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Surrogacy for Intended Parents

March 19, 2026 at 10:45:00 AM

For many two-mom families, including lesbian, bisexual, pansexual, transgender, and non-binary individuals with female reproductive anatomy, the journey to parenthood can include the opportunity to share a meaningful role in bringing their child into the world.


Reciprocal IVF offers an answer. Often called shared motherhood, this path allows both partners to participate in different but equally important parts of the surrogacy journey. One partner contributes the genetic material as the egg donor, while the other partner carries the pregnancy. This creates a shared experience of family building, one that honors both biological connection and the emotional partnership at the heart of parenthood.


Reciprocal IVF is both a medical process and a shared emotional experience. It involves coordinated fertility treatment, careful decision-making, and support from experienced fertility specialists and family-building professionals. But at its core, it is about you and your partner building a family together in a way that best reflects your partnership.


At Growing Generations, we support intended parents of all identities and family structures. Reciprocal IVF is one of many pathways available to LGBTQIA+ families, and for many couples, it becomes a way to share the journey from conception to birth.

 

What is Reciprocal IVF? How Shared Motherhood Works

Reciprocal IVF is a process that allows two partners to share biological roles in the conception and birth of their child. In this process, one partner (or in some cases both) undergoes ovarian stimulation and provides eggs. Those eggs are fertilized in a laboratory using donor sperm through in vitro fertilization (IVF). One embryo is then transferred to the partner who will carry the pregnancy.


Because both partners play a biological role, one genetically and one through pregnancy, this approach is often referred to as shared motherhood or co-maternity.


Growing Generations works with LGBTQIA+ intended parents as they explore family-building options, helping couples explore the medical, legal, and considerations involved in paths  like reciprocal IVF.


While reciprocal IVF is often a meaningful option for sharing biological roles, it’s not the right fit for every family. If one partner does not want to carry, or if medical screening shows that carrying a pregnancy may not be possible, surrogacy may be another path to consider. Our team supports intended parents in understanding these options and determining what aligns best with their goals.

 

How Reciprocal IVF Works: Step-by-Step Process

While every fertility journey is unique, reciprocal IVF generally follows a structured process coordinated by fertility specialists, embryologists, and surrogacy care teams.


Step 1: Fertility testing for both partners

Each partner undergoes initial fertility evaluations. This may include hormone testing, ovarian reserve assessments, and uterine health evaluations. These screenings help determine which partner may provide eggs and which partner may carry the pregnancy.


Step 2: Selecting a sperm donor

Because reciprocal IVF involves two female partners, donor sperm is required for fertilization. You may choose sperm from a sperm bank or from a known donor, depending on your personal preferences.


Step 3: Egg retrieval and embryo creation

The partner providing the eggs undergoes ovarian stimulation, allowing multiple eggs to mature. These eggs are retrieved in a brief outpatient procedure and fertilized in a laboratory using donor sperm to create embryos. Fertility clinics carefully monitor embryo development before selecting the strongest candidate for transfer.


Step 4: Embryo transfer to the gestational partner

Once an embryo is ready, it is transferred to the partner who will carry the pregnancy. This is a simple medical procedure performed at the fertility clinic. If the embryo implants successfully, the pregnancy progresses just as it would in a natural conception.


Throughout this process, fertility specialists guide you through each step. Medical teams coordinate timing, medications, and testing to ensure that the treatment plan aligns with the couple’s health, goals, and timeline.


Success Rates and Outcomes

The success rate of reciprocal IVF is comparable to traditional IVF cycles. Outcomes depend on several factors, including age and ovarian health of the partner providing the eggs, the reproductive health of the partner carrying the pregnancy, sperm quality, and embryo quality. IVF success is typically measured across several stages. Some families conceive on the first transfer, while others may require additional cycles or embryo transfers.


Working with experienced fertility clinics and reproductive specialists can help you understand their specific outlook and make informed decisions along the way. While no fertility treatment can guarantee pregnancy, reciprocal IVF has helped many lesbian couples successfully welcome healthy children and build the families they envision.


