Country comparison

IVF in Spain vs Georgia: cost, success & law (2026)

Side by side — price per cycle, the real cost per baby, and the laws that decide if you're even eligible. Georgia is the lower cost per baby in this matchup.

Cost per baby by age: Spain vs Georgia

Key legal difference: single women: Spain allows, Georgia restricts; same-sex couples: Spain is more inclusive. This shapes who can access each country and what they can choose.

Donor eggs: both offer donor cycles — Spain at ~€6500/cycle, Georgia at ~€5500/cycle. That's a 18% gap; combined with different legal rules (above), donor availability is a tiebreaker for 40+ patients.

Sticker price per cycle is the wrong comparison — success falls with age, so the figure that matters is the cycle price times the transfers you are likely to need. Using each country's own-egg cycle price and registry live-birth rates:

Age bandOwn-egg LBR / transferSpain est. cost to a babyGeorgia est. cost to a baby
Under 3548%€11,000€8,000
35-3741%€11,000€8,000
38-4032%€16,500€12,000
41-4218%€16,500€12,000
43-448%€22,000€16,000
45+4%€22,000€16,000

Illustrative: registry live-birth per transfer (SART/CDC, HFEA) × typical transfers (PMC10591412) × each country's cycle price.

For 40+ patients: Georgia is typically the better value — lower cycle costs or better donor access.

For single women: Spain allows it, Georgia does not — a decisive legal gate.

For same-sex couples: Spain is more inclusive; Georgia has restrictions.

For donor eggs (about 48% per transfer at any age), a cycle is €6,500 in Spain versus €5,500 in Georgia — the cheaper donor route is decisive for most patients over 40.

What the registries actually show

IVF success is driven mainly by maternal age and egg type, not by the country you choose. The public registries put own-egg live birth at roughly:

Cost per baby (own eggs, age 38) — Spain vs Georgia
Spain€17,050
Georgia€12,400

Cost & law, side by side

SpainGeorgia
IVF own eggs / cycle€5,500€4,000
Donor eggs / cycle€6,500€5,500
Egg donationanonymousyes
Age limit≤50flexible
Single womenyesrestricted
Same-sexyes (ROPA)no
PGT-Ayesyes
Sex selectionnoyes
SurrogacynoYES (paid, hetero)

Regulatory arbitrage — why country matters

🥚Egg donation is banned in Germany, Switzerland & Italy-restricted — patients legally travel to Spain, Czechia, Greece.
👩Single women & female couples: yes in Spain/Greece/Denmark/UK/Portugal; restricted in Germany/Poland/Turkey.
🧬Non-medical sex selection: legal in North Cyprus & USA only.
🤰Paid surrogacy: Georgia & USA; altruistic: Greece, UK, Portugal; banned in Germany/France.

Laws change — verify current eligibility for your nationality and situation.

Which should you choose?

On cost per baby (own eggs, age 38), Georgia comes out lower here — but the right choice depends on your age, whether you need donor eggs, and the legal rules above (single, same-sex, age limit). Model your exact case in the cost-per-baby calculator.

Cost: clinic averages 2026. Success: SART/CDC, HFEA, ESHRE. Verify current legal eligibility for your nationality.

Data sources & medical review

The success rates, cost ranges and legal-eligibility rules on this page are compiled from public clinical registries and national guidelines — not opinion. They are planning estimates and do not replace advice from a licensed fertility specialist.

Reviewed against: HFEA (UK), SART/CDC (US), ESHRE/EIM (EU) and NICE CG156.

Compiled and fact-checked by the BabyPath editorial team against the primary sources above · last reviewed 2026-06-12 · BabyPath is an independent cross-border comparison platform, not a clinic. Always consult a licensed clinician before starting treatment.

Find the country where your baby costs the least.

We compare IVF success rates, prices and laws across 12 countries — using real CDC, HFEA and ESHRE data — to show your true cost per baby, not per cycle. Donor eggs, age 40+, single or same-sex: we show where it's affordable and legal for you.

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