Black Health
Pregnant women Georgia · Georgia Medicaid

Medicaid for pregnant women in Georgia

The number

Georgia Medicaid covers pregnancy-related care up to 220% of the federal poverty line — about $56,800 annual income for a family of three in 2025 — including prenatal, delivery, and postpartum visits plus WIC eligibility.

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What Medicaid covers during pregnancy in Georgia

Georgia Medicaid covers pregnant women up to 220% of the federal poverty line — about $56,800 annual income for a family of three in 2025. Enrollment covers the full pregnancy from the date of application, plus — in most states — presumptive eligibility, which lets a qualified hospital, FQHC, or WIC clinic enroll you on the spot for at least 60 days of temporary coverage while your application is processed. Apply at https://gateway.ga.gov/.

What's covered during pregnancy: all prenatal visits (ACOG recommends 10-15 for a typical pregnancy), ultrasounds, prenatal labs and blood tests, genetic screening, birth classes in most states, labor and delivery (vaginal or c-section), anesthesia, newborn care, and the 6-week postpartum check. Dental and vision are covered for pregnant enrollees in every state regardless of whether they're covered for adults generally. Georgia Medicaid extended postpartum Medicaid coverage to 12 months (effective 2022-07-01), and has a doula Medicaid benefit pending CMS approval.

WIC (the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children) is a separate federal program that every Medicaid-enrolled pregnant woman automatically qualifies for. WIC provides monthly food benefits for pregnant, breastfeeding, and postpartum women and their children through age 5, plus nutrition counseling and breastfeeding support. Apply at your county WIC clinic or at signupwic.com. WIC enrollment does not affect Medicaid enrollment or vice versa.

Finding a prenatal provider who accepts Medicaid: our provider directory filters to Georgia at /providers/ga/, and our FQHC directory for Georgia — every FQHC takes Medicaid and offers sliding-scale fees on a sliding basis for anyone uninsured — is at /clinics/ga/. For Black-serving community-based perinatal organizations, see the "Where to get help" section below. Governor Kemp's Georgia Pathways to Coverage (launched July 2023) is the only work-requirement Medicaid program in the country; as of late 2024 fewer than 4,500 Georgians had enrolled out of an estimated 345,000 who would qualify under full expansion. The Georgia Black Maternal Health Advocacy Network (Ga-BMHAN) pressed the Department of Community Health to open its doula-coverage State Plan Amendment for public comment in 2025.

For Black families

In Georgia, Black pregnant women are roughly three times more likely than white pregnant women to die from pregnancy-related causes, per CDC WONDER state-level mortality data. Medicaid is the single largest payer of Black births in the state. Governor Kemp's Georgia Pathways to Coverage (launched July 2023) is the only work-requirement Medicaid program in the country; as of late 2024 fewer than 4,500 Georgians had enrolled out of an estimated 345,000 who would qualify under full expansion. The Georgia Black Maternal Health Advocacy Network (Ga-BMHAN) pressed the Department of Community Health to open its doula-coverage State Plan Amendment for public comment in 2025.

Where to get help in Georgia

  • Federally Qualified Health Centers in Georgia: every FQHC accepts Medicaid, charges on a sliding scale for the uninsured, and has certified application counselors who can help you apply or renew. See our FQHC directory for this state at /clinics/ga/.
  • Medicaid-accepting providers in Georgia: our provider directory lets you filter to providers in this state. See /providers/ga/.
  • State health profile for Georgia: for state-level health outcomes context (maternal mortality, infant mortality, life expectancy, uninsured rate) by race, see /health/georgia/.
  • Georgia Medicaid consumer help line: 1-877-423-4746 for application help, renewal questions, and general Medicaid inquiries. Ask for an interpreter if you need one; language access is required under Title VI of the Civil Rights Act.
  • Black Mamas Matter Alliance maintains a national directory of Black perinatal organizations at blackmamasmatter.org. Filter to programs serving Georgia.
  • National Health Law Program (NHeLP) doula tracker: up-to-date Medicaid doula coverage map at healthlaw.org/doulamedicaidproject.

References & primary sources

Data refreshed: