Prior to the Dobbs decision, studies reported that the majority of patients seeking abortion care were interested in initiating a contraceptive method at their abortion visit. However, not all patients were able to obtain a method, particularly those experiencing economic hardships. Information on post-abortion contraceptive preferences following Dobbs is lacking, and preferences among pregnant people traveling from abortion ban states may not mirror prior reports, given the numerous logistical and financial hurdles they need to overcome to obtain care. In the proposed project, we will leverage the existing infrastructure of an ongoing prospective mixed methods study and survey a diverse sample of 600 abortion patients who traveled from abortion ban to protected access states to quantitatively assess their preferences for getting contraceptive information and initiating a method at their abortion visit; we will also purposively sample 40 participants for in-depth interviews to explore reasons underlying patient preferences for contraceptive care at the time of their abortion and interest in other strategies that may meet their needs. This study is informed by conversations with our project advisory panel and our team’s prior research on people’s preferences for post-abortion contraceptive care in restrictive settings before Dobbs. Our findings can be used to tailor the timing and content of contraceptive information shared at patients’ abortion visits and develop practice and policy strategies that can reduce barriers to desired care and support patients’ reproductive autonomy.