If IVF has not given you the result you were hoping for, or if access, cost or waiting times at home have put treatment out of reach, considering fertility treatment abroad is a practical and increasingly common next step. Thousands of patients from the UK, the US, Europe, the Middle East and East Africa travel each year to receive IVF at internationally accredited clinics, often with shorter waiting times, wider treatment options and significantly lower costs than they faced at home.
This article is a practical, honest guide to what that journey looks like. It covers why patients travel for IVF, how the treatment process works abroad, how to read success rate claims without being misled, which destinations are worth considering and why, and what good care actually looks like. The goal is to give you the information you need to make a confident, well-informed decision, wherever that decision leads.
Why People Consider IVF Abroad: Cost, Access and Waiting Times Explained

Cost Is the Most Common Driver, But Not the Only One
A single IVF cycle in the UK through a private clinic typically costs between £4,000 and £8,000, not including medication. In the United States, the picture is often more challenging: a single cycle costs between $15,000 and $30,000, and fewer than half of US states have insurance mandates that require any fertility coverage. For patients paying out of pocket, multiple cycles add up rapidly. In Spain, Turkey, Malaysia or Thailand, the same cycle, delivered at clinics with comparable technology and internationally trained embryologists, costs 40 to 70 percent less.
For patients who have already completed two or three cycles at home and are weighing their next steps, the cumulative cost of continuing domestically often makes the case for treatment abroad straightforward. The saving on a single donor egg cycle abroad can be equivalent to the cost of a full own-egg cycle at home.
Access and Regulatory Barriers
In the UK, NHS-funded IVF is rationed by Clinical Commissioning Group, meaning access depends significantly on postcode, age, BMI, whether either partner has children from a previous relationship, and how many cycles have previously been received. Many patients who meet the clinical criteria for IVF are simply not eligible for NHS funding in their area. For these patients, the motivation to travel is not primarily cost. It is access.
In the United States, access barriers are different but equally real. Even in states with insurance mandates, coverage is often partial, excludes donor cycles, or applies only to specific employer plans. For patients in states without any mandate, IVF is an entirely out-of-pocket expense. For patients across both countries, travelling abroad is not a compromise. It is often the most direct route to treatment.
For patients in parts of Africa, the Middle East and South Asia, fertility treatment may be unavailable locally, unaffordable in the private market at home, or subject to cultural or regulatory restrictions on donor eggs or embryo storage. Malaysia, the UAE and India serve significant patient populations from these regions precisely because they combine clinical quality with cultural and religious compatibility.
Donor Egg Availability and Waiting Times
In the UK, egg donation waiting times at many clinics now exceed 12 months due to a shortage of UK-registered donors. In the US, donor egg IVF adds $10,000 to $15,000 on top of standard cycle costs, and access to a diverse donor pool varies significantly by location. Spain has no such shortage. It is the largest egg donation market in Europe, and waiting times at established clinics are measured in weeks rather than months. For patients for whom donor eggs represent the clearest path forward, the combination of shorter waiting times, lower costs and access to a larger, more diverse donor pool makes Spain and other destinations a genuinely practical choice, not a compromise.
How Does IVF Abroad Work? The Treatment Process Explained

