You called your insurance company. You navigated the automated menu, waited on hold, and finally reached a human being. You asked the question that had been weighing on you for weeks: does my plan cover fertility treatment?
The answer was no. Or worse, it was a qualified maybe: coverage for diagnosis but not treatment, coverage for medications but not procedures, coverage for IUI but not IVF, coverage only after 12 months of documented infertility (which excludes you if you are single or in a same-sex relationship).
You hung up the phone and felt the ground shift. The path you thought was available, the one where medical science helps you build your family, suddenly had a price tag you cannot pay. Now what?
This guide is for you. It is for everyone who has discovered that the American healthcare system considers fertility treatment optional, elective, or simply not their problem. The situation is genuinely unfair, but you are not as stuck as you feel in this moment. There are paths forward, and some of them cost far less than you think.
The Insurance Reality in 2026
The state of fertility insurance coverage in America is, to put it plainly, inadequate. Despite the fact that infertility is recognized as a disease by the World Health Organization, the American Medical Association, and the American Society for Reproductive Medicine, the majority of insurance plans treat it as a lifestyle choice rather than a medical condition.
Here are the numbers:
- 72% of large employer health plans do not cover IVF.
- Only 21 states have any form of fertility insurance mandate (and mandates vary wildly in scope).
- Self-insured employer plans (which cover the majority of American workers) are exempt from state mandates under federal ERISA law.
- Marketplace (ACA) plans are not required to cover fertility treatment. Fertility is not listed among the ten essential health benefits.
- Medicaid provides virtually no fertility treatment coverage in any state.
The result is a system where access to fertility treatment is largely determined by where you live, who you work for, and how much money you have. If you are lucky enough to work for a large tech company in a mandate state, you might have excellent coverage. If you work for a small business in a non-mandate state, you are entirely on your own.
State Mandates: Who's Covered and Who's Not
As of 2026, 21 states have enacted some form of fertility insurance mandate. But the word "mandate" is doing a lot of heavy lifting, because these laws differ dramatically in what they actually require.
Strong Mandate States (Require IVF Coverage)
A handful of states have relatively comprehensive mandates that require insurers to cover IVF: California (under SB 729, effective 2025), Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, and Rhode Island. However, even these states have limitations, including lifetime caps, age restrictions, and requirements for documented infertility that may exclude certain populations.
Weak Mandate States (Diagnosis Only or Limited Coverage)
Some states only require insurers to cover fertility diagnosis or offer fertility treatment coverage without requiring it. Arkansas, Hawaii, Louisiana, Montana, Ohio, Texas, and West Virginia fall into this category. In these states, the mandate may mean that your insurer covers blood tests and ultrasounds but nothing beyond that.
No Mandate States
Twenty-nine states have no fertility insurance mandate at all. If you live and work in one of these states, your employer's decision determines your coverage. And most employers, as noted above, choose not to include fertility treatment.
The People Insurance Leaves Behind
Even in states with strong mandates, certain groups face systematic exclusion:
Single Women
Many insurance plans and state mandates define infertility as the inability to conceive after 12 months of unprotected intercourse (or 6 months if over 35). If you are a single woman using donor sperm, you may not meet this definition regardless of how many cycles you have tried. Some states have updated their definitions to be more inclusive, but many have not.
Same-Sex Couples
The same intercourse-based definition of infertility that excludes single women also excludes same-sex couples. While some progressive states and employers have adopted more inclusive definitions, many insurers still require proof of heterosexual intercourse failure before covering treatment.
Transgender and Non-Binary Individuals
Coverage for fertility preservation before gender-affirming care, or for reproductive assistance after transition, remains extremely limited. Most insurance plans have not updated their policies to address the fertility needs of transgender individuals.
Low-Income Individuals
Even with insurance mandates, copays, deductibles, and out-of-pocket maximums mean that significant costs remain. For people living paycheck to paycheck, even $5,000 to $10,000 in out-of-pocket costs is prohibitive, regardless of what insurance covers above that threshold.
Even With Coverage, You're Still Paying
It is important to understand that having fertility insurance coverage does not mean treatment is free. Even with the best coverage available, patients typically face:
- Deductibles: $1,000 to $5,000 before coverage kicks in.
- Copays and coinsurance: 10-30% of covered services, which can amount to thousands per cycle.
