Lowest-Cost Guaranteed Surrogacy Program in America
Other agencies: $300,000–$350,000
Our total: $165,000
You save $100,000–$135,000+
Guaranteed Embryos — No Other Leading U.S. Agency Offers This
Circle, GSHC, ORM, ConceiveAbilities = NO embryo guarantee
We guarantee 3+ Day-5 blastocysts, created by our physician team.
Physician-Led From Start to Finish
Parents deserve medical oversight —
Not coordinator-run programs.
Remote-Work & Stay At Home Moms [SAHM] -Friendly Surrogate Program
We recruit surrogates who have flexible schedules, which:
Donor & Surrogate Databases for the USA + Canada
Find the right match fast, safely, and under medical supervision.
International Clients Welcome
Support for visas, travel planning, and passports for newborns.
For Intended Parents
Build Your Family With Confidence, Safety & Guaranteed Embryos
📌Most popular option:
Guaranteed Blastocysts + U.S. Surrogacy = $165,000 Total
For Egg Donors
Make $6,000–$15,000+ per donation and Help a Family Build a Future
Egg donation is perfect for:
For Surrogates
Earn $45,000–$80,000+ and Support a Family in Need
Ideal for:
Surrogacy includes:
Surrogacy in Canada is altruistic, meaning:
Intended Parents may use:
America’s Only Guaranteed Embryo + Guaranteed Surrogacy Program
What’s Included:
| Service | Included |
| Guarantee of 3+ blastocysts | ✔ Yes |
| Donor selection | ✔ Yes |
| Donor stimulation & IVF | ✔ Yes |
| Surrogate matching | ✔ Yes |
| Surrogate compensation | ✔ Yes |
| Legal & psychological screening | ✔ Yes |
| Case management | ✔ Yes |
| Pregnancy oversight | ✔ Yes |
| IVF clinic fee | ❗ Paid to clinic (~$15k) |
You save $100,000+ instantly.
Egg Donation
Surrogacy
Guaranteed Embryos
A couple from Boston tried 3 agencies without success. They needed a South Asian donor, preferably graduate-level with strong AMH.
Within 10 days, EggDonors4All matched them with:
11 eggs retrieved → 7 embryos → 2 euploid embryos → healthy baby boy born via surrogate.
“Circle quoted us $290,000. With Surrogacy4All, we had a baby for $163,400. The embryo guarantee changed everything.”
“As a stay-at-home mom, surrogacy fit perfectly into my routine. The support from the physician team was incredible.”
“We received 4 blastocysts from our $45,000 package. Our surrogate got pregnant on the first try.”
“The physician-led process at EggDonors4All was far superior to every other agency we contacted.”
“We found our Jewish donor here when every other agency had a waitlist.”
“Frozen eggs worked perfectly for our second child.”
Choosing a donor typically involves reviewing detailed profiles that include medical history, education, personal traits, physical characteristics, photos, and sometimes video interviews. Many intended parents also consider personality, interests, and family background. A fertility specialist or donor coordinator can help guide the selection process.
Most egg donors are between 21 and 30 years old, as this age range provides the highest egg quality and success rates according to fertility industry standards.
Both anonymous and known donation options are available. Intended parents may choose to exchange no identifying information, or choose open/identity-release donation where limited contact or future disclosure is possible.
If you plan for genetically related siblings, you can reserve additional eggs or embryos from the same donor. Many families choose frozen donor eggs specifically to secure future sibling cycles.
A typical frozen donor egg cohort includes 5–8 mature eggs, depending on the program. This amount is usually sufficient to create multiple embryos.
Donors undergo extensive carrier genetic screening for common inherited conditions such as cystic fibrosis, SMA, thalassemia, and others based on guidelines. Intended parents may also be tested to ensure compatibility.
Matching with a donor can take a few days to several weeks, depending on donor availability, preferences, and whether you select fresh or frozen eggs.
Compensation typically covers the donor’s time, travel, lost wages, medical procedures, medications, and psychological screening. It does not affect medical care quality for intended parents.
Policies vary. Some programs inform donors only whether a retrieval was successful, while others may share non-identifying outcome details (e.g., if a pregnancy resulted) with consent.
Yes. Donors may donate up to 6 cycles in their lifetime based on ASRM guidelines, assuming they maintain medical eligibility.
If a donor does not pass medical, psychological, or genetic screening, intended parents may select a new donor without losing their investment, depending on program policy.
Legal counsel is recommended, especially for fresh or known donation arrangements. A lawyer ensures that parental rights, donor agreements, and future contact terms are clearly established.
Most agencies require standard vaccinations, and many donors are COVID-19 vaccinated. You may request vaccination documentation during selection.
IVF with donor eggs has one of the highest success rates in fertility care. Many clinics report 60–80% success rates per embryo transfer depending on age, embryo quality, and clinical factors.
Absolutely. LGBTQ+ families are fully supported, and donor eggs are commonly used with gestational surrogacy or IVF.
Yes. Single fathers can build a family using donor eggs and a gestational surrogate.
Yes. Intended parents often combine donor eggs with gestational surrogacy, especially for male couples or women who cannot carry a pregnancy safely.
We partner with leading fertility clinics across the USA, allowing you to choose a location most convenient for treatment. You may also use a clinic of your choice.
Yes. Depending on egg quality and sperm health, a single frozen batch may produce multiple viable embryos, increasing the chance of pregnancy or sibling planning.
You can begin by registering to browse donor profiles, speaking with a donor coordinator, or scheduling a consultation with our team. We’ll guide you through matching, screening, legal steps, and IVF planning.
Ethical, safe, physician-led, and fully compliant with Canadian law.
Egg donation is a process where a woman (the egg donor) provides one or several eggs (also known as oocytes) for purposes of assisted reproduction, with the eggs being fertilized in the laboratory. Once fertilized, the resulting embryos are transferred to the recipient’s uterus to initiate a pregnancy, or they can be cryopreserved (frozen) for future use.