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Purpose: Uniquely, reproductive-age women will develop contraception needs pursuant to variation between contraceptive prevalence and fertility preferences. Among contraception needs, unmet need is the desire to reduce fertility by delaying or limiting childbirth besides abstaining contraception use among exposed reproductive-age women. With dearth of consolidated literature on conceptualization and ideation of unmet need for contraception, this paper synthesizes sparse findings from cogent fertility literature and generates single intelligible script. Methodology: Conceptualizing unmet need preceded 1970s, evolving into current understanding pursuant to incorporation of multifarious assumptions and estimations. Initial conceptualization and documentation of contraception need and demand used data from knowledge, attitude and preference survey conducted in 1970s’ that identified pool of women in “irrational situation”. Incorporating evidence from fertility surveys and psychology literature, irrational women evolved into displaying “discrepant behaviour”, having “KAP-gap” and then unmet need for contraception. Further refinements incorporated “wantedness” of current pregnancy/ last childbirth, protection status and “intendendeness” of current pregnancy/ last childbirth. Findings: Continued omission of husbands’ effect prompted cogent Authors to suggest existence of a pool of reproductive age women classified as having unmet need but genuinely have “no unmet” need. This study supports this argument by proffering that exposed reproductive-age women whose husband has virility loss attendant to genetic, health, social and lifestyle factors could assume superficial protection due to diminished conception risk oblivious of coital interaction. Unique Contribution to Theory, Practice and Policy: This study corroboratively incorporates husband issue of virility loss, and attendant dissertation helps reclassify such pool from having “unmet need” to “no unmet need” besides adducing evidence of overestimation.