The Clinical Process Is the Same
IVF performed abroad follows the same fundamental protocol as IVF at home. Ovarian stimulation, egg collection, fertilisation, embryo culture and embryo transfer are the same steps, using the same medications, the same laboratory standards and the same success metrics. The difference is location, not the medicine.
Most clinics that serve international patients have developed treatment protocols specifically for remote patients. This typically means that the stimulation phase of the cycle is managed at home, often with monitoring at a local clinic or scanning centre, with the patient travelling to the destination clinic only for egg collection, and returning home after transfer. For most patients, the total time abroad is between 5 and 10 days for a fresh cycle.
Frozen Embryo Transfer: Fewer Travel Days
For patients who have embryos frozen from a previous cycle, whether abroad or at home, a frozen embryo transfer cycle requires significantly less travel. The preparation phase is managed at home with medication and monitoring, and the patient travels for a short visit of 2 to 4 days for the transfer itself. For patients with demanding professional or family commitments, or who are balancing treatment with everything else life requires, frozen embryo transfer cycles abroad are a significantly more manageable option.
What to Prepare Before You Travel
- Full medical history including all previous IVF cycle records, stimulation protocols, embryology reports and outcome data.
- Current hormone levels including AMH (anti-Mullerian hormone), AFC (antral follicle count), FSH and LH. Most clinics will request these before a consultation.
- Semen analysis results for your partner if a male factor component is involved.
- Any genetic screening results if you have completed preimplantation genetic testing previously.
- Your most recent consultation notes from your gynaecologist or fertility specialist at home.
How to Read IVF Success Rates Without Being Misled
Success rate figures in fertility medicine require careful interpretation. The number a clinic publishes on its website may be technically accurate and simultaneously a poor predictor of your personal outcome. Understanding the difference between the metrics clinics use is one of the most important things you can do before choosing a clinic, whether at home or abroad.
The Three Numbers Clinics Report
- Positive pregnancy test rate: The proportion of cycles that result in a detectable pregnancy hormone in the blood. This is the highest number and the least meaningful for the patient who wants to bring a baby home.
- Clinical pregnancy rate: The proportion of cycles that result in a pregnancy visible on ultrasound at approximately 6 to 7 weeks. Higher than live birth rate, but still does not account for early pregnancy loss.
- Live birth rate: The proportion of cycles that result in the birth of a live baby. This is the number that matters. It is always the lowest of the three figures, and it is the only one that answers the question you are actually asking.
Age Is the Single Most Important Variable

Published success rates are often presented as single headline figures without age stratification. A clinic reporting a 60 percent success rate without specifying the age distribution of its patient cohort is reporting a figure that may have very limited relevance to your situation. Success rates decline significantly with maternal age, particularly after 35, and the rate of decline accelerates after 38. Any clinic worth choosing will provide you with age-stratified live birth rate data for patients with a profile similar to yours.
Donor Egg Success Rates Are Different
Donor egg IVF success rates are substantially higher than own-egg IVF rates and are largely independent of the recipient's age, because the quality of the eggs depends on the donor, not the recipient. Clinics that specialise in egg donation, particularly in Spain and the UAE, often report live birth rates per transfer that reflect the quality of their donor programme and embryology laboratory rather than the recipient's ovarian reserve. Understanding this distinction matters: for patients who are good candidates for donor egg IVF, the outlook with this treatment can be significantly more encouraging than their own-egg IVF history might suggest.
Egg Donation IVF Abroad: Which Countries Allow It and What to Expect
Egg donation is the recommended treatment pathway for women with diminished ovarian reserve, premature ovarian insufficiency, recurrent IVF failure attributed to egg quality, or those who are post-menopausal. It is also used by women who carry genetic conditions they do not wish to pass on, and by same-sex female couples where one partner will carry the pregnancy.
Donor egg IVF is legal in most of the destinations My1Health works with, with one important exception covered separately below. The availability of anonymous versus known donation, the age limits for donors and recipients, and the regulatory framework governing embryo storage vary by country. A My1Health specialist can advise on which destination's regulatory environment is most suitable for your specific circumstances.

