
by Emmitt Barry, Worthy News Washington D.C. Bureau Chief
(Worthy News) – The Trump administration has ended federal funding for gender-transition surgeries and cross-sex hormone treatments for transgender inmates in federal prisons, a policy shift officials say will save taxpayers nearly $2 million.
The U.S. Bureau of Prisons (BOP) issued new guidance on Feb. 19 titled “Management of Inmates with Gender Dysphoria,” reversing policies implemented during the Biden administration that required federal prisons to provide and pay for hormone therapy and certain surgical procedures for inmates who identify as transgender.
According to Justice Department figures shared with the Washington Examiner, the previous policy cost the BOP about $1.65 million. Roughly $1.25 million of that total went toward hormone-replacement therapy—including estrogen injections and testosterone-suppressing medications—for inmates housed in federal prisons, halfway houses, or on home confinement. Two gender-transition surgeries performed under the earlier policy cost approximately $400,000 combined.
Under the updated guidelines, prison medical staff will instead emphasize psychotherapy, antidepressant treatment, and care for coexisting mental health conditions. Officials said inmates currently receiving hormone therapy may be placed on medically supervised taper plans to safely reduce dosages.
A Justice Department official told the Washington Examiner the new policy would prevent “almost $2 million” from being spent on treatments the administration views as medically questionable and potentially disruptive within correctional facilities.
The revised policy also eliminates taxpayer-funded “social transitioning” items previously provided at government expense, including wigs, makeup, breast padding, and other gender-related products. Inmates may still purchase such items through prison commissaries but will no longer receive them for free.
The policy change is part of a broader initiative by President Donald Trump aimed at reducing federal spending and reinforcing what the administration describes as “biological truth” in federal policy. Trump previously directed that no federal funds be used to alter a prisoner’s outward appearance to match a preferred gender identity.
The issue gained national attention in 2022 when a federal inmate serving a life sentence became the first federal prisoner to undergo gender-reassignment surgery funded by taxpayers.
Civil rights organizations and LGBTQ advocacy groups have strongly criticized the change, arguing it undermines medical care for transgender inmates. Several legal challenges to the administration’s transgender-related policies are ongoing.
One lawsuit, Kingdom v. Trump, has temporarily blocked portions of the prison policy, though the injunction does not require the Bureau of Prisons to provide gender-transition surgeries.
Justice Department officials maintain the policy does not violate constitutional protections and say savings from the change can be redirected toward medically necessary care for the broader federal inmate population.
Copyright 1999-2026 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.
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