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Reproductive Data Privacy Laws in Michigan (2026)

Last updated: March 21, 2026

TLDR

Abortion access is constitutionally protected in Michigan. Period tracker data faces low subpoena risk backed by the state's Proposal 3 constitutional amendment.

DEFINITION

Subpoena
A court order compelling a person or company to produce documents or data. Period tracker apps that store data on their servers can be served with subpoenas — apps that store data only on your device cannot.

DEFINITION

Reproductive data
Health information related to menstrual cycles, pregnancy, fertility, and related symptoms. This data is not protected by HIPAA when held by period tracker apps, meaning standard federal health privacy law does not apply.

DEFINITION

On-device storage
A privacy architecture where all personal data is stored exclusively on the user device and never transmitted to a company server. Because there is no server record, law enforcement subpoenas have nothing to retrieve.

Abortion Law Status in Michigan

Abortion access is constitutionally protected in Michigan following the passage of Proposal 3 in November 2022. Michigan voters approved this constitutional amendment explicitly protecting the right to abortion and reproductive autonomy. The Michigan Reproductive Health Act (2023) then updated state law to align with this new constitutional protection, eliminating the state’s 1931 abortion ban and removing criminal penalties for providers.

Period Tracker Data Risk in Michigan

Period tracker data in Michigan faces low subpoena risk. Abortion is constitutionally protected, state prosecutors are not pursuing reproductive health cases, and Michigan’s legal environment is actively protecting reproductive rights. While Michigan’s comprehensive consumer data privacy law is still in progress, existing health data security requirements provide some baseline protections. Michigan serves as a key destination state for patients from neighboring Indiana and Ohio, where abortion is banned or restricted.

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Michigan — Period Tracker Data Risk Summary
CategoryStatus
Abortion law statusProtected — state law explicitly protects access
Data protection levelModerate — general consumer data privacy law applies
Subpoena risk for period dataLow — protective laws in place

Relevant Laws — Michigan

  • Michigan Proposal 3 (2022)

    Constitutional amendment passed by Michigan voters explicitly protecting the right to abortion and reproductive autonomy in the Michigan Constitution.

  • Michigan Personal Data Privacy Act (Pending as of 2026)

    Michigan has been working toward a comprehensive consumer data privacy law. Health data currently receives some protection under Michigan's existing data security and breach notification laws.

  • Michigan Reproductive Health Act (2023)

    Repealed the 1931 abortion ban and updated Michigan law to align with the new constitutional protection, removing criminal penalties for abortion providers.

What is the abortion law in Michigan in 2026?

Abortion access is constitutionally protected in Michigan. Voters passed Proposal 3 in 2022, explicitly adding reproductive rights to the state constitution.

Does Michigan protect period tracker data?

Michigan's constitutional abortion protections and health data security requirements provide some protection. Subpoena risk from state prosecutors is low given the constitutional protection for abortion rights.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is period tracker data safe in Michigan?
Michigan is a low-risk state for period tracker users. Abortion is constitutionally protected, state prosecutors are not pursuing abortion-related cases, and Michigan has been working toward stronger consumer data privacy legislation.
Does Michigan protect reproductive health data from period tracking apps?
Michigan's constitutional protection for abortion rights and its existing health data security requirements provide some protection. A comprehensive consumer data privacy law is expected to strengthen these protections.
Can other states access period tracker data through Michigan companies?
Michigan does not have a formal shield law as of 2026, but the constitutional protection for abortion rights creates a legal environment hostile to out-of-state abortion investigations.

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