No Taxpayer Funding for Abortion and Abortion Insurance Full Disclosure Act of 2025
Sponsored By: Senator Roger Wicker
Introduced
Summary
Blocks federal funding for abortions and for health plans that cover abortion. The bill would permanently ban the use of federal funds for abortions or for any health plan paid for in whole or in part with federal money and would bar abortions in federal facilities or by federal employees.
Show full summary
- Families and marketplace enrollees would not be able to use premium tax credits or cost‑sharing reductions to buy plans that include abortion. They could purchase a separate abortion-only plan but would receive no federal subsidy for that coverage.
- People who receive care in federal facilities and anyone served by federal employees would not get abortions paid for with federal funds. The bill extends funding restrictions to federal trust funds and the District of Columbia. Exceptions are preserved for rape, incest, and life‑threatening conditions.
- Employers and insurers would face new rules. Plans that include abortion would be excluded from the small employer health insurance credit. Qualified health plans and marketplace materials would have to prominently disclose whether they cover abortion and any separate surcharge for that coverage.
Your PRIA Score
Personalized for You
How does this bill affect your finances?
Sign up for a PRIA Policy Scan to see your personalized alignment score for this bill and every other piece of legislation we track. We analyze your financial profile against policy provisions to show you exactly what matters to your wallet.
Bill Overview
Analyzed Economic Effects
4 provisions identified: 0 benefits, 2 costs, 2 mixed.
Ban on federal abortion funding
If enacted, federal funds and federal trust funds would not be allowed to pay for abortions. Federal hospitals and federal health workers would not be able to provide abortions. Federal payment could still be used for abortions after rape or incest or when a doctor certifies the pregnancy threatens life. Federal money would still cover infections, injuries, or disorders caused or worsened by an abortion. The bill would treat some District of Columbia amounts as federal money and would not change other existing federal restrictions.
No premium tax credits for abortion
If enacted, health plans that include abortion coverage would not qualify as "qualified health plans" for the premium tax credit or cost-sharing reductions. That means people could not use the premium tax credit for those plans, except for the rape/incest or life-of-the-mother exceptions. Small employers also could not claim the section 45R small employer credit for plans that include abortion. These rules would apply to plan years beginning after December 31, 2025.
Health plan abortion notices and limits
If enacted, multi-State qualified health plans sold on Exchanges could not include coverage that federal funds are barred from paying for, starting with plan years after December 31, 2025. If enacted, plans that include certain abortion services would have to disclose that coverage at enrollment and show any extra surcharge separately in ads, comparison tools, and benefit summaries. Those notice rules would apply to materials made available more than 30 days after enactment.
Separate abortion coverage with private funds
If enacted, people, employers, insurers, and governments could offer or buy a separate abortion-only policy or a separate plan that includes abortion. Those separate policies must be paid entirely with money that is not federal or from a federal trust fund. You could not use the premium tax credit, advance payments, or Medicaid matching funds to pay the premiums for that separate coverage.
Sponsors & CoSponsors
Sponsor
Roger Wicker
MS • R
Cosponsors
Mike Lee
UT • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
Cynthia Lummis
WY • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
Mike Rounds
SD • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
Eric Schmitt
MO • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
Rick Scott
FL • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
Tim Scott
SC • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
Tim Sheehy
MT • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
Dan Sullivan
AK • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
John Thune
SD • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
Todd Young
IN • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
Bernie Moreno
OH • R
Sponsored 2/3/2025
David McCormick
PA • R
Sponsored 3/14/2025
Jon Husted
OH • R
Sponsored 4/28/2025
Ashley Moody
FL • R
Sponsored 9/16/2025
James Lankford
OK • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
Cindy Hyde-Smith
MS • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
Jim Banks
IN • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
John Barrasso
WY • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
Marsha Blackburn
TN • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
John Boozman
AR • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
Katie Britt
AL • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
Ted Budd
NC • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
Shelley Capito
WV • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
Bill Cassidy
LA • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
John Cornyn
TX • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
Tom Cotton
AR • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
Kevin Cramer
ND • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
Mike Crapo
ID • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
Ted Cruz
TX • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
John Curtis
UT • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
Steve Daines
MT • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
Joni Ernst
IA • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
Deb Fischer
NE • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
Lindsey Graham
SC • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
Chuck Grassley
IA • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
Bill Hagerty
TN • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
Josh Hawley
MO • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
John Hoeven
ND • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
Ron Johnson
WI • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
James Justice
WV • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
John Kennedy
LA • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
Roger Marshall
KS • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
Sen. McConnell, Mitch [R-KY]
KY • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
Jerry Moran
KS • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
Markwayne Mullin
OK • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
Pete Ricketts
NE • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
James Risch
ID • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
Thomas Tillis
NC • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
Tommy Tuberville
AL • R
Sponsored 1/22/2025
Roll Call Votes
No roll call votes available for this bill.
View on Congress.govTake It Personal
Get Your Personalized Policy View
Start a Free Government Policy Watch to see how policy affects your household, then upgrade to PRIA Full Coverage for year-round monitoring.
Already have an account? Sign in