Surrogacy Journeys Surrogacy Prices The Complete Guide to Compensation Costs for Surrogate Mothers Worldwide (2025 Edition)

The Complete Guide to Compensation Costs for Surrogate Mothers Worldwide (2025 Edition)

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Many prospective parents are looking forsurrogacy agencyAt first glance, you are attracted by the "starting price". But when you actually sign the contract and enter the process, you realize: "Hey? Why do I have to pay the double tire fee? Why is there a clothing fee? What's the cost of lost labor?"

Due to information asymmetry, many families areSurrogacy budgetNot only is it easy to overspend, but you may even fall into a deep pit of legal or medical risks because of your desire for a "cheap surrogate mom".

To help you save those dozens of hours of retrieval time, and to make sure you spend every penny, I've compiled this list of the2025 Global Surrogate Mother Compensation Price Standard".

Let's start with the conclusion: what is the approximate range of compensation for surrogate mothers, in different countries?

nations Surrogacy model Typical base compensation range (USD) Common additional compensation A little reminder for Chinese families
United States of America Commercial surrogacy Approx. 50,000-90,000 (first birth → multiple experiences) Price increases for twin births, cesarean sections, bed rest, invasive procedures, etc. "Finished luxury housing": expensive, but the most legally and medically sophisticated, with the fewest hidden mines
Canadian Altruistic surrogacy (reimbursement system) Reimbursement of expenses approximately 18,000-45,000 CAD Reimbursement of living expenses, lost wages, childcare, psychological support, etc. "Affordable housing": not a lot of money, but very few surrogate moms, and queues of 1-2 years are common
Georgia (country)Central Asian Commercial surrogacy (policy tightening) About 10,000-30,000 Compensation for twin births, cesarean sections, multiple transplants "Potentials": cost-effective, but must pick a reliable organization and medical team
Kyrgyzstan / Kazakhstan Business / Regulations vary Approx. 10,000-25,000 Compensation for multiple births, bed rest, complications Prices are considerably cheaper than in the U.S. Contract terms, legal enforceability should be looked at carefully
Colombia / Mexico Business / Recognized in some states Approx. 10,000-20,000 Nutritional expenses, clothing expenses, relatives' escort, double birth bonus right LGBTQ Friendly and suitable for families on a budget, but must emphasize safety and contract enforcement
Belarus(pre-war mode) Commercial surrogacy Approx. 20,000-26,000 EUR Monthly allowance, wartime risk, compensation for complications Very good value for money before the war, now affected by the war, new projects need to be extremely cautious

If you haven't seen ourGlobal Surrogacy Prices 2025, it is recommended to get a general idea of the total budget range of each country before returning to this one to look specifically at surrogate compensation for a more holistic view.

Overall:
American Surrogacy CostsThe most expensive is the "furnished mansion" in the surrogacy circle;
Canada is "affordable housing" with comfortable prices, but very few properties and long lines;
Central Asia and Latin America are like the "potential neighborhoods" of today, the prices look good, the plans are attractive, but the "developers" (surrogacy agencies) must be chosen.

Many families look at a quote for the first time with one voice in their head:

"surrogate motherHow much money do you take?
Is it worth it to her?
I don't want to be slaughtered by the agency nor do I want to gouge too hard on her."

Reality is a little more complicated again:

  • In the same country and city, "veteran" surrogate mothers are more expensive than "newbies", because they have experience in childbearing and are more sought after in the industry;
  • A single baby is a bite-sized price, and every variable of twin, multiple, c-section, bedridden ...... is adding up;
  • In some countries, salaries can be written openly, while in others, only "reimbursement of reasonable expenses" can be written, which looks "cheap", but in reality, the cost of time and effort is very high.

This substitute mom cost guide wants to help you with three things:

  1. First, I'll give you a global surrogate mother compensation range reference: the US, Canada, Central Asia, Latin America, and roughly what bracket each is;
  2. replacing "Surrogacy costs"Breaking it down: base compensation, allowances, special risks, psychological support to help you read the offer;
  3. Tells you which money is really for surrogate mothers and which are just organizations playing with packaging, and: what pitfalls you will step into if you only look at "cheap surrogate mothers".

