Background: Postpartum Medicaid coverage and support are central maternal health policy issues, but county-level tools for identifying where postpartum Medicaid populations may face overlapping administrative, clinical, and contextual access barriers remain limited. Methods: We developed and internally validated a county-level Postpartum Medicaid Access Barrier Index for all 3,144 counties and county equivalents in the 50 states and District of Columbia. Public data sources included geocoded Medicaid office locations from Shafer et al. (2024), U.S. Census county boundaries, American Community Survey 2024 5-year county indicators, the National Center for Health Statistics 2023 Urban-Rural Classification Scheme for Counties, and county-level hospital-based obstetric care status from the University of Minnesota Rural Health Research Center. Medicaid office locations were spatially assigned to counties, then merged with ACS indicators, rurality, and obstetric care status by county FIPS. The theoretical score range was 0-11; the index assigned higher weights to two core infrastructure measures and lower weights to contextual indicators. Internal validation assessed component structure, known-groups validity, geographic clustering, weighting sensitivity, added value over simpler infrastructure screens, and separation across concern levels. Results: Across 3,144 counties, observed scores ranged from 0 to 10 on the theoretical 0-11 score, with a mean of 3.65 and median of 3. High or highest concern counties accounted for 665 counties (21.2%), including 56 counties (1.8%) in the highest concern group. Component correlations were low-to-moderate, with an average absolute phi of 0.176 and no pairwise component correlation at or above 0.50. Known-groups validity was strong: dual administrative and clinical gap counties scored 4.43 points higher than counties with neither gap (Cohen's d = 3.28, p < 0.001). Scores were geographically clustered (Moran's I = 0.375, permutation p = 0.005). A dual-gap-only screen captured 386 of 665 high/highest concern counties (58.0%) but missed 279 high/highest counties; a parsimonious rule requiring one infrastructure gap plus at least four contextual flags recovered 265 of these 279 missed counties (95.0%) with 100.0% precision. Discussion: The Postpartum Medicaid Access Barrier Index provides a transparent county-level screening tool for identifying places where administrative, clinical, and contextual barriers may overlap for postpartum Medicaid populations and should be externally validated against Medicaid enrollment, renewal, churn, coverage continuity, and postpartum care outcomes.