The three day waiting period for abortions has no medical basis, but it remains in Irish law as a way to slow women down, second guess their decisions, and keep the idea of abortion as regret firmly in place, writes Roe McDermott.
by Roe McDermott
19th Jan 2026
Ireland likes to tell itself that the abortion debate is over, that Repeal shut down moral panic and state control over women’s bodies, and that whatever is left is just bureaucratic tidying up. The mandatory three day waiting period blows that story apart. It is not a neutral safeguard or a quiet moment for medical reflection. It is a moral speed bump, deliberately placed to remind women that certainty is suspicious, that abortion should feel heavy, and that even in supposedly post Repeal Ireland, reproductive autonomy still comes with strings attached.
This waiting period has never been about medicine. It has always been about mistrust. It rests on the belief that women cannot be relied upon to know their own minds, that they need to be slowed down in case they change them, and that the law should gently but firmly steer them away from abortion if given the chance.
Continued: https://www.image.ie/self/ireland-still-doesnt-trust-women-to-be-sure-about-abortion-979834