Birth control, as you may have noticed, is under the microscope on Capitol Hill. And access to affordable birth control is under heightened threat since the the House of Representatives passed the American Health Care Act (AHCA), which would end the Affordable Care Act's guarantee of no-copay birth control and other women's health care.

To estimate exactly how much birth control methods could cost you out-of-pocket, health care transparency company Amino analyzed a database of over nine billion health claims from 225 million Americans. Spoiler alert: The findings aren't pretty.

Amino found that an IUD could run you around $1000, depending on the brand (the median estimate for Mirena is $1,111, while Skyla cost cost around $983 and Paragard around $1,045). IUDs are one of the safest and most effective birth control methods there are, and research shows women’s health care providers use them more than any other method — and so making them inaccessible for women who want them seems like a very bad call.