This fact sheet was written by Kimya Forouzan. It was edited by Ian Lague.
Parental involvement in a minor’s decision to have an abortion is required in most US states, a set of laws that can substantially restrict minors’ access to care. These states typically require the consent or notification of only one parent, usually 24 or 48 hours before the abortion, but a handful of states require the involvement of both parents. Some states require the minor and a parent to provide government-issued identification to the abortion provider. In several other states, the parent must also provide proof of parenthood or submit a notarized form to the provider. Several states allow other adults to fulfill the parental involvement requirement or allow the health care provider to waive the requirement, though some states allow this only under specified circumstances.
Most state parental involvement requirements include a judicial bypass procedure that allows a minor to receive court approval for an abortion without their parents’ knowledge or consent, in accordance with US Supreme Court decision Bellotti v. Baird. Some states require judges to use specific criteria when determining whether to grant a waiver of parental involvement. This sometimes involves the unusually strict legal standard of “clear and convincing evidence” to determine whether a minor is sufficiently mature and the abortion is in their best interest prior to waiving the parental involvement requirement. Additionally, most states allow for exceptions to parental involvement requirements in case of medical emergency and some include either an exception, or a basis for judicial bypass, if a minor is determined to have experienced abuse, assault, incest or neglect. Finally, all 12 states that ban abortion retain parental involvement laws, although these policies are generally not enforced unless an abortion is being provided under an exception to the ban.