Contraception is an effort to prevent pregnancy. This effort can be temporary or permanent by means of certain methods, tools and medicines. In Indonesia, contraception is regulated and implemented in the family planning program which aims to create quality families and achieve community welfare. This study aims to analyze the factors that influence the shift in the use of modern to traditional contraceptives among currently married women in Indonesia based on the 2017 IDHS data. The data collection method is cross sectional and analyzed with a logistic regression model. The description of the type of modern contraception used is the short-term contraceptive method, while the reasons for the respondents moving were due to side effects, problems of access and availability, and the absence of support from their husbands. The bivariate results state that predisposing factors (age, education level, level of knowledge, socioeconomics, and desire to have children), reinforcing factors (decision makers, family planning visits and counseling, and media exposure) and enabling factors, namely service quality have a significant relationship with displacement. modern contraception. Based on mutivariate analysis, the variable level of education is the variable that has the strongest influence on the transfer of modern contraception compared to other variables. Family planning programs need to focus more on client demographic factors by providing broad and quality service and counseling so that the objectives of the family planning program can be delivered effectively and on target.