Free contraception policy sharply reduces patient costs in B.C., especially for young adults

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by University of British Columbia

edited by Sadie Harley, reviewed by Andrew Zinin

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Researchers at UBC found that B.C.'s decision to provide universal, no-cost prescription contraception sharply reduced what patients pay, with the largest financial gains for people in their 20s. Unaffordable contraception is linked to higher rates of unintended pregnancy, which carries significant consequences for health, education and economic equality.

Published in JAMA Health Forum, the study is the first to quantify patient cost impacts after B.C. introduced free prescription contraception in April 2023.

The highest payers gain the most

Before the policy, the pill averaged about $25 per month, while IUDs ranged from $75 to more than $500 up front—and for long-term pill users, lifetime costs could reach $10,000.

Nearly 40% of prescription contraception was not covered by insurance, but was paid out of pocket by patients—the highest rate in Canada and well above most other prescription drugs. Among young adults, that figure was even higher at about 45%. After implementation, their out-of-pocket share fell by roughly 33 percentage points.

Across all patient groups, the share of prescriptions with any patient cost dropped to under 10% and to 5% for prescription contraceptives that were fully covered.

Two years later, patient spending was 83% lower than expected, translating to average savings of $43 per contraceptive user per year.

"People in their 20s are often in a coverage gap. They're off a parent's plan but not yet in jobs with benefits," said lead author Dr. Elizabeth Nethery, a postdoctoral researcher at UBC's faculty of pharmaceutical sciences. "This policy was particularly important for this group, who were most likely to be paying out of pocket."

System costs stable as access expands

The study analyzed pharmacy data from all 10 provinces, using jurisdictions without universal coverage as a comparison. While patient costs fell sharply, total contraceptive spending across patients, insurers and the public system remained essentially unchanged after two years. Researchers also found increased uptake of long-acting reversible contraceptives, including IUDs and implants.

"Universal coverage works," said senior author Dr. Laura Schummers, an assistant professor at UBC. "Removing cost barriers increased uptake of the most effective methods, which helps reduce unintended pregnancy and inequality—adding to strong evidence that universal contraception coverage is essential in Canada."

In Canada, roughly two out of five pregnancies are unintended, disproportionately affecting people with fewer financial resources.

Policy momentum across Canada

Manitoba introduced a similar program in October 2024, with early results consistent with B.C.'s. At the federal level, Canada passed pharmacare legislation in 2024 committing to public coverage of contraception, although implementation agreements currently involve only three provinces and one territory.

Publication details

Universal free contraception policy impacts on out-of-pocket payments and contraception costs, JAMA Health Forum (2026). DOI: 10.1001/jamahealthforum.2026.1269

Journal information: JAMA Health Forum

Key medical concepts

Contraceptive AgentsPregnancy, UnplannedIntrauterine Devices

Clinical categories

Reproductive healthObstetrics & gynecologyWomen's health Provided by University of British Columbia Who's behind this story?

Sadie Harley

BSc Life Sciences & Ecology. Microbiology lab background with pharmaceutical news experience in oil, gas, and renewable industries. Full profile →

Andrew Zinin

Master's in physics with research experience. Long-time science news enthusiast. Plays key role in Science X's editorial success. Full profile →

Citation: Free contraception policy sharply reduces patient costs in B.C., especially for young adults (2026, May 29) retrieved 29 May 2026 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2026-05-free-contraception-policy-sharply-patient.html This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.