Reciprocal IVF: How It Works and Why Couples Choose It
Learn how reciprocal IVF works, including costs, success rates, and emotional factors for lesbian couples.

Reciprocal IVF: More Than Just a Medical Option
On paper, reciprocal IVF is simple. One partner provides the egg. The other carries the pregnancy. But in reality, it’s one of the most emotionally meaningful choices available to lesbian couples. Because it changes how both partners are involved.
How the process works
Medically, it follows the same steps as IVF:
Egg retrieval from one partner
Fertilization with donor sperm
Embryo transfer into the other partner
Success rates are similar to standard IVF: around 30–40% per cycle under 35. But the experience is different. Both partners are physically part of the process.
Why couples choose it
For many, it’s about shared connection. Instead of one partner being the biological parent and the other not, both are involved in different ways. That can feel more balanced.
But it’s not the only reason. Some couples also consider:
age differences
fertility factors
personal preferences
What’s more complicated than expected
It’s not just the medical side. It’s the decisions around it.
Who provides the egg?
Who carries?
What happens if the first plan doesn’t work?
These conversations can be surprisingly difficult. Not because of conflict — but because there’s no obvious answer.
Cost and planning
Reciprocal IVF is typically more expensive than standard IVF. Because both partners are involved medically, you’re effectively combining two processes into one. That’s why planning ahead matters. Not just financially — but emotionally too.