Core points of this article

  • Expensive:American Surrogate MothersCompensation is highest, with a full pregnancy often in $60,000-$100,000Canada is "reimbursement only", but the actual reimbursement can be up to 20,000-40,000 Canadian dollars; Central Asia/Latin America is mostly in the range of 15,000-25,000 U.S. dollars, which is the "cost-effective region" at present.
  • How the structure comes apart:The money for substitute moms is not a lump sum hit that is Basic Compensation + Monthly Allowance + Special Risk Compensation + Postnatal Support"Giving in pieces".
  • The key to determining price:National legal models (Commercial surrogacy vs Altruistic Surrogacy), the personal conditions of the surrogate mother (age, birth history, health), the number of fetuses (single vs. twin), the availability of insurance, and whether the package is "guaranteed success" or paid per cycle.
  • Common Pit:
    • "Starting price for substitute mom compensation" is just the minimum configuration;
    • She doesn't get most of the "surrogate mother management fees" and "surrogate mother screening fees", the organization does;
    • Looking at cheap, not screening and psychological support can end up costing you money in the NICU and legal trouble.
  • Hands-on advice:Choose legal + medical first, then look at price; budget a decent chunk of compensation for the surrogate mom, then set aside a 10-20% risk buffer; save on airfare and hotels if you can, not on her medical exams and psychological support.

What exactly are the items included in the cost of surrogate motherhood?

Many prospective parents look at the quotation and only stare at the big numbers on the line. But the money for a substitute mom is not a lump sum, but "little by little".

The only way you can break down these pieces is so that you won't be shocked in your mind when you come across any bills or supplemental agreements later on.

1. Basic compensation

This is what we commonly refer to as "wages", and in legal documents it may be written as "compensation", "pain compensation", "love compensation". "It's all the same thing:

During those ten months of pregnancy, she took all the risks and discomforts with her body, and this money is a buyout for that time.

Common Features:

  • Maximum amount:In the United States, the average first-time mom is $50,000-$70,000, and an experienced mom is $70,000-$90,000 or more;
  • Payment in installments:It's not usually given as a lump sum, but:
    • Positive pregnancy test + Fetal Heart Confirmation to start sending the first one;
    • Send a few more by a certain stable pregnancy week (say 12/20/24 weeks);
    • The final payment is sent after delivery and completion of key legal steps.

You can interpret base compensation as:"The basic offer for this entire pregnancy, and all the extras that follow are added on top of that."

2. Pregnancy allowance & subsistence allowance

This small piece, which many families don't pay attention to at first, is critical to the surrogate mom experience.

A few common categories:

  • Subsistence allowance/:A couple hundred dollars a month to buy healthy food, get more nutrition, and pay for miscellaneous expenses;
  • Lost wages:Because of maternity, bedridden, and unable to work on vacation, she is underpaid and you need to make up for it; this is done in the US on an actual payroll basis, and Central Asia/Latin America often gives a flat rate;
  • Childcare / housework support:In the later stages of pregnancy, the cost of hiring help to take care of her own children and do household chores should also be included in your side of the budget.

Surrogate Mother Costs

3. Medical and special risk compensation

It's easy to get mixed up here: some of the money goes to the hospital, pharmacy, and lab - "medical bills" - and some of it is "compensation" because she "assumed additional risks for these medical practices" - "indemnity". "compensation".

A typical few:

  • Injection period subsidy:When you first start getting shots and medication to prepare for the transplant, you will be uncomfortable and usually have a few hundred dollars to compensate;
  • Twin / Multiple births at an increased price:Twins are not simply x2, but rather a flat amount added to the base compensation (+5,000-10,000 USD is common in the US, +2,000-3,000 or so in other countries);
  • Compensation for cesarean sections:Cesarean deliveries, with their slow recovery and high risks, typically carry an additional $2,500-$5,000;
  • Compensation for intrusive operations:For example, amniocentesis, chorionic villus sampling, etc., some programs give a one-time compensation;
  • Compensation for major complications / organ damage:For example, if you have a postpartum hemorrhage or hysterectomy, there are programs that will state a large indemnity or claim through insurance.

