New Poll Shows Nearly Two-Thirds of Americans Reject Unrestricted Abortion
Four years after Roe’s reversal, new Gallup polling suggests that one of the most common narratives being pushed in America may be wrong.
While legacy media continues to focus on growing support for abortion, Gallup’s latest data demonstrates that two-thirds of Americans continue to reject unrestricted abortion and support some legal restrictions on abortion.
According to Gallup’s 2026 survey, 64% of Americans support legal restrictions on abortion, while only 33% support unrestricted abortion.
The 64% is broken down into three categories, including 15% who say abortion should be legal in most circumstances, 32% who believe it should be legal in only a few circumstances and 17% who think it should be illegal in all circumstances.
The march towards full acceptance of unrestricted abortion hasn’t materialized like abortion advocates hoped it would following the Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision in 2022.
What’s even more interesting: Support for the strongest pro-life position seems to be growing. The percentage of Americans who believe abortion should be illegal in all circumstances increased from 13% in 2025 to 17% in 2026.
Gallup’s latest polling also shows a more complex view of how Americans identify on the issue of abortion and the kind of policy they support.
The 2026 survey shows that 53% of Americans identify as pro-choice, while 42% identify as pro-life.
While that data might appear discouraging to the pro-life community, it is curious that even while 53% of Americans call themselves pro-choice, only 33% of respondents support unrestricted abortion. Meaning 20% of those who identified as pro-choice support restrictingabortion.
Those numbers represent millions of Americans who consider themselves pro-choice but still think preborn children deserve at least some legal protections.
The data reveal that Americans who occupy the middle ground on abortion are largely politicalIndependents. Among Independents, 54% identify as pro-choice, yet only 49% say abortion is morally acceptable and just 32% believe it should be legal in all circumstances.
This means many Independents who embrace the pro-choice label do not feel comfortable withunrestricted abortion. As the distinction moves from identity to morality and public policy, abortion support declines. This suggests that many Independent voters hold nuanced views that aren’t fully aligned with the abortion lobby’s push for unrestricted abortion.
Among Independents, 38% identify as pro-life, 40% find abortion to be morally wrong and 63% support either legal restrictions on abortion or making abortion illegal altogether (46% support some restrictions and 17% support making abortion illegal).
Interestingly, these views closely mirror those of Americans overall.
The findings suggest that many Independents who embrace the pro-choice label still support meaningful legal protections for preborn human life.
For some time, Americans have been told that support for abortion is steadily increasing and that legal protections for preborn children are no longer favored by a majority of the public.
Gallup’s latest data tells a different story.
Public opinion remains unsettled, and Americans’ hearts and minds remain open to policies that recognize the humanity and dignity of preborn babies. While many Americans continue to identify as pro-choice, nearly two-thirds support at least some legal restrictions on abortion and reject unrestricted abortion.
For the pro-life movement, this data is a reminder that the debate is far from settled. The work of persuading our fellow Americans on the life issue and building a culture that protects every human life remains as important as ever.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Nicole Hunt, J.D., is an attorney and serves as a writer and spokesperson at Focus on the Family. She provides analysis and advocacy engagement for Christians to promote faith, family, and freedom. Some of the issues she writes and speaks on include life, religious freedom, parental rights, marriage, and gender. Prior to joining Focus on the Family, Nicole practiced employment law specifically advising businesses and ministries on employment policies and practices. Nicole worked in Washington, D.C. as a Legislative Assistant to two Members of Congress. During her time on Capitol Hill, Nicole provided policy analysis and voting recommendations to Members of Congress on a variety of public policy matters, wrote speeches, drafted committee statements and questions, wrote floor statements, produced legislation and amendments to legislation, met and developed networks with constituents and interest groups, and worked on regional projects. In addition, Nicole served as an intern to Former Attorney General Ed Meese in the Center for Legal and Judicial Studies at the Heritage Foundation, provided legal analysis to Americans United for Life, and interned in the Office of Strategic Initiatives at The White House during the George W. Bush Administration. Nicole earned her J.D. from George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School and her Bachelor of Arts in Philosophy and Political Science from Westmont College. Nicole enjoys riding horses and spending time camping and hiking with her family in the great outdoors. Nicole is married to her husband, Jeff, and they have four children. Follow Nicole on Twitter @nicolehunt
Related Posts

Moral Acceptance of Abortion Falls 5 Points
June 12, 2026

FDA Launches Study on Safety of Abortion Pill
June 5, 2026

