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PurposeHospice care is a patient- and family-centered approach to end-of-life care that prioritizes comfort, symptom management, and psychosocial support while foregoing curative treatment. Hospice care improves quality of life and care at the end of life. Despite its benefits, hospice remains underutilized by racially and ethnically diverse people, sexual and gender minorities, and socioeconomically marginalized populations.FindingsGuided by the Social Ecological Model, the objectives of this narrative review are to (a) discuss disparities in hospice care use, (b) explore multidimensional levels and factors contributing to such disparities, and (c) outline implications and imperatives for improving access to and use of hospice care. This review revealed that hospice care disparities are shaped by interacting factors across societal, structural, healthcare system, interpersonal, and individual levels. Historical context, policy design, geographic and socioeconomic constraints, clinician communication, and cultural beliefs collectively influence patterns of access, timing, and utilization of hospice care. System-level solutions include integrating hospice referrals into routine care workflows, improving hospice-related policies, strengthening partnerships with community organizations, and transitional care research. Clinicians are uniquely positioned to identify care preferences, advocate for timely referrals and support the hospice transition, and build trust with patients and families at the end of life.ConclusionsEfforts across clinical settings, policy, and research are critical to improving hospice care use, and ensuring that all seriously ill individuals benefit from goal-concordant, high-quality hospice care. Reducing hospice care disparities will require coordinated, multilevel interventions that address policy and healthcare system factors while strengthening hospice-related communication and care.