This may seem like a "small item," but it can add up to tens of thousands of dollars in total compensation for a surrogate mom in the same country.

4. Post-natal compensation and psychological support

Many people think "it's over when the baby is born," but the really tough part for a substitute mom is often after the birth.

Common arrangements are:

  • Subsidized post-natal recovery:For nutrition, physical therapy, and rehabilitation, usually 6-12 weeks after delivery;
  • Pumping Milk Fee:If you want her to help provide breastmilk, there is a weekly fee;
  • Counseling / Social Worker Follow-up:Some programs include 3-6 counseling sessions to ensure a smooth exit from the "surrogate role" and a return to her own life.

This is one of the easiest things to cut out of the "super cheap package". What you don't see is that a surrogate mom who is not taken care of can easily take her grievances to the industry at a later stage or the next time she considers surrogacy.

What factors can make surrogate motherhood expensive or cheap?

In this line of work for a long time, you will find: the logic of compensation for surrogate mothers is very similar to buying a used car, recruiting senior managers: the standard model has a market price; "high quality" must be expensive; defective must be cheaper, but do you dare to buy?

Surrogate Mother Costs

1. National and legal models: commercial surrogacy vs. altruistic surrogacy

This is the underlying logic that determines the "ceiling" and "floor" of prices.

Commercial surrogacy countries (United States, Central Asia, some Latin America, pre-war Ukraine)

  • Substitute moms know it's a high-risk, high-reward job with prices determined solely by the market;
  • When local inflation goes up and the cost of living increases, it's only natural that compensation for surrogate mothers should go up;
  • In popular states like California, which is a standard "seller's market" where the world's rich are flocking to, it's not unusual for compensation for surrogate mothers to be 5,000-10,000 more expensive than in other states.

Altruistic surrogacy countries (Canada, UK, Israel, some EU countries)

  • Legal red line: you cannot "pay for the pregnancy itself", but only reimburse reasonable expenses;
  • That is why the contract will only say: reimbursement of living expenses, lost wages, nutritional expenses, psychological counseling, and so on; it will not say: "I will give you $30,000 for the birth of a child".
  • It doesn't seem like a lot of money, but the real cost is elsewhere:Cannot openly advertise for surrogate moms → extremely difficult to recruit; You may spend two years waiting for an altruistic surrogate mom, during which time you have been paying attorney's fees, frozen embryo storage fees, and travel costs.

2. "Hard indicators" for surrogate mothers: experience and personal conditions

The easiest place to pull the price off is "Novice vs. Veteran."The

surrogate mother

  • Newbie substitute moms:The price is relatively cheap; the risk is: I've never had so many injections before, and I don't know if I can handle the psychological "having a child that is not my own" thing.
  • Experienced veterans:This means that the surrogate has had one or more successful surrogate pregnancies and the process has gone smoothly; in the United States, this "upgrade" usually results in a $5,000-$10,000 direct increase in Base compensation.

Why is it expensive? Because she has proven: uterine environment OK; fits well; knows the wholeSurrogacy ProcessWhat the body and mind go through in.

For families who don't want to compromise, this money is often one of the best spent.

3. Number of fetuses and medical risk: single fetuses are "standard", twin fetuses are "big bets"

The first reaction of many Chinese families is, "Since it's all so expensive, might as well have twins at once and have both children."

On the books, the twins are just: +$5,000-10,000 (US) on base compensation; Central Asia / Latin America maybe +$2,000-3,000.

It looks like "one more child, a few thousand more, it's a good deal."

Single vs. Twin

The real pitfall is - high risk pregnancy + NICU:

  • The risk of preterm labor, high blood pressure, and gestational diabetes is almost "doubled" with twin births;
  • In the U.S., a NICU of $3,000-5,000 a day is normal, and that's a little over $100,000 for two weeks;
  • Even in relatively price-friendly countries, a trip to the hospital for preterm labor, neonatal jaundice, or respiratory problems is enough to give you a "headache".