Emotional and Relationship Considerations  in Reciprocal IVF

One of the most meaningful aspects of reciprocal IVF is how it allows both partners to participate biologically in the creation of their child. One partner contributes the egg, providing the genetic connection, while the other carries the pregnancy and experiences the physical journey of bringing the baby into the world.


This structure can deepen the sense of partnership in family building. Each parent holds a distinct role in the process, yet both contributions are equally vital. This shared participation can feel like a reflection of the relationship itself, two people bringing different experiences together to create a family.


Reciprocal IVF can create opportunities for emotional closeness between partners. The process often involves shared decisions, medical milestones, and moments of anticipation that couples experience side by side. Many couples begin exploring this path with a sense of excitement. 


At the same time, fertility treatment can bring moments of vulnerability. Medical procedures, waiting periods, and uncertainty are natural parts of the IVF process. Some partners may feel pressure around their role, whether providing eggs or carrying the pregnancy, while others may feel protective of their partner as they move through treatment. Along the way, many couples also experience pride and gratitude. The collaborative nature of reciprocal IVF can reinforce the sense that you are navigating the journey as a true team.


There is no single emotional reaction for reciprocal IVF. Every couple’s experience is different, and all feelings are part of the process. What matters most is maintaining open communication and supporting one another as partners throughout the journey.


Medical, Legal, and Cost Considerations  for Reciprocal IVF

Reciprocal IVF involves planning and coordination across several areas of family building.


Medical considerations include fertility evaluations for both partners, medication protocols for ovarian stimulation and embryo transfer, and monitoring throughout the IVF cycle. Fertility clinics help determine which partner may be the best candidate for egg retrieval and which may carry the pregnancy.


Legal considerations are also an important part of the process. Laws surrounding parental recognition can vary depending on location, and many families choose to complete legal parentage steps to ensure both mothers are fully recognized as parents. Working with an experienced surrogacy attorney helps protect everyone involved and establishes parental rights from the beginning.


Cost considerations can include IVF procedures, donor sperm, medication, and legal services. Because each fertility journey is unique, overall costs can vary depending on medical needs, clinic protocols, and the number of treatment cycles required.


For this reason, you can benefit from early conversations with fertility clinics, legal professionals, and family-building advisors who can help outline the process clearly.

 

Is Reciprocal IVF the Right Path for Your Family?

Deciding whether reciprocal IVF is right for your family is a personal process. Rather than focusing on a checklist of requirements, you and your partner can begin with in-depth conversations about your hopes and expectations. Some questions that may help guide that reflection include:


  • Do we both want to participate biologically in different ways?

  • How do we feel about one partner providing the egg while the other carries the pregnancy?

  • Are we prepared for the emotional and financial commitment that fertility treatment may involve?

  • Do we feel supported in navigating medical and legal steps together?

  • What aspects of family building feel most meaningful to us as partners?

  • How might we support one another if the process takes longer than expected?

  • How do we want to talk about our child’s conception story as they grow?

  • Are we comfortable making medical decisions together throughout the fertility process?


For some couples, reciprocal IVF aligns beautifully with their vision of shared parenthood. For others, a different path may feel more comfortable.


If carrying a pregnancy is not medically possible or not the right fit for your family, surrogacy can also be a highly successful option for LGBTQIA+ parents. There are many ways to build a family. What matters most is choosing the path that feels right for you.

 

Building Your Shared Motherhood Story

Every family begins with intention. Reciprocal IVF simply offers one way for two mothers to share in the creation of that story from the very beginning. While biology can play a meaningful role in family building, it is never the only thing that defines parenthood. Love, commitment, and partnership are what shape a family over time. For many two-mom couples, reciprocal IVF becomes a powerful reflection of those values, a journey where both parents participate in bringing their child into the world.


If you’re exploring surrogacy or evaluating different family-building paths alongside fertility treatments like reciprocal IVF, our client care specialists at Growing Generations are here to help you understand your options and determine what comes next. Your path to parenthood is uniquely yours, and with the right support, it can begin with clarity and confidence.


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RECIPROCAL IVF 101: A ‘SHARED MOTHERHOOD’ GUIDE FOR TWO-MOM FAMILITES

RECIPROCAL IVF 101: A ‘SHARED MOTHERHOOD’ GUIDE FOR TWO-MOM FAMILITES

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