- Lifetime caps: Many plans cap fertility coverage at $25,000 to $100,000 lifetime. At $20,000-$30,000 per IVF cycle, this covers one to three attempts.
- Non-covered services: PGT, ICSI, embryo storage, and certain medications are frequently excluded even from otherwise comprehensive plans.
- Out-of-network charges: If your preferred clinic is out-of-network, you may receive minimal reimbursement for a significant expense.
The gap between what insurance covers and what treatment actually costs is often $5,000 to $15,000 per cycle, even with good coverage. For a full accounting of where that money goes, see our hidden costs breakdown.
What You Can Actually Afford Right Now
When you cannot access or afford clinic-based treatment, the question becomes: what can you do? The answer is more than you might think.
At-Home ICI: $59-$299 Per Cycle
At-home intracervical insemination is the most affordable fertility intervention available. A comprehensive kit like the MakeAMom Her Success Kit includes everything you need: the insemination device, ovulation tests, fertility supplements, and detailed instructions. Six cycles cost $300-$500 total, less than a single clinic copay for many insured patients.
For people without diagnosed fertility conditions, ICI is not a compromise. It is a medically valid approach with per-cycle success rates of 10-15% and cumulative six-cycle rates of 40-65% for women under 35. This is where to start.
OB-GYN Managed Medicated Cycles: $200-$1,000 Per Cycle
You do not need a reproductive endocrinologist to prescribe ovulation-inducing medications. Many OB-GYNs will prescribe Clomid ($20-$100) or letrozole ($30-$75) and monitor with basic ultrasounds. Combined with at-home ICI, this adds medical support without fertility clinic pricing. Your regular health insurance may cover the OB-GYN visits and even the medications.
Diagnostic Testing Through Primary Care: Often Covered
Many basic fertility tests can be ordered by your OB-GYN or primary care provider and billed as diagnostic services rather than fertility treatment. Hormone panels, thyroid tests, semen analyses, and basic ultrasounds are often covered even by plans that exclude fertility treatment. Getting these tests done helps you understand your fertility landscape without paying fertility clinic prices.
Using FSA and HSA Funds Strategically
Flexible Spending Accounts (FSA) and Health Savings Accounts (HSA) are powerful tools for paying for fertility expenses with pre-tax dollars. Depending on your tax bracket, this effectively saves you 20-35% on every dollar spent.
What Qualifies
- Clinic visits and consultations.
- Diagnostic testing (blood work, ultrasounds, semen analysis).
- Fertility medications (prescription and some OTC).
- IUI and IVF procedures.
- At-home insemination kits that qualify as medical devices.
- Ovulation predictor kits.
- Prenatal vitamins (with a letter of medical necessity for FSA).
For a detailed guide on using FSA and HSA funds for insemination kits, see our dedicated resource.
Strategic Planning
If you know you will be pursuing fertility treatment in the upcoming year, maximize your FSA or HSA contributions during open enrollment. The 2026 HSA contribution limit is $4,300 for individuals and $8,550 for families. For FSAs, the limit is $3,300. Contributing the maximum and using these funds for fertility expenses provides the largest tax benefit.
Grants and Financial Assistance Programs
Several organizations provide grants specifically for fertility treatment. These are competitive but worth pursuing:
- Baby Quest Foundation: Grants up to $16,000 for IVF, IUI, surrogacy, and other treatments. Applications accepted year-round, with awards made quarterly.
- The Cade Foundation: Family-building grants of up to $10,000. Focus on helping those who cannot afford fertility treatment or adoption.
- Pay It Forward Fertility Foundation: Grants of varying amounts for individuals and couples facing infertility. Funded in part by previous grant recipients who give back.
- The Samantha Busch Fund: Provides IVF grants to selected applicants. Known for its focus on reducing the financial barrier to IVF access.
- Gift of Parenthood: Monthly grants of up to $16,000 for fertility treatment. Open to US residents.
Apply to multiple programs simultaneously to improve your chances. Most programs have rolling or quarterly application cycles, so there is no reason to wait for one decision before applying to another.
Clinic-Based Financial Programs
Many fertility clinics offer their own financial assistance:
- Multi-cycle packages: Discounted rates when you commit to 2-3 IVF cycles upfront. Savings can be 10-20% compared to paying per cycle.