So from a purely financial risk perspective: unless one is really exceptionally well-funded, a single child will always be the least risky option.

4. Differences in insurance and health systems

One often overlooked point: whether the substitute mom has insurance and what the healthcare system is like in her country.

  • Some American surrogate moms come with "Surrogate Friendly Insurance", her company's insurance will cover the cost of the pregnancy; this kind of surrogate mom is a scarce resource; the logic is: she saves you $20,000-$30,000 in commercial insurance premiums, so her base compensation will be increased by $3,000-$5,000. The logic is: she saves you $20,000-$30,000 in business insurance premiums, so her base compensation will go up by $3,000-$5,000, and you're still making money after all.
  • Some countries have cheaper healthcare, but limited capacity in ICUs and neonatal units; the probability of something going wrong is not necessarily higher, but if something goes wrong, there are far fewer tools and options available.

A simple sentence:Where there is insurance and a mature healthcare system, you are paying for "expensive but manageable"; where healthcare is cheap but the system is weak, you are paying for "cheap but hard to clean up if something goes wrong".

Look at surrogate mother compensation prices by country and package

This is the part where we "don't talk about ads, we talk about practice": we look at the numbers, but we also look at the logic and the pitfalls behind them.

🇺🇸 USA: "Hermes surrogacy" with a price tag.

American surrogacy is the "gold standard" of surrogacy in the world, and the cost is tops in the world.

1) Basic compensation

  • Some Midwestern/Southern states:First-time moms tend to be in the $50,000-65,000 range; experienced moms around $65,000-80,000;
  • California / East Coast:With a high cost of living and high demand, surrogate compensation can easily be pushed to 70,000-85,000; for the "Hexagonal Warrior"-white, highly educated, multiple births, and surrogacy experience-there are agencies willing to pay as much as 90,000-100,000+.

2) The inevitable "Extra Bundle"

A lot of quotes for this piece are written vaguely, but the reality is that you must pay out:

  • Monthly subsistence allowance;
  • Maternity clothes, transportation, childcare;
  • Life insurance / accident insurance;
  • Postpartum psychological support.

That adds up to about $15,000-$20,000.

Summary: In the United States surrogacy, do not want to save 10,000 dollars, hard to choose a surrogate mother you do not even look too comfortable. What is really expensive in the United States is the medical care and potential complications, the surrogate mother's health is stable, can often help you save hundreds of thousands of NICU bill.

🇨🇦 Canada & 🇬🇧 UK: "Hidden Costs" of the Altruistic Model

The legal logic is simple: you can't write "I'll give you $30,000 for the birth of a child"; you can only write "We'll reimburse you for reasonable expenses incurred as a result of your pregnancy".

Where does the money go in practice?

  • Reimbursement of living expenses, nutritional expenses, lost wages and childcare;
  • Some Wellness programs (massage, acupuncture, counseling, yoga, etc.);
  • Reimbursements can often add up to $25,000-$35,000 (or more).

The real big one is"Cost of Time"Canadian surrogate mothers are so scarce that waiting lists of 12-24 months are common; during this time, you're continually paying for: lawyer consultations, annual fees for frozen embryos, and small trips to and from visits.

So the "surrogate mother compensation amount" in Canada / UK doesn't look intimidating, but when you factor in time and peripheral costs, it's not necessarily much cheaper than Central Asia / Latin America.

🇬🇪 Georgia & 🇰🇬 Kyrgyzstan and other Central Asia: "black box games" in packages.

For Chinese families, this has been the hottest "cost-effective area" in recent years.

Typical situation:

  • Compensation for "surrogate motherhood" is often advertised at US$ 10,000-25,000;
  • The total cost of a project is typically between $60,000 and $100,000 dollars.

Sounds very tempting, so the question arises - how exactly is the money split?

Most agents like to quote an "all-inclusive price": "You pay a total of $65,000, which includes compensation for the surrogate mom, lodging, a nanny, and a driver ......".

But the key thing for you is:How much do surrogate moms really get? Are surrogate moms being pressed too hard for nutrition, lodging, and psychological support?

