Core Benefits of Surrogacy Services in Georgia
Legal Clarity and International Recognition
Georgia is one of the few countries in the world that allows commercial surrogacy and has a well-established legal system, having passed the Citizen’s Health Protection Law in 1997, which clarifies the legality of surrogacy. The advantages include:
Legal protection: the surrogacy contract is notarized and has mandatory effect, and the birth certificate of the newborn directly registers the commissioning party as the legal parents, without the need for adoption procedures.
Applicable to a wide range of people: married couples, singles and the LGBTQ+ community can legally apply for surrogacy services, with no restrictions on nationality.
Technology and Success Rate
Third-generation IVF technology (PGT-A): embryo chromosome screening accuracy reaches 99% and live birth rate is increased to 60%-70%.
Mature Medical Package: Adoption of international standard ovulation programs (e.g. antagonist program) and Timelapse dynamic culture system, with a blastocyst formation rate of over 70%.
Surrogacy Cost Structure and Transparency
Total Cost Range
The overall cost of surrogacy in Georgia is approximately $70,000 – $110,000, which is only 1/3 of the cost in Europe and the U.S. The exact cost varies depending on the organization, medical needs, and additional services.
Core Cost Items
Medical expenses (about 25,000-30,000 USD):
Includes ovulation stimulation drugs, embryo culture, transfer and pregnancy monitoring.
Additional $5,000-$8,000 if gender screening (PGT technology) or donor egg services are required.
Surrogate Mother Compensation (approximately $20,000-$30,000):
Legal & Administrative Fees (approx. $5,000-$10,000 USD):
Includes contract notarization, Hague certification of cross-border documents and birth certificate processing.
Agency Service Fee (approx. 10,000-20,000 USD):
Covers surrogate mother screening, medical coordination and 24-hour monitoring services.
Hidden Cost Tips
Multi-cycle attempts: additional $15,000-$20,000 for second transplant after first failure.
Complications contingency: out-of-pocket expenses for emergencies such as eclampsia, preterm labor, etc. can be $30,000-$50,000 USD.
Process efficiency and risk control
Standardized Processes
Demand Matching (1-2 months): After submitting health report, the agency matches qualified surrogate mothers (BMI 18.5-24.9, AMH >1.1 ng/mL).
Medical operation (3-4 months): Ovulation stimulation to embryo transfer is done by ISO certified laboratory, pregnancy confirmation cycle is only 6-8 weeks.
Legal Confirmation (1-2 weeks): After the birth certificate is certified by The Hague, the client can directly apply for a passport and settle down in his/her home country.
Risk avoidance strategies
Contract regulation: Clearly define the ownership of the embryo, medical responsibility and phased payment terms to avoid invalid contract disputes.
Insurance coverage: the surrogate mother needs to take out medical insurance with an insured amount of ≥100,000 USD, covering 20 kinds of pregnancy complications.
Institutional Choice and Ethical Commitment
Criteria for Compliant Institutions
Accreditation: Licensed to provide assisted reproduction services, partner hospitals must have ISO 9001 certified laboratories.
Transparency: Fee details need to cover medical, legal and surrogacy compensation, rejecting hidden clauses.
Surrogate Mother Protection: Provide mental health support (e.g. SCL-90 scale screening) and reasonable living conditions.
Declaration of Ethics
Anti-exploitation clause: no objectification of surrogate mother, compensation paid directly to individual account, agency commission ≤ 30%.
Privacy: Surrogate mothers sign a lifetime confidentiality agreement, but anonymous mail drop services are allowed.
Conclusion – Rational Planning and Long-Term Security
Georgian surrogacy services have become the fertility choice of families worldwide due to their cost-effectiveness and legal security, but success depends on the screening of compliant agencies and cost transparency control. In order to achieve a balance between fertility goals and ethical responsibilities, the commissioning party should prioritize agencies with complete qualifications, transparent fees, and protection of surrogate mothers’ rights and interests, as well as set aside a contingency budget to deal with unexpected risks.
Georgia Surrogacy Services,Legal IVF Hospital,Global Fertility Agency