- Shared-risk (refund) programs: You pay a higher upfront amount, but if treatment is unsuccessful after a set number of cycles, you receive a partial or full refund. This reduces financial risk but requires meeting specific eligibility criteria (usually age and ovarian reserve requirements).
- Medication discount programs: Pharmaceutical manufacturers and specialty pharmacies offer compassionate care programs, discount cards, and financial assistance for fertility medications.
Employer Fertility Benefits: The New Landscape
The fastest-growing area of fertility coverage is employer-sponsored benefits administered through platforms like Progyny, Carrot Fertility, Maven, and WINFertility. As of 2026, a growing number of employers offer these benefits as part of their compensation packages.
If your current employer does not offer fertility benefits, it is worth knowing which employers do. Major companies known for comprehensive fertility benefits include those in technology, professional services, consulting, and financial services sectors. Some people make career decisions specifically to access these benefits, which can be worth $50,000 or more in coverage.
If you are in a position to negotiate benefits with your employer, fertility coverage is increasingly common to request. Some small and mid-size companies have added fertility benefits after a single employee made the ask, especially when presented with data showing that fertility benefits improve retention and reduce downstream healthcare costs.
Tax Deductions Most People Miss
Fertility treatment expenses may be tax-deductible as medical expenses on your federal return if your total medical expenses exceed 7.5% of your adjusted gross income (AGI). This includes:
- All clinic fees, procedure costs, and medications.
- Travel costs to and from appointments (mileage, parking, tolls, public transit).
- Insurance premiums paid with after-tax dollars.
- At-home insemination kits and supplies.
- Donor sperm costs.
- Lodging expenses if traveling for treatment (up to $50 per night per person).
Keep meticulous records of every fertility-related expense from day one. Even if you do not expect to exceed the 7.5% threshold in a given year, you may be surprised at how quickly costs add up when you include all ancillary expenses. Consult a tax professional for guidance specific to your situation.
Jessica's Story
I had no insurance coverage for fertility. Zero. My plan covered exactly nothing beyond a basic consultation that confirmed what I already knew: I wanted to have a baby and needed help getting there. The clinic quoted me $15,000 for IVF and $2,500 for IUI, neither of which I could afford on my teacher's salary. The $299 Her Success Kit was the best investment I ever made. Three cycles, three months, and Sofia was on her way. I did not need a $15,000 procedure. I needed a $149 kit and the knowledge that I had options nobody had told me about.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does health insurance cover fertility treatment in the US?
Coverage varies dramatically by state, employer, and plan. Only 21 states have fertility mandates, and most have significant limitations. Approximately 72% of large employer plans do not cover IVF. Self-insured employer plans (which cover the majority of workers) are exempt from state mandates. For a state-by-state breakdown, see our insurance coverage guide.
What states require insurance to cover fertility treatment?
As of 2026, 21 states have some form of fertility mandate: Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Montana, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Rhode Island, Texas, Utah, and West Virginia. Mandates range from comprehensive IVF coverage (California, Illinois, Massachusetts) to diagnosis-only coverage. Self-insured employer plans are exempt in all states.
Can I use my FSA or HSA for fertility treatment?
Yes. Both FSA and HSA funds can be used for most fertility expenses, including clinic visits, diagnostic testing, medications, procedures, and qualifying at-home insemination kits. Using pre-tax dollars effectively saves 20-35% on every dollar spent, depending on your tax bracket.
What is the most affordable fertility treatment without insurance?
At-home ICI is the most affordable option at $59-$299 per cycle. Six cycles cost approximately $300-$500 total (excluding donor sperm), compared to $3,000-$24,000 for six clinic IUI cycles or $15,000-$30,000 for one IVF cycle. For people without diagnosed fertility conditions, ICI offers per-cycle success rates of 10-15%, making it a valid and dramatically more affordable first step.
Are there grants or financial assistance for fertility treatment?
Yes. Organizations like Baby Quest Foundation (up to $16,000), The Cade Foundation ($10,000), Pay It Forward Fertility, and Gift of Parenthood offer fertility grants. Many clinics also provide multi-cycle packages and shared-risk refund programs. Applications are competitive, so apply to multiple programs simultaneously and start early in your treatment planning process.