Egg Donation
Egg Donation for Surrogacy and Intended Parents
For Intended Parents Considering Donor Eggs
Intended parents consider donor eggs for many reasons. Some are navigating age-related fertility factors, medical history, genetic concerns, prior IVF outcomes, or a fertility specialist’s recommendation. Others need donor eggs as part of surrogacy for same-sex male parenthood, single fatherhood, or another family-building path.
GSS helps intended parents understand where they are in the process and what type of donor coordination they need. Some intended parents already know they need an egg donor. Others are still weighing options with their fertility clinic. The GSS team helps keep communication, timing, and next steps organized while medical providers guide clinical decisions.
For Women Interested in Becoming an Egg Donor
Becoming an egg donor is a meaningful decision, but it is also a real medical commitment. Egg donors complete screening, attend appointments, take medications, use injections as directed, and participate in egg retrieval planning with the medical team.
GSS gives potential egg donors a clear place to start. The process includes a review of eligibility, personal health history, family medical history, and screening requirements. Egg donor compensation currently ranges from $9,000 to $15,000, with final details reviewed during the donor process.
Egg Donor Requirements and Screening
Egg donor requirements help protect the donor, intended parents, and the medical process. GSS reviews each potential donor before moving forward to additional screening.
Starting egg donor requirements include:
- Age 20 to 29 for first-time donors
- Age up to 31 for prior donors
- United States or Canadian citizenship
- At least some post-secondary education
- Ability to take daily injections as instructed
- BMI no higher than 28
- Willingness to complete medical screening
- Willingness to complete psychological screening
- Willingness to complete background, drug, and sexually transmitted disease screening
- Willingness to share personal and family medical history
Some medical, genetic, mental health, or family history factors prevent a donor from moving forward. Completing an egg donor form starts the review process and does not guarantee approval.
Egg Donor Requirements and Screening
Egg donor requirements help protect the donor, intended parents, and the medical process. GSS reviews each potential donor before moving forward to additional screening.
Starting egg donor requirements include:
- Age 20 to 29 for first-time donors
- Age up to 31 for prior donors
- United States or Canadian citizenship
- At least some post-secondary education
- Ability to take daily injections as instructed
- BMI no higher than 28
- Willingness to complete medical screening
- Willingness to complete psychological screening
- Willingness to complete background, drug, and sexually transmitted disease screening
- Willingness to share personal and family medical history
Some medical, genetic, mental health, or family history factors prevent a donor from moving forward. Completing an egg donor form starts the review process and does not guarantee approval.
Known and Private Egg Donation Options
Every intended parent and donor has different preferences around privacy, communication, and future contact. Some arrangements involve a known egg donor. Others follow a more private process.
GSS helps intended parents and potential donors understand which options are available and how those choices fit with clinic guidance, legal review, and the overall family-building plan. Clear expectations early in the process help everyone understand what information is shared, how communication works, and what next steps are required.
Support During the Egg Donation Process
Egg donors should not feel like they are submitting a form and then figuring out the process alone. GSS provides donor support through a designated team member who helps with communication, process questions, and next steps.
Support does not replace medical care or screening. It helps donors understand where they are in the process, what information is needed, who will contact them, and what to expect as the review moves forward.
Frequently Asked Questions About Egg Donation
How much are egg donors compensated?
Egg donor compensation currently ranges from $9,000 to $15,000. Final compensation details depend on donor review, program requirements, and the details confirmed during the process.
Does every applicant become an egg donor?
No. Submitting an inquiry or form starts the review process. Approval depends on eligibility, medical screening, psychological screening, background review, and other case-specific factors.
Do egg donors need to take injections?
Yes. Egg donors must be comfortable taking injections as instructed by the medical team.
Do intended parents need an egg donor before contacting GSS?
No. Some intended parents contact GSS before choosing an egg donor. Others already have embryos or are already working with a fertility clinic. GSS can discuss where you are and what needs to happen next.
How does egg donation connect to surrogacy?
Donor eggs may be used to create embryos through IVF. In gestational surrogacy, the surrogate carries the pregnancy but does not have a genetic connection to the baby.
Start Your Egg Donor Application
Real Surrogacy Support Starts Here
For Women Considering Surrogacy
You deserve to understand what surrogacy asks of you before you apply. We help women learn about surrogate requirements, compensation, screening, matching, medical steps, pregnancy support, and what happens after an application is submitted.
For Intended Parents Ready for More Than Waiting
Many intended parents come to us after years of fertility treatment, uncertainty, or searching for the right surrogate. We help you understand matching, screening, cost planning, donor needs, legal timing, pregnancy communication, and the support available throughout the process.