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Family Planning

Young Woman

Michigan's Family Planning Program provides high quality reproductive health care to women, men, and teens at low or no-cost. Family Planning is a public health service that helps individuals and families to plan for their desired family size and spacing of children or to prevent an undesired pregnancy.

Find a Clinic

Family Planning Services

What Family Planning Services are Available?

  • Information on birth control and sexual health
  • Help choosing the birth control method that best fits your life
  • Help planning a healthy pregnancy when you want a baby
  • Pregnancy testing and counseling
  • Testing and treatment for sexually transmitted infections (STIs)
  • Preventive health exams to screen for cancer or other health issues

 

Family Planning Services are Voluntary, Confidential, and Affordable.

  • Services are charged based on your ability to pay
  • You can use your insurance, including Medicaid

 

Happy couple holding a baby

Additional Resources

Find a Family Planning Clinic

Enter your city, state, or zip code to find the Family Planning clinic nearest you.

Sexually Transmitted Infections

Protect yourself from sexually transmitted infections.

Birth Control

There is no single "best" method of birth control. Choosing a method that fits for you at this time in your life is a personal decision.

Healthy Pregnancy

Family planning clinics help women and men protect their health, decide if or when they want children (or more children), and plan for a healthy pregnancy when they are ready.

Information for Providers

Essential program documents and resources for Family Planning providers.

What is Title X?

Federal Title X funding is intended to provide affordable family planning services and reproductive health care options.

For more information about Michigan's Family Planning Program, contact MDHHS-ReproductiveHealthUnit@michigan.gov.

 

Acknowledgement of federal funding: The Michigan Department of Health and Human Services Family Planning Program is supported by the Office of Population Affairs (OPA) of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) as part of a financial award totaling $20.7 million with $7.6 million funded by OPA/OASH/HHS and $13.1 million funded by other source(s). This website is supported as part of this financial assistance award. The contents are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent the official views of, nor an endorsement, by OPA/OASH/HHS, or the U.S. Government. For more information, please visit: https://opa.hhs.gov/.