After being raped and discovering they are pregnant, women face numerous difficulties in seeking a legal termination of pregnancy (legal abortion). The aim of this study was to understand the experiences of women seeking a legal termination of pregnancy in a Brazilian health service and their experiences with health care. Interviews were conducted with six women who had undergone a termination of pregnancy at a public health service in a city in the interior of Minas Gerais (Brazil). Using Reflective Thematic Analysis, we chose three categories to analyse: (Dis)Information and (Dis)Guidance; Loneliness and the fragility of the Network; Performance of the healthcare team. We used feminist epistemologies to analyse the content of the interviews and noted: misinformation about their rights; difficulties in finding specialised care in the public health sector for legal abortion; gaps between what is prescribed in the Ministry of Health's rules and the implementation of these actions by health professionals.