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Posted on 2010-12-06

The Fertility Treatment Cost Mountain

Getting pregnant can be inexpensive, if you’re young, in good health and particularly fertile. However, a lot of women do struggle with fertility, and need a little bit of a boost. If that’s you, then you know that there are tons of products on the market, as well as many medical procedures, all of which try to help you successfully conceive a child. At the low end of the cost spectrum are things like fertility supplements and generic fertility medications, and at the high end are aggressive procedures like Frozen Embryo Transfer.

Here’s a look at some of the possible fertility treatments on the market, more or less in order of cost:

  • Fertility supplements. Your least expensive way to help your conception efforts is often with a nutritional supplement. Maca, for example, is an especially effective and affordable option, but there are others on the market, as well. These kinds of products range from a few dollars to maybe $20 or $30 a month.
  • Fertility medications. Generic fertility medications, such as Clomid, aren’t especially expensive, particularly if they’re covered by your insurance provider. Even at full price, they’re not that costly. You can expect to pay a few dollars a month for a Clomid prescription, for example.
  • Artificial insemination. When you start looking at medical procedures, things get more expensive. In addition to your doctor’s visits, you can expect to pay $400 or more for most variants of artificial insemination. More complex variants of artificial insemination, such as ICSO, will cost more, of course.
  • IVF. In Vitro Fertilization will be one of the most expensive ways to try to treat infertility, starting at more than $7,500 in most places for a single go-around.
  • FET. Perhaps the most expensive medical treatment for infertility is FET. This procedure fertilizes several eggs in the lab and then freezes some of them. If you don’t get pregnant with your first cycle of IVF treatments, a frozen embryo can then be used for the next attempt. You can expect this to cost an additional $3,000 or more, plus the cost of embryo storage.


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