We conducted a needs assessment with 31 women experiencing homelessness, 81% of whom also reported illicit substance use, in San Francisco from December 2017 – March 2018, and found that a majority of participants would be happy if they found out they were pregnant today. Among women surveyed at a street encampment, one-third used no contraceptive method at last intercourse and one-third used withdrawal; one-third would not be interested in starting any contraceptive method if all methods were available immediately. We also interviewed 26 medical and social service providers, many of whom described believing that clients want better contraceptive access. These results reveal a disconnect between providers’ contraception-focused approach to reproductive healthcare for women experiencing homelessness, and clients’ desire for pregnancy and/or ambivalence towards contraception. In Phase 2 of this grant, we propose to: (1) establish a client and provider stakeholder group to facilitate collaboration and review proposed interventions; (2) develop a reproductive justice-based training and resource toolkit that encourages medical and social service providers to initiate conversations about clients’ pregnancy intentions and link them to relevant services and (3) evaluate the program using pre- and post- training surveys and interviews. We will train 40 service providers on counseling using the reproductive justice-based curriculum, and offer the resource toolkit as a roadmap of reproductive health services around the city for women experiencing homelessness. If the intervention proves successful, we will continue trainings using a train-the-trainer model, and apply for additional funding to evaluate impact on client-centered reproductive health outcomes.