Background: Immediate postpartum family planning (IPPFP) helps prevent unintended and closely spaced pregnancies. Despite Ethiopia’s rising facility-based delivery rate and supportive IPPFP policies, the prevalence of postpartum contraceptive use remains low, with little known about disparities in access to IPPFP counseling. We sought to understand if women’s receipt of IPPFP counseling varied by individual and facility characteristics. Methods: We used weighted linked household and facility data from the national Performance Monitoring for Action Ethiopia (PMA-Ethiopia) study. Altogether, 936 women 5–9 weeks postpartum who delivered at a government facility were matched to the nearest facility offering labor and delivery care, corresponding to the facility type in which each woman reported delivering (n = 224 facilities). We explored women’s receipt of IPPFP counseling and individual and facility-level characteristics utilizing descriptive statistics. The relationship between women’s receipt of IPPFP counseling and individual and facility factors were assessed through multivariate, multilevel models. Results: Approximately one-quarter of postpartum women received IPPFP counseling (27%) and most women delivered government health centers (59%). Nearly all facilities provided IPPFP services (94%); most had short- and long-acting methods available (71 and 87%, respectively) and no recent stockouts (60%). Multivariate analyses revealed significant disparities in IPPFP counseling with lower odds of counseling among primiparous women, those who delivered vaginally, and women who did not receive delivery care from a doctor or health officer (all p < 0.05). Having never used contraception was marginally associated with lower odds of receiving IPPFP counseling (p 24 h), membrane leak or rupture (at 12 h), and convulsions or fits. These were assessed as any complications vs. no complications. Facility-level characteristics included availability of IPPFP services, ascertained by asking the facility in-charge “Is immediate postpartum family planning provided at this facility?”. Additional facility characteristics included short- and long-acting method availability, recent stockouts, ratio of monthly deliveries to providers, and presence of family planning guidelines. We defined method availability by whether each of five non-barrier family planning methods appropriate for IPPFP were in-stock and observed on the day of the survey. These included long-acting methods; specifically, implants and non-hormonal intrauterine devices (IUDs), and the following short-acting methods: progesterone-based pills, progestin-based injectables, and emergency contraception [14, 39]. The proportion of women who reported using exclusive breastfeeding as their primary contraceptive method was calculated among women who answered “No” to the question, “Do you plan to use a method of family planning, other than breastfeeding, within a year of giving birth?” Recent method stockout was defined by whether any method was reported out-of-stock at any time in the past 3 months, and if so, which method (short-acting, long-acting, or both). We also examined the ratio of monthly deliveries to providers, as a proxy for caseload volume, as a categorical variable and generated tertiles based on facility distributions. Finally, we explored the presence of national family planning guidelines in the delivery room of each facility. We used descriptive statistics to examine the distribution of women’s sociodemographic and reproductive characteristics (Table 1) and receipt of IPPFP methods, among women who received IPPFP counseling (Table 2). We described facility characteristics in two ways; first by the distribution of characteristics of the 224 linked facilities and second, by the percentage of women who delivered in a facility of each type (Table 3). We assessed the bivariate distributions of IPPFP counseling and each covariate at both levels (Individual, Table Table1;1; Facility, Table Table3).3). We used multivariate, multilevel models to estimate differences in women’s odds of receiving IPPFP counseling by individual and facility-level characteristics, adjusting for clustering of women within the facilities. Our final adjusted model included individual and facility-level covariates driven by theory and conceptual relevance, while also accounting for established confounders of women’s receipt of reproductive health services (i.e. age and urban/rural residence) (Table 4) [40, 41]. We examined model fit by analyzing model fit statistics (i.e., Aikake’s Information Criterion (AIC) values) and assessed collinearity at 0.6 using a correlation matrix for all analytic variables. We excluded wealth from the multivariate analysis due to its high correlation with urban/rural residence (r = 0.749) and religion due to small cell sizes, limiting statistical power. Statistical significance for the adjusted multivariate analysis was set to p < 0.05. All analyses were weighted to reflect the national population of pregnant and postpartum women in Ethiopia and accounted for the complex survey design [42]. All analyses were conducted in StataSE, Version 16 [43]. Sociodemographic and reproductive characteristics of postpartum Ethiopian women who delivered at a government health facility (n = 936)b aAmong women who received at least 1 ANC visit bAll values were weighted to account for the complex survey design Receipt of IPPFP methods or referrals among women who received IPPFP counseling (n = 251a) aUnweighted bWeighted cAmong women who received IPPFP counseling, but did not receive a method or a referral Facility-level (n = 224) and woman-level (n = 936) descriptive characteristics of linked health facilities LARC Long-acting and reversible contraception, SA Short-acting contraception *Represents the design-based chi-squared test between each facility-level characteristic and government facility type (health center/hospital) **Represents the weighted bivariate logistic regression between each woman-level facility characteristic and women’s receipt of IPPFP counseling Adjusted odds of receiving immediate postpartum family planning counseling by women’s individual and facility-level characteristics (n = 936) AOR Adjusted Odds Ratio, LARC Long-acting and reversible contraception, SA Short-acting contraception *p < 0.10, **p < 0.05