Egg Freezing Calculator
Calculate egg freezing costs, estimated eggs retrieved by age, viable eggs, and success rate for live birth. Compare freezing now vs. later and estimate total all-in cost including storage and IVF.
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Total Procedure Cost
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Est. Eggs Retrieved (Total) —
Est. Viable Eggs (Mature/Survived) —
Est. Chance of Live Birth per Egg —
Extended More scenarios, charts & detailed breakdown ▾
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Total Procedure Cost
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Total Medication Cost —
Total Storage Cost —
Grand Total —
Professional Full parameters & maximum detail ▾
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Cost Breakdown
Total Retrieval Cost —
Storage Cost —
Use Cost (Thaw + IVF) —
Cumulative Cost (All-In) —
Egg Outcomes
Est. Eggs Retrieved —
Est. Viable Eggs —
Est. Cumulative Live Birth Chance —
Efficiency
Cost Per Viable Egg —
How to Use This Calculator
- Enter your current age to get age-adjusted egg retrieval estimates.
- Enter the number of cycles you plan to complete.
- Enter the cost per cycle (default $15,000 — typical US range).
- Use Cost Estimate to add medications and storage. Use Success Rate to see how many eggs you need for a target live birth chance.
Formula
Viable Eggs = Retrieved Eggs × 0.75 (mature survival rate)
Cumulative Live Birth Chance = 1 − (1 − rate per egg)^viable eggs
Age-adjusted retrieval rate: ≤30: ~15/cycle, 32-35: ~12, 36-38: ~10, 39-40: ~7, 40+: ~5
Example
Example: Age 33, 2 cycles, $15,000/cycle. Retrieved: ~24 eggs. Viable: ~18. Total procedure cost: $30,000. Cumulative live birth chance with 18 viable eggs at age 33: approximately 52%.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Age is the primary factor: under 30 averages about 15 eggs, age 32-35 about 10-12, age 36-38 about 7-10, and over 40 about 5 or fewer. Only about 75% of retrieved eggs are mature and survive the freezing process.
- The number depends heavily on age. Under 35, about 10 mature eggs give a roughly 60-70% chance of one live birth. Over 38, you may need 15-20 eggs for the same chance. Success rates drop significantly after 37.
- A typical cycle costs $10,000-$17,000 for the procedure, plus $3,000-$6,000 for medications. Annual storage fees run $500-$1,000. Using the eggs later (thaw, fertilize, IVF transfer) adds another $5,000-$10,000.
- The earlier the better for egg quantity and quality. Most fertility specialists recommend freezing before age 35. After 37, egg quality declines sharply, reducing success rates even with more cycles.
- Coverage varies widely. Some states mandate fertility preservation coverage. Many plans cover diagnostic work but not the retrieval or storage. Check your specific plan and state regulations.
Related Calculators
Sources & References (5) ▾
- ASRM — Oocyte Cryopreservation: A Committee Opinion (2013, reaffirmed 2020) — American Society for Reproductive Medicine
- CDC — ART Success Rates — National Summary Report (2021) — CDC
- Cobo A et al. — Use of cryo-banked oocytes in an ovum donation programme: a prospective, randomized, controlled, clinical trial. Hum Reprod. 2010;25(9):2239-2246 — Human Reproduction
- Goldman KN et al. — Predicting oocyte cryopreservation outcomes. Fertil Steril. 2017;108(4):671-677 — Fertility & Sterility
- RESOLVE — The National Infertility Association: Cost of Egg Freezing — RESOLVE