A very real risk is: if the organization, in order to increase profits, tear down the east wall to make up for the west wall on the surrogate mother - nutritional expenses shrink; the environment of the place of residence is poor; the maternity examination is perfunctory; in the end, what will be affected is her state of health and the child in the womb.

Hands-on advice:Ask the agency to show you the actual video of the "surrogate mother's home" instead of the showroom; try to choose a program that has the surrogate mother's compensation written clearly and in detail, and don't just listen to a "packaged price".

🇨🇴 Colombia & 🇲🇽 Mexico: Latin America's "Dollar Dividend"

Latin America is characterized by the fact that the dollar is very valuable and the same amount of money can mean a lot to local families.

Compensation range: Compensation for surrogate mothers tends to be in the range of US$ 10,000-20,000; this is a "game-changing" amount for the local community, and cooperation is often high.

Suitable Crowd:

  • Some countries are more friendly to LGBT gay families;
  • An option for families on a limited budget but who want a relatively clear path to legality.

But also pay very close attention to two things:

  1. Policing:The odds are that you'll have to go to the area a few times, and you'll have to inquire ahead of time about the location and security levels of hospitals, hotels, and agency offices.
  2. Funding regulation:Always try to use third-party escrow account (Escrow) programs to avoid direct cash to institutions or individuals, which is too risky.

How do I read the "Surrogate Mother Compensation" line in the agency's quote?

1. The most common ways in which quotations are written

  • Base Compensation:Basic compensation, which is the "body of wages";
  • Surrogate Compensation:Sometimes it refers to the entire "substitute mom package" and sometimes it refers only to Base, so ask for clarification;
  • Monthly Allowance / Living Allowance:Monthly miscellaneous expenses, subsistence allowance;
  • Start Fee / Injection Fee:Small compensation for startup/injection period;
  • Contingency Fund:A reserve fund, which requires you to deposit a portion in advance to cover small unexpected medical bills, will be refunded when you don't use it;
  • Surrogate-related Costs:The vaguest way to write it, it might be sandwiched in there: compensation for surrogate mother + agency overhead + medical exam fee.

When you see "related / package / program", a red light goes off in your head: "How much of this is really for her? How much of this is for yourselves?"

2. "Surrogate mother screening fee" & "Surrogate mother management fee"

Quotations will often say, "Costs associated with surrogate motherhood: $10,000 USD". When you break it down, it will include: pre-embryo transfer medical and psychological evaluations; background checks and home visits; coordinator's salary; and administrative fees. ......

The portion that actually hits the surrogate mom's hand is probably just a small piece of the pie.

So you must ask two things:

  1. How much of the $10,000 did the surrogate mom get?
  2. Who does this part of the contract say is the "payee"? Is it her, or is it the organization?

As long as the other side dares to remove it, you dare to choose; as long as the other side is dead set on not removing it, you know who the money is really hitting.

3. Low-price gimmicks of "compensating the starting price"

"Compensation for surrogate motherhood starts at only 30,000!" "Our surrogate moms start at only 8,000!"

These "starting prices" will almost certainly fulfill at least two of several conditions:

  • No twin births, no cesarean sections, no bed rest;
  • Suitable for the combination of "new mom + average conditions + small city";
  • Didn't count in any psychological support, postpartum care;
  • There are a bunch of "subject to availability" additions.

What you see is a very attractive figure, but when it comes to the actual match, the program consultant will quickly say, "In your case, it is recommended to choose a better surrogate mother, it will be much more stable." So you are smoothly guided from the "starting price" to the "middle to high price range", the starting price is just a nice anchor point.

Just look at the "cheap surrogate mother" will step on the mine: the price is too low means what?

The Risks of Cheap Surrogate Moms

1. Reduced standards for medical testing and screening

Surrogacy is an industry where the most expensive thing is risk control. Surrogate compensation is most likely to be cut when it's pushed to low:

  • Full medical checkup at a large hospital → Switch to a small clinic for a basic ultrasound;
  • Complete Genetic Disease Screening → Only the cheapest basic program;
  • Systematic psychological assessment → becomes "just a chat".

