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Reproductive Data Privacy Laws in Ohio (2026)

Last updated: March 21, 2026

TLDR

Abortion access is constitutionally protected in Ohio following Issue 1 (2023). Period tracker data faces moderate subpoena risk given weak data privacy protections and ongoing legal tensions.

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 Ohio

Abortion access is constitutionally protected in Ohio following the passage of Issue 1 in November 2023. Ohio voters approved a constitutional amendment explicitly protecting the right to make reproductive decisions, including abortion, overriding a 6-week ban that had been enacted. Despite the constitutional protection, Ohio’s legal environment around abortion remains politically contested, with ongoing debates about the scope and implementation of the amendment.

Period Tracker Data Risk in Ohio

Period tracker data in Ohio faces moderate subpoena risk. While abortion is now constitutionally protected, Ohio has no consumer data privacy law, and the political environment around abortion enforcement remains tense. The moderate risk reflects both the improved legal status and the ongoing uncertainty about how the constitutional amendment will be implemented. Users in Ohio benefit from choosing apps with strong data minimization practices as a precaution.

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Ohio — Period Tracker Data Risk Summary
CategoryStatus
Abortion law statusProtected — state law explicitly protects access
Data protection levelWeak — no specific protection; general consumer protection only
Subpoena risk for period dataMedium — legal landscape uncertain

Relevant Laws — Ohio

  • Ohio Issue 1 Constitutional Amendment (2023)

    Ohio voters approved a constitutional amendment in November 2023 explicitly protecting abortion rights in the Ohio Constitution, overriding a previously enacted 6-week ban.

  • No Comprehensive State Data Privacy Law

    Ohio has not enacted a comprehensive consumer data privacy law as of 2026. Period tracker data is governed only by federal baseline requirements.

What is the abortion law in Ohio in 2026?

Abortion access is constitutionally protected in Ohio following the passage of Issue 1 in November 2023. Voters added explicit abortion rights to the Ohio Constitution, overriding a previously enacted 6-week ban.

Is period tracker data at risk in Ohio?

Period tracker data in Ohio faces moderate subpoena risk. While abortion is now constitutionally protected, Ohio has no consumer data privacy law, and ongoing political tensions create some legal uncertainty around implementation.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is period tracker data safe in Ohio?
Ohio's legal landscape has improved with Issue 1 (2023), which added abortion rights to the state constitution. However, Ohio has no consumer data privacy law, and ongoing legal tensions around implementation create moderate uncertainty.
What did Ohio Issue 1 do for period tracker users?
Issue 1 added abortion rights to the Ohio constitution, making it harder for the state legislature to restrict abortion access. This significantly reduces the risk of new prosecutions. However, it does not directly protect period tracker data.
Does Ohio have any law protecting period tracker data?
No. Ohio has no comprehensive consumer data privacy law. Period tracker data is governed only by federal baseline requirements and app privacy policies.

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