis likely underestimates total obligations to all CPCs due to challenges identifying these organizations.

Why GAO Did This Study

GAO was asked to review the amount of federal funding that CPCs have received. This report describes what available data show about CPCs and the amount of federal funds obligated to CPCs in the U.S. and its territories from fiscal years 2018 through 2024 for reproductive health-related grants. In general, an obligation is a commitment made by a federal agency that creates a legal liability to make payment.

GAO reviewed HHS grant documentation and analyzed data on HHS grant obligations for fiscal years 2018 through 2024. GAO also interviewed HHS officials and representatives from a nongeneralizable selection of stakeholders with a range of perspectives, such as CPCs and researchers.

For more information, contact Mary Denigan-Macauley at DeniganMacauleyM@gao.gov.

Full Report

Full Report (12 pages)

GAO Contacts

Mary Denigan-Macauley Director Health Care deniganmacauleym@gao.gov

Media Inquiries

Sarah Kaczmarek Managing Director Office of Public Affairs media@gao.gov

Public Inquiries

Contact Us

Topics

Health Care Abortions Reproductive health care Compliance oversight Federal funds Federal spending Grant programs Health care Teenage pregnancy Crisis Grant awards

Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
GAO
Published
April 1st, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor
Document ID
GAO-26-108137

Who this affects

Applies to
Healthcare providers Government agencies
Industry sector
6211 Healthcare Providers 9211 Government & Public Administration
Activity scope
Grant Programs Reproductive Health Services
Geographic scope
United States US

Taxonomy

Primary area
Healthcare
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Federal Spending Reproductive Health Care

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