Planned Parenthood Federation of America aborted a record 434,450 unborn babies during the period covered in its 2024-2025 annual report, released April 7.
The total represents 32,200 more lives lost compared with the 402,200 abortions reported in the 2023-2024 report. The year before that, Planned Parenthood recorded 392,715 abortions. Overall, the organization now accounts for nearly 39% of all abortions in the U.S., according to data cited by National Right to Life.
The latest report — covering services provided primarily from October 2023 through September 2024 — also shows that Planned Parenthood has continued to scale back other health services it touted in the past. From 2023 to 2024, preventive care visits fell by 3.2%, pap tests by 2.5%, and cancer screenings by 8.6%. Breast exams fell to a new low of 162,336, a 15.4% decrease from the previous year.
Planned Parenthood reported a slight increase in adoption referrals — 3,038 in the latest report compared with 2,148 the prior year. Even so, for every adoption referral, Planned Parenthood ended the lives of more than 143 unborn children.
In 2024, Planned Parenthood reported seeing 2.09 million patients and providing more than 9.9 million services. It also reported 320,390 telehealth appointments, a 31% increase from the previous year. While the report did not disclose how many abortion pills the abortion giant dispensed, Live Action estimated that it is responsible for 42% of all chemical abortions in the U.S.
Over the past decade, the number of abortions performed by Planned Parenthood has risen by more than 34%. Meanwhile, cancer screenings declined by more than 42% and prenatal services dropped by more than 55%.
The report also covered fiscal data from July 2024 through June 2025. According to the report, Planned Parenthood received $832 million in government health services reimbursements and grants — about 39% of its total $2.14 billion in revenue. The year before, it reported receiving $792.2 million in taxpayer funding. Since 2014, that funding has increased by 50%.
The report’s release comes after Congress and the Trump administration enacted legislation in July 2025 to block Medicaid reimbursements to Planned Parenthood facilities for a year. The policy is scheduled to take effect in fiscal year 2026 and did not affect the period covered in the latest report. The change could result in the closure of up to 200 of its facilities, Planned Parenthood said.
In a statement responding to the annual report, Students for Life of America President Kristan Hawkins said Planned Parenthood’s decision to quietly release its report during Easter weekend “represents the kind of callousness we expect from a business whose plan for parenthood is selling death for infants in the womb.”
Hawkins also urged Republicans to “wake up and finish the job” of ensuring no more taxpayer dollars fund abortion.
“If the GOP does not act, Planned Parenthood will get a gift on America’s 250th birthday of hundreds of millions in taxpayer dollars,” Hawkins said, “a slap in the face to all those who are actually struggling to make ends meet. Republicans must finish what they started.”