June 21 (Reuters) - A small but growing number of companies, including Amazon.com
and Tesla Inc, are rolling out policies to offer benefits to U.S. employees who may
need to access abortion services as some state legislatures impose tighter restrictions.
    An unprecedented leak of a draft opinion earlier this month suggests that the U.S. Supreme
Court is set to vote to overturn the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling, which legalized abortion
nationwide.
    
    Following is a list of companies who have offered their U.S. employees reproductive
healthcare benefits including abortion coverage or travel benefits for out-of-state abortions.
 Company                          Benefit(s) Offered
                                  
 Citigroup Inc                    The bank has started covering travel expenses for employees
                                  who go out of state for abortions because of newly enacted
                                  restrictions in Texas and other places, becoming the first
                                  major U.S. bank to make that commitment.             
 Yelp Inc                         The crowd-sourced review platform will extend its abortion
                                  coverage to cover expenses for its employees and their
                                  dependents who need to travel to another state for abortion
                                  services.             
 Amazon.com                       The second-largest U.S. private employer told employees it
                                  will pay up to $4,000 in travel expenses yearly for
                                  non-life threatening medical treatments, among them
                                  elective abortions.             
 Levi Strauss & CO                The apparel company will reimburse travel expenses for its
                                  full- and part-time employees who need to travel to another
                                  state for healthcare services, including abortions.
                                              
 United Talent Agency             The private Hollywood talent agency said it would reimburse
                                  travel expenses related to women's reproductive health
                                  services that are not accessible in an employee's state of
                                  residence.             
 Tesla Inc                        Tesla's Safety Net program and health insurance includes
                                  travel and lodging support for its employees who may need
                                  to seek healthcare services that are unavailable in their
                                  home state, according to the company's 2021 impact report.
                                  (https://bit.ly/3beSOOQ)
 Microsoft Corp                   Microsoft said it would extend its abortion and gender
                                  affirming care services for employees in the United States
                                  to include travel expense assistance.             
 Starbucks Corp                   Starbucks said it will reimburse U.S. employees and their
                                  dependents if they must travel more than 100 miles from
                                  their homes to obtain an abortion.             
 Netflix Inc                      Netflix said it will offer travel reimbursement for U.S.
                                  employees and dependents who travel for cancer treatment,
                                  transplants, abortion and gender-affirming care through its
                                  U.S. health plans.
 Mastercard Inc                   Mastercard said it will fund travel and lodging for
                                  employees seeking abortions outside their home states from
                                  June, according to an internal memo seen by Reuters.
                                              
 
 (Reporting by Doyinsola Oladipo and Akash Sriram; Editing by Anna Driver, Rosalba O'Brien and
Shounak Dasgupta)