In the short term, you save thousands of dollars; in the long term, you may be buying: gestational hypertension, gestational diabetes; unstable mental state, poor cooperation; "with the disease on the battlefield" surrogate mother.

2. Inadequate psychological support and follow-up services

In a responsible program, the surrogate mother has a "logistical team": a regular social worker/psychologist; someone who regularly asks her if she sleeps well, her relationship with her family, and if she has any anxiety about the surrogacy.

It's common in ultra-low-cost programs to see one coordinator managing dozens of projects at once; using WhatsApp mass messaging to maintain contact; and having to carry her own weight when something goes wrong emotionally.

This is not a "sentimental topic", but a real risk: withdrawal in the middle of the day; non-cooperation with medication and labor and delivery tests; the accumulation of all kinds of small conflicts, and finally become a big explosion.

3. Contract enforcement & risk of default

To put it bluntly: the contracts for projects with extremely low prices are most likely not very "hard".

The agency has written a lot of constraints on the surrogate mothers, but has downplayed the responsibility of the agency; in case of disputes, it just says "friendly negotiation, subject to the agency's interpretation". If you really cross-country to go to court? Most families are unlikely to do so. The organization also understands this.

So, when you choose a "cheap substitute mom", you're also putting yourself in a situation where you have to pay a lot of money for a cheap substitute mom. "High cost of defending your rights and low cost of default by the other party." The position of the

4. Ethical risks and long-term consequences

There is another easily overlooked but important issue: ethical boundaries.

When a program tells you, "We compensate surrogate mothers for as little as $4,000-$6,000." And it's in an area of extreme economic hardship, you have to ask the question in your mind:

"Is she genuinely willing, has family support, understands the risks, or has she been pushed by life to the point where she has no choice but to trade her body for a quick buck?"

The probability of such programs being targeted by the media, legislation, and the judiciary is increasing - and then: policies are suddenly tightened; old contracts are revisited by the courts; new programs are halted, children's documents are difficult to obtain, and exit from the country is blocked. In the end, the tens of thousands of dollars you saved may turn into "high legal and time costs".

Tips for choosing a surrogate mother in different countries

Tips for Choosing a Surrogate Mother

Legal & Medical first, then compensation for surrogate motherhood

When making choices, the order suggested is:

  1. Legal security:Are foreigners / Chinese families allowed? How do I write my birth certificate? Do I need a court and how long does it take?
  2. Medical and neonatal care capacity:Embryology lab level; experience in managing pregnancy complications; NICU/NICU in place.
  3. Then go ahead and compare surrogate mother costs and total prices.

Don't gamble on a combination of "ambiguous policies + questionable medical care + unfunded liabilities" just to save a few tens of thousands of dollars.

How to talk to organizations about "transparency in compensation for surrogate mothers"

You absolutely can, and should, get right to the point and ask:

  • "How much do surrogate mothers actually get in this program?"
  • "What percentage of the overall program is your agency overhead?"
  • "Can you show me a sample of the anonymized breakdown of the surrogate mom's collections?"

Organizations that dare to show you the figures and talk about the ratio are at least honest in their attitude. If you just say, "Don't worry, we won't treat her badly," and let you rush to sign, put a question mark on it first.

How do you make trade-offs with safety on a limited budget?

It can be saved:The class of air tickets and hotels; unnecessary tourist-style escort; some flashy "value-added services" (e.g., "happy journey records" in the form of blockbuster movies).

Can't save it:The surrogate mother's base compensation is pressed to a level significantly lower than the local norm; the piece of health screening and psychological support is chopped to pieces; and the legal, insurance and financial regulation is ambiguous.

Bottom line: If you really want to save money, you'd rather take a step back on "whether you live in a five-star hotel" than save a dollar on "her medical checkups and psychological support".

Frequently Asked Questions FAQ:

Q1:I think the compensation for surrogate mothers quoted by the organization is too expensive, can I bargain with the surrogate mothers privately?

Never.

