• Due to preexisting laws, 13 states have limited or banned abortion following the Supreme Court ruling – or will do so shortly – including Kentucky, Utah and West Virginia.
  • Sixteen states, including California and New York, and the District of Columbia have laws that protect the right to an abortion, according to the Guttmacher Institute.
  • In some states where laws are unclear, such as Arizona and Wisconsin, abortion providers have ceased offering procedures as a precaution to avoid criminal liability.

The Supreme Court’s landmark decision to overturn Roe v. Wade continued to reverberate through the nation on Saturday, as abortion laws are rapidly changing in numerous states.

The reversal on Roe now means Americans’ access to abortion depends primarily on where they live. And it will be up to the states to regulate where and how their citizens can access an abortion.

The historic news prompted abortion-rights activists to immediately gather outside the Supreme Court and throughout the nation. Liberal politicians quickly pushed back on the high court’s decision while many conservatives celebrated the news. 

All the while, millions of Americans are left to question how the landmark decision will affect them. Here’s what we know: 

What happened Friday after the Supreme Court overturned Roe? 

Due to preexisting laws, 13 states have limited or banned abortion following the decision – or will do so shortly. In some states where laws are unclear, such as Arizona and Wisconsin, abortion providers have ceased offering procedures as a precaution to avoid criminal liability. 

The moves in some states happened nearly instantaneously, although the bans often come with lingering legal questions about their lawfulness or enforcement. For example, the Planned Parenthood Association of Utah has filed a lawsuit against and will soon request a “temporary restraining order against the state’s ban on abortion at any point in pregnancy.”

In Ohio, it’s now illegal for medical professionals to perform an abortion if they can detect a fetal heartbeat, following a ruling from a federal judge.

And Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton on Twitter said, “Abortion is now illegal in Texas,” and declared June 24 should be a holiday moving forward. The state already had limited abortions to within six weeks of pregnancy, and another law set to go into effect in late July will bar abortions in most cases. Planned Parenthood and Whole Woman’s Health clinics in the states also stopped performing abortions on Friday.

And in Alabama attorney general Steve Marshall said on Friday that anyone providing medical abortions within the state should, “immediately cease and desist operations.” 

REACTIONS:Americans divided as they react to Supreme Court overturning Roe

Is abortion legal or illegal in my state? 

The Supreme Court’s decision means the nation will be covered in an evolving patchwork of laws – and changes to those laws are expected to happen at a disorienting pace in coming days.