Spain: Europe's Leading Egg Donation Destination
Spain's egg donation programme operates under a well-established legal framework that permits anonymous donation. Spanish clinics have built large, diverse donor registries over several decades, and waiting times at established clinics are typically far shorter than in the UK. Spanish clinics are also subject to rigorous quality regulation by the national reproductive medicine authority. For European patients considering donor egg IVF, Spain is the most frequently chosen destination for sound clinical and logistical reasons.
Malaysia: Islamic-Compatible IVF
Malaysia holds a distinct position in fertility tourism for Muslim patients. Malaysian fertility clinics operate under regulatory and ethical frameworks that are compatible with Islamic jurisprudence on assisted reproduction. For Muslim patients from East Africa, the Middle East and South Asia for whom donor egg IVF raises religious questions, Malaysia's legal and cultural environment provides clarity that is not available in all destinations. My1Health partner clinics in Malaysia can advise on what is and is not permitted under Malaysian law and clinic policy.
Which Country Is Best for IVF Abroad? A Practical Comparison
The table below summarises how My1Health's IVF destinations compare across the factors most relevant to international patients. Costs are approximate comparisons against UK private IVF pricing.
| Destination | Cost vs UK | Donor Egg? | Sperm Donation? | Muslim-Compatible? | Best Suited For |
| Spain | 40–60% less | Yes | Yes | Varies by clinic | Donor egg IVF, failed cycles, European patients |
| Turkey | 50–70% less | No | No | Yes | Married couples, own eggs and sperm only |
| Malaysia | 50–65% less | Yes | Yes | Yes | Muslim patients, SE Asian regional access |
| Thailand | 50–65% less | Yes | Yes | Check clinic | Asian regional access, failed cycles |
| UAE | 20–40% less | Yes | Varies | Yes | Middle East and African patients, convenience |
| India | 60–75% less | Yes | Yes | Check clinic | Cost-focused patients, donor egg cycles |
| Switzerland | Similar to UK | Check | Check | Check clinic | Patients prioritising European proximity and privacy |
Regulatory frameworks and clinic-specific policies change. The information above reflects the general position as of 2026. My1Health specialists confirm current regulations and clinic policies before any patient travels.

IVF Clinics Abroad: My1Health Partner Hospitals by Country
All clinics and hospitals listed below are verified My1Health partners. The table includes all current IVF and fertility partner facilities across My1Health's network.
| Region / Country | My1Health Partner | Key Notes |
| Thailand | Bumrungrad International Hospital, Bangkok | JCI-accredited. Full IVF programme including donor egg. International patient centre with multilingual support. Accessible from the Middle East and East Africa. |
| Malaysia | Sunway Fertility Centre | Established fertility programme. Islamic-compatible IVF protocols available. Suitable for Muslim patients with specific treatment requirements. |
| Malaysia | Monash IVF KPJ Johor Fertility Centre | Part of the Monash IVF Group, one of the most experienced IVF networks in the Asia-Pacific region. |
| Malaysia | KPJ Healthcare | Multi-site hospital network across Malaysia. Fertility services available at several KPJ locations. |
| Spain | Clinica Tambre, Madrid | One of Spain's most established fertility clinics. Egg donation fully legal and widely available. Spain is the largest egg donation market in Europe. |
| Spain | Dexeus University Hospital, Barcelona | Academic hospital with a dedicated fertility department and over 40 years of reproductive medicine experience. |
| Switzerland | Hirslanden Private Hospital | Switzerland's largest private hospital network. IVF and fertility treatment available under strict regulatory framework. |
| Turkey | Memorial Healthcare Group | Turkey's largest private hospital network. IVF available for married heterosexual couples using own eggs and sperm only. See legal note above. |
| Turkey | Liv Hospital | JCI-accredited. IVF programme available. Own gametes only. See legal note above. |
| Turkey | Acibadem Group of Hospitals | Major Turkish hospital group with dedicated fertility department. Own gametes only. See legal note above. |
| Turkey | Anadolu Medical Center | Johns Hopkins Medicine partner. Fertility services available for eligible couples. Own gametes only. See legal note above. |
| Turkey | Medipol Hospital | Istanbul-based hospital group with fertility programme. Own gametes only. See legal note above. |
| UAE | Bourn Hall Fertility Clinic, Abu Dhabi | The original IVF clinic, founded by the team behind the world's first IVF birth. Full programme including donor egg where permitted under UAE regulations. |
| UAE | Fakih IVF | One of the UAE's largest and most established IVF clinics. Extensive experience with patients from the Middle East, Africa and internationally. |
| UAE | American Hospital Dubai | JCI-accredited. Fertility services within a full-service tertiary hospital. Donor egg available under UAE regulations. |
| UAE | Burjeel Hospitals | Multi-site hospital group across the UAE. Fertility programme available at select locations. |
| India | Partner clinics available via My1Health | India offers among the most cost-competitive IVF programmes globally. Donor egg IVF is available. Speak to a My1Health specialist for current partner clinic details. |
This list reflects My1Health's partner network as of 2026. For India-specific partner clinic details and current availability, please speak directly with a My1Health patient support specialist.
Important: Legal Restrictions on IVF in Turkey
Important: IVF Legal Restrictions in Turkey Turkish law restricts IVF treatment to married heterosexual couples using their own eggs and sperm. Egg donation, sperm donation, embryo donation, and surrogacy are not permitted under Turkish legislation. This applies to all clinics operating in Turkey, regardless of their international affiliations or accreditations. Patients who require donor eggs, donor sperm, or surrogacy cannot receive these treatments in Turkey and should consider Spain, Malaysia, the UAE, or Thailand instead. My1Health patient support specialists can advise on the most appropriate destination based on your specific clinical and personal circumstances. |
How to Choose an IVF Clinic Abroad: What to Look For
The fertility industry internationally is not uniformly regulated, and not all clinics that market themselves to international patients operate to the same standards. The markers of a clinic worth trusting are consistent regardless of destination.
Accreditation and Registration
Any clinic you consider should be registered with and regulated by the relevant national fertility authority in its country. In Spain, this is the Ministry of Health and the national regulatory framework for assisted reproduction. In the UK equivalent abroad, look for the same level of statutory oversight. International accreditations such as JCI (Joint Commission International) reflect broader hospital quality standards and are relevant where the fertility clinic is part of a larger hospital group.
Transparent Outcome Data
A reputable clinic provides age-stratified live birth rate data, not just headline success figures. It explains how its rates are calculated, which patient populations they reflect, and acknowledges the limitations of the data. Clinics that refuse to provide this information, or that present only marketing-friendly statistics, are telling you something important about their approach to patient communication.
A Consultation Before a Commitment

