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Known Donor vs. Sperm Bank: The Complete Decision Guide for 2026

Table of Contents

  1. Known Donor vs. Sperm Bank: The Big Picture
  2. Pros and Cons Comparison
  3. Legal Frameworks and Parental Rights
  4. Health Screening Requirements
  5. Cost Comparison
  6. Emotional Considerations
  7. Known Donor Legal Agreements
  8. How to Approach the Known Donor Conversation
  9. Choosing a Sperm Bank
  10. Which Is Right for You?
  11. Frequently Asked Questions

One of the most significant decisions in your at-home insemination journey is where your sperm will come from. If you need donor sperm, whether as a single parent by choice, an LGBTQ couple, or a couple dealing with severe male factor infertility, you have two primary options: using a known donor (a friend, family member of your partner, or someone you have connected with specifically for this purpose) or purchasing sperm from a licensed cryobank.

Both paths lead to the same destination, but they differ enormously in cost, legal complexity, emotional dynamics, and practical logistics. This guide walks through every factor to help you make the choice that is right for your family.

Known Donor vs. Sperm Bank: The Big Picture

A known donor is someone whose identity you know: a friend, a friend of a friend, a family member (typically of a partner, for genetic connection), or someone you have connected with through a donor matching platform. You have a personal relationship or at least direct contact with this person.

A sperm bank (cryobank) is a licensed medical facility that recruits, screens, and stores sperm from anonymous or identity-release donors. You choose a donor based on detailed profiles, medical histories, and sometimes audio interviews or childhood photos, but you typically do not meet the donor (though identity-release options allow your child to access donor information at age 18).

Neither option is universally better than the other. The right choice depends on your priorities around cost, legal clarity, genetic information, the child's future relationship with the donor, and your personal comfort level.

Pros and Cons Comparison

Known Donor Advantages

Known Donor Disadvantages

Sperm Bank Advantages

Sperm Bank Disadvantages

This is arguably the most important factor in the known donor vs. sperm bank decision. The legal landscape is complex and varies significantly by state.

Sperm Bank: Clear Legal Framework

When you purchase sperm from a licensed cryobank, the legal situation is generally straightforward. Under the Uniform Parentage Act (adopted in most states), an anonymous sperm donor has no parental rights or obligations. The intended parent(s) are the legal parents. This clarity is one of the strongest arguments for using a cryobank.

Known Donor: Varies by State

The legal treatment of known donors varies dramatically by jurisdiction. In some states, a known donor who provides sperm outside of a licensed medical facility may be considered a legal parent with both rights (custody, visitation) and obligations (child support). In other states, a properly executed donor agreement can protect all parties.

Key legal factors to consider:

Critical recommendation: If you are considering a known donor, consult a family law attorney in your state before proceeding. The consultation fee ($200 to $500) is a small price for the legal clarity it provides.

Health Screening Requirements

Sperm Bank Screening

Licensed cryobanks follow FDA regulations and typically screen donors for:

Donors are also quarantined: sperm is frozen, the donor is retested after six months, and the sperm is only released for use after the second set of negative results. This quarantine period virtually eliminates the risk of window-period infections.

Known Donor Screening

When using a known donor, you are responsible for arranging appropriate screening. At minimum, a known donor should undergo:

The total screening cost for a known donor is typically $400 to $1,200. While less comprehensive than cryobank screening, this covers the most critical health and safety factors.

Cost Comparison

Cost is often the primary driver of the known donor vs. sperm bank decision. Here is a realistic comparison over six insemination cycles:

Expense Known Donor Sperm Bank
Sperm (6 cycles, 2 vials each) $0 $6,000 - $13,200
Shipping $0 $600 - $1,050
Health screening $400 - $1,200 $0 (included)
Legal agreement $500 - $2,000 $0 (not needed)
Insemination kit $149 - $299 $149 - $299
Total (6 cycles) $1,049 - $3,499 $6,749 - $14,549

The cost difference is substantial: using a known donor can save $5,000 to $11,000 over six cycles. For a complete breakdown of all insemination costs, see our cost guide.

