Planned Parenthood Reports Financial Loss
Planned Parenthood’s latest annual report indicates that the organization has faced monetary challenges, reporting a loss even as it continued to receive significant taxpayer funding.
In the fiscal year 2024-2025, the group’s expenses outpaced its income for the first time in several years, leading to a net loss of $29.3 million. Notably, during this same period, abortion providers garnered more than $2.14 billion in total revenue, which included $832 million from government contracts, grants, and Medicaid reimbursements. This data dates back to 2024, and the national figures were compiled prior to the passage of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which resulted in the loss of Medicaid funding for the organization.
Since Congress cut Medicaid funding, nearly twenty family planning clinics have shut down, as reported by various outlets.
The report also noted that taxpayer funds allocated to Planned Parenthood increased to $39.8 million for the fiscal year 2024-2025, marking an approximate 50% rise since 2014. Meanwhile, while many other services saw a decline, the number of abortions performed reached a record high of 434,450, an increase from 402,200 the previous year.
In spite of its financial losses, the organization highlighted that it had assisted over 12,200 patients with $3.7 million aimed at removing barriers to abortion care, such as transportation, lodging, and meals. Additionally, resources were directed towards legal battles, including opposition to changes in teen pregnancy prevention programs and involvement in the Supreme Court case of Medina v. South Atlantic Planned Parenthood.
As of now, Planned Parenthood has not provided a comment on these developments.
A Supreme Court ruling in June 2025 enabled states to eliminate Medicaid funding for family planning, a decision influenced by the court’s 2022 overturning of Roe v. Wade.
The organization allocated approximately $56.9 million for advocacy and an additional $61.2 million for public policy activities. In March 2025, the Trump administration declared an extension of funding for family planning through the administration’s Title X subsidies for another year, a move criticized by pro-life groups. The Department of Health and Human Services is currently working on new rules that would restrict funding to entities that perform abortions.
Missouri Republican Senator Josh Hawley expressed his concerns regarding the decision to continue Title X funding, which he argues supports organizations like Planned Parenthood that conduct numerous abortions each year.





