
Surrogacy for Intended Parents
June 3, 2026 at 8:00:00 AM
The day your baby is born is the beginning of a new chapter, not only for you as a parent, but for the relationship you have built with your surrogate. Growing Generations has supported more than 2,400 families through the surrogacy process, including through the post-birth transition.
98% of intended parents match with their surrogates after a single meeting, meaning many of these relationships begin with immediate rapport. For these families, the post-birth relationship is often important.
There is no single way for this relationship to evolve. With 30 years of family-building experience, we understand that surrogacy is not just a process. It is also an emotional experience shaped by the shared goal of bringing your child into the world.
What Post-Birth Surrogate Relationships Look Like
Post-birth relationships exist on a spectrum: some families develop lifelong friendships with regular contact and visits; others share major milestones a few times a year; some feel complete after delivery and move forward separately. None of these is better than another.
A close ongoing friendship can be beautiful, but so can a relationship defined by gratitude, clear closure, and mutual respect. What matters is whether both intended parents and the surrogate feel understood and comfortable with how the relationship unfolds—whether it continues or gently concludes.
It is also important to remember that feelings can evolve. The first few weeks after delivery may feel emotionally full, while later months may bring a more natural rhythm of connection. Some relationships become closer after the baby is born. Others become quieter, not because the journey mattered less, but because the shared purpose of pregnancy has been completed.
Setting Post-Birth Expectations Before the Baby Arrives
One of the best ways to nurture a healthy post-birth relationship is to talk about expectations before delivery. These conversations often begin during the surrogate matching process. At that meeting, discuss what each person expects after birth. Do you hope to send photos and updates? Would your surrogate like to hear from you on birthdays or holidays? Are there boundaries around visits, social media, or extended family involvement? These conversations do not need to feel formal or final, but they can create clarity and avoid assumptions later.
The birth plan conversation is another important opportunity to revisit expectations. By this stage, the relationship has usually developed more fully, and everyone may have a clearer sense of what feels natural. Intended parents and surrogates can talk about who will be present during delivery, how the first moments after birth may unfold, and what kind of contact feels supportive in the days and weeks that follow.
It is helpful to distinguish these personal conversations from the legal framework of the surrogacy journey. Legal considerations such as surrogacy agreements, birth orders, and pre-birth orders — coordinated through Growing Generations’ network of surrogacy attorneys — establish parentage and help define legal rights and responsibilities. Post-birth contact, however, is a personal conversation.
At Growing Generations, the screening and matching process is designed to help build this foundation early. By focusing on compatibility and shared expectations, we help intended parents and surrogates begin their journey with a clear understanding of one another.
Navigating the Emotional Transition After Delivery
The emotional transition after birth is real for everyone involved. Intended parents are stepping into the immediate, life-changing experience of caring for their newborn. Even after years of planning, parenthood can bring joy, exhaustion, vulnerability, and adjustment all at once.
For surrogates, delivery brings physical and emotional transition after an extraordinary experience. This is a natural adjustment—not a sign of parental attachment to the baby.. It reflects the reality that a pregnancy that shaped her daily life has reached its natural conclusion, and her body and routine are adjusting accordingly.
This is where empathy matters. A thoughtful message, a photo, or a simple acknowledgment of what your surrogate has done can mean a great deal. Likewise, intended parents should give themselves grace as they adjust to life with a newborn. You do not need to have every post-birth interaction perfectly planned. What matters is staying kind, communicative, and consistent with the expectations you have discussed.
Growing Generations' support does not end at delivery. Each intended parent has a dedicated Case Specialist who remains your point of contact through the postpartum period, helping coordinate communication with your surrogate, answer logistical questions, and connect you with resources as you adjust to parenthood.
Staying Connected After the Surrogacy Journey Ends
For intended parents who maintain contact, share newborn photos, milestone updates, or birthday messages. These gifts of connection honor the profound role your surrogate played.
Some families create a rhythm that works naturally for everyone. That may mean sending photos a few times a year, exchanging messages on the baby’s birthday, or sharing updates around milestones. Others may have a more open relationship that includes phone calls, visits, or ongoing friendship.
The key is to honor the level of contact both parties agreed to. If you promised updates, do your best to follow through. If your surrogate expressed that she prefers less contact after delivery, respect that boundary. If the relationship changes over time, communicate thoughtfully rather than allowing uncertainty to create distance or hurt feelings.
It can also be helpful to remember that your surrogate’s extended family may have been part of the journey too. Her partner, children, or close loved ones may have supported her throughout pregnancy. Acknowledging that support, when appropriate, can be a meaningful part of expressing gratitude.
Involving Your Child in the Surrogate Story
As your child grows, their birth story—and the role of their surrogate—becomes part of their understanding of who they are. Talk about surrogacy early and age-appropriately, letting the story unfold naturally.
For young children, keep it simple: another kind person helped carry them. As they grow, add detail about the surrogate's role, the medical team, and the love that surrounded their arrival.
Including the surrogate’s role as a positive part of the family narrative can help children develop a healthy understanding of their origin story. It reinforces that their birth was not something secret or complicated to be hidden, but something thoughtful, loving, and deeply intentional.
If your family maintains contact with your surrogate, photos, cards, or updates can become part of that story. If you do not have ongoing contact, you can still speak about her with warmth and gratitude. The goal is to help your child understand that many people played a caring role in helping your family come together.
How Personal Experiences Shape Every Relationship
Every surrogacy journey is unique, and every post-birth relationship is shaped by the people involved. Intended parents and surrogates each bring their own histories, hopes, family dynamics, and communication styles to the experience. These individual perspectives shape how the relationship develops during pregnancy and how it may naturally evolve after delivery.
Growing Generations' structured screening and matching process is designed to build those expectations early—before pregnancy begins. This foundation makes post-birth transitions clearer for everyone involved. There is no universal formula for what the relationship should look like after delivery. Some connections remain close. Some become occasional. Some end with sincere gratitude and a sense of completion. What matters is that the relationship is approached with empathy and respect for everyone’s role in the journey.
At Growing Generations, the relationship between intended parents and their surrogate continues beyond delivery. With your dedicated Case Specialist supporting you through the postpartum period, we carry forward the intentionality—and gratitude—that defined your journey.
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