Jessica's Pick for Donor Sperm

Whether you chose a known donor or a cryobank, the decision is deeply personal and I respect whatever path you're on. For cryobank vials, I always recommend the CryoBaby — it's designed for those tiny thawed volumes. For known donor fresh samples, the Impregnator Kit with its cervical cup gave me the most confidence during testing.

See our full 2026 kit rankings →

Emotional Considerations

Beyond the practical factors, the emotional dimensions of this decision are profound and deserve careful thought.

For the Intended Parent(s)

Known donor emotions: Many people find comfort in knowing their child's biological father personally. There is a sense of security in knowing the donor's character, health history, and temperament firsthand. However, this can also create anxiety about boundary management: what if the donor wants more involvement than expected, or less? What if the relationship changes over time?

Sperm bank emotions: Using an anonymous donor can feel liberating in its simplicity. There is no one to navigate a relationship with, no one whose feelings you need to consider in parenting decisions. However, some parents feel a sense of loss or discomfort about not knowing their child's genetic father, and worry about how to discuss this with their child as they grow up.

For the Child

Research consistently shows that donor-conceived children do best when they are told about their origins early and in an age-appropriate way, regardless of whether the donor is known or anonymous. Key findings include:

For the Known Donor

If you are considering asking someone to be a donor, it is worth considering their emotional experience too. Being a sperm donor for someone you know is a significant decision. The donor may experience complex feelings about having a biological child that is not "theirs," seeing the child grow up in another family, or being asked questions about parentage as the child gets older.

If you choose to use a known donor, a legal agreement is essential. While not a substitute for state law, a well-drafted donor agreement serves several critical functions:

What the Agreement Should Cover

How to Get a Legal Agreement

Each party should have their own attorney review or draft the agreement. This typically costs $300 to $1,500 per party, depending on complexity and location. Both parties having independent legal representation strengthens the agreement's enforceability.

Do not use a generic online template without attorney review. State-specific legal requirements vary, and a template that works in California may be inadequate in Texas.

How to Approach the Known Donor Conversation

Asking someone to be a sperm donor is one of the most vulnerable conversations you may ever have. Here are guidelines for approaching it thoughtfully:

Before the Conversation

During the Conversation

After a "Yes"

Choosing a Sperm Bank

If you decide to use a sperm bank, here are the key factors to evaluate. Our donor selection guide goes deeper into choosing a specific donor profile.

Key Selection Criteria

Which Is Right for You?

Consider a known donor if:

Consider a sperm bank if:

Frequently Asked Questions

Can a known donor change their mind and claim parental rights?

This depends on state law. In states with strong donor protection statutes and a properly executed donor agreement, the risk is low. In states with less clear laws, especially if insemination was performed at home rather than through a physician, the risk is higher. A family law attorney can assess your specific situation.

Is fresh sperm from a known donor more effective than frozen sperm?

Fresh sperm generally has higher motility than frozen-thawed sperm. Some studies suggest per-cycle success rates may be slightly higher with fresh sperm. However, the difference is modest, and many families conceive successfully with frozen donor sperm.

Can I use a known donor's sperm through a sperm bank?

Some cryobanks offer "directed donor" programs where a known donor deposits and stores their sperm through the bank. This provides the benefits of both options: a known donor with professional screening, quarantine, and the bank's legal framework. It is more expensive but offers additional safety and legal protection.

How do I find a known donor if I do not already have someone in mind?

Some people connect with potential donors through online communities, apps designed for co-parenting and donor matching, or LGBTQ family-building networks. Exercise extreme caution with any online donor situation: always require comprehensive health screening, use legal agreements, and never accept sperm without proper STI testing.

Should I tell my child how they were conceived?

The overwhelming consensus among child development experts and donor-conceived adults is yes. Children who learn about their origins early and in a loving, matter-of-fact way tend to adjust better than those who learn later or discover the truth unexpectedly. Organizations like the Donor Sibling Registry offer resources for age-appropriate disclosure.