No reputable clinic accepts a patient for IVF without first reviewing their full medical history, previous cycle records and current investigations. The consultation, conducted remotely before you travel, is not a formality. It is the point at which the treating physician assesses whether the proposed treatment is appropriate for your specific profile, and whether the clinic's programme is the right match for your case. If a clinic is prepared to commit to a treatment plan without this review, that is a reason for caution.
Continuity with Your Care at Home
A good international fertility clinic provides a full clinical summary on discharge, including your stimulation protocol, embryology records, transfer details and any specific follow-up requirements. This summary is shared with your GP or fertility specialist at home to ensure that post-transfer monitoring and any subsequent care is informed by what happened during your treatment abroad.
How My1Health Helps You Plan IVF Treatment Abroad

My1Health is a medical facilitation company, not a fertility clinic. We do not have a financial interest in recommending one clinic over another within our partner network. Our role is to match the right patient to the right clinic based on their specific clinical profile, treatment requirements, budget and travel preferences.
- Case review: We review your medical history and previous IVF records before recommending any clinic or destination.
- Consultation coordination: We arrange a remote pre-travel consultation with your chosen clinic so your case is assessed by the treating team before you book flights.
- Cost transparency: We obtain a written, itemised cost estimate for your full treatment cycle, including medication, monitoring, egg collection, embryo transfer and any additional procedures, before you travel.
- Logistics support: We coordinate travel timing with your treatment schedule, and can assist with accommodation near the clinic.
- Post-treatment follow-up: We remain available after your return home and can facilitate communication between the international clinic and your GP or fertility specialist.
- No fees: My1Health does not charge patients for facilitation. You pay the clinic's treatment cost directly. My1Health is compensated by partner clinics at no mark-up to you.
Continue Reading
Compare IVF destinations: India, Turkey, Spain and Malaysia:
Best Countries for IVF Abroad: India, Turkey, Spain and Malaysia Compared
IVF at specialist clinics in India:
IVF Treatment in India for International Patients: Clinics, Costs and What to Expect
IVF at Memorial Hospital, Turkey:
IVF at Memorial Hospital Turkey: What International Patients Need to Know