U.S. Supreme Court Issues One-Week Pause on Nationwide Restriction on Abortion and Miscarriage Medication

Anti-abortion politicians’ challenge to mifepristone access will now proceed on the Court’s emergency docket

May 4, 2026 11:15 am

Media Contact
125 Broad Street
18th Floor
New York, NY 10004
United States

WASHINGTON — The U.S. Supreme Court today entered an administrative stay, granting a one-week pause of an order by the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit reinstating a restriction on mail and pharmacy access to mifepristone, a safe and effective medication used in nearly two-thirds of U.S. abortions as well as for early miscarriage care. The case, Louisiana v. U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), will now proceed on the Court’s emergency docket — where the Court will decide whether to allow the Fifth Circuit’s medically unnecessary nationwide restriction to take effect while the litigation proceeds. Doing so would upend how patients obtain this medication all across the country.

“While this is a positive short-term development, no one can rest easy when our ability to get this safe, effective medication for abortion and miscarriage care still hangs in the balance,” said Julia Kaye, senior staff attorney for the Reproductive Freedom Project of the ACLU. “The Supreme Court needs to put an end to this baseless attack on our reproductive freedom, once and for all.”

The stay was requested by two manufacturers of mifepristone following the Fifth Circuit’s ruling reinstating a nationwide requirement that patients obtain mifepristone in person at a health center, rather than by mail or at a pharmacy after receiving care through telemedicine. FDA’s 2021 decision to lift this medically unjustified requirement was based on extensive scientific evidence and endorsed by every leading medical association — but anti-abortion politicians have sought to reinstate this and other restrictions through the federal courts and through a sham FDA review announced by the Trump Administration last year.

Today, more than 1 in 4 people in the U.S. who have an abortion do so using telemedicine. Without this method of care delivery, patients using mifepristone would be forced to travel, sometimes hundreds of miles, to a health center just to pick up a pill, a requirement that leading medical authorities agree has no safety benefit.

While there are other safe and effective medication abortion regimens that may continue to be available by mail and at pharmacies, mifepristone has long been part of the most common and recommended protocol in the United States and is used in a majority of all U.S. abortions today.

The stay will remain in effect until 5 pm. ET on May 11th. The Supreme Court has ordered Louisiana to file its brief by Thursday, May 7 at 5 pm ET.


Learn More About the Issues in This Press Release