It's not just a matter of money, it's a game of human nature. In mature commercial surrogacy countries, there is a rough "market price" for surrogate compensation; if you push the price below the market, there are usually only two outcomes:

  • Well-endowed surrogate moms can't see you and choose families who can afford to pay market prices;
  • You pick someone who is "forced to compromise" because of money, and there will be a thorn in your side when you suffer during pregnancy.

If you start "cutting prices" to save a few thousand dollars, she will likely "cut corners" on nutrition and rest, and in the end, you'll probably both lose out, as well as your children. A smarter approach would be to talk to the organization about the configuration plan, rather than cutting her money directly.

Q2: I would like to privately give my substitute mom a big red packet on New Year's holidays, will she treat the child better this way?

My advice: Be thoughtful, but be careful with the "cash".

In commercial surrogacy countries such as the United States: you can go the "small, high-frequency, heartfelt" route: gift cards, toys for her children, flowers; large amounts of cash, once customized, can make the relationship very "transactional".

In altruistic countries, such as Canada, there are often laws that explicitly prohibit cash exchanges that go beyond "reasonable reimbursement"; once recognized as "disguised salary payments", this can directly bring compliance risks to the entire project. So, emotions can add up, but it's best to stay within the bounds of the contract and the law.

Q3: In order to save money, I would like to find a surrogate mom to carry twins, and the compensation is only a few thousand dollars more, is it a good deal?

In the short term, it seems to be, but in the long term, it's mostly a "rookie cul-de-sac".

The markup on the compensation given to surrogate mothers for twin births may only be a few thousand dollars; but the probability of preterm birth, cesarean section, and pregnancy complications for twin births, goes right up; the NICU is a few thousand dollars a day, and a two week stay is a 100,000 or so dollars to fly away.

What you're seeing is "What I don't see is the "skyrocketing cost of medical care.". Unless you are on a very good budget and the hospital is very well resourced, a single pregnancy is always the more stable option.

Q4: If I am unfortunate enough to have a miscarriage, can I get a refund of the money I paid to my surrogate mom?

The reality is: it's basically unreturnable.

Compensation for surrogate motherhood is calculated on the basis of the "course of the pregnancy that has already taken place"; if you are already in the 5th month of pregnancy and have a miscarriage halfway through the pregnancy, the subsequent installments will be stopped; however, the amount of money that has already been paid out in the first 5 months of the pregnancy is the compensation for the physical effort made in that period of time, and there is no going back.

Here's what you need to do: read in your contract: abortion/medical termination, billing rules for each trimester; and in your budget, set aside that 10%-20% risk buffer.

Q5: I see in the contract that it says "Escrow", why is the money going to a third party and not directly to the organization?

This is the "last line of defense" for your financial security, so don't bother.

Escrow is a legally regulated trust account: you deposit money into it, neither the organization nor the surrogate mother can get it at the moment; only when a certain step of the contract is completed and the escrow company audits and approves it correctly, then the money will be paid to the surrogate mother or the hospital according to the instructions; in case of any problems with the organization (operational risks, or even running out of the business), the money will be legally "independent" and will not be taken away directly. The money is legally "independent" and will not be directly rolled away. However, escrow is currently only popular in the United States, Central Asian countries do not have the so-called regulatory account.

Many real-life cases of "organizations running away with the money" start with the phrase: "Save yourself the trouble and call the company account directly."

summarize

There are really only two things you need to ultimately figure out about "surrogate mother compensation rates":

  1. Is the money being spent where it belongs:Her medical examination, psychological support, reasonable compensation; legal, insurance, financial escrow.
  2. Have you ever pushed yourself into a high risk position by being cheap:Extremely low compensation + vague laws + weak medical care.

You have every right to be smart within your budget, but in my opinion, the two least important pieces to save are:

  • Decent compensation for the person who helped you bring your child into the world;
  • Basic underwriting capacity for the overall program risk.

I hope that this article will help you to know what you are buying and what you are avoiding when you are faced with the "surrogate mother compensation" figures, instead of just "expensive or not expensive".

This article is organized and published by Surrogate's House, the pictures are from the Internet, if there is any infringement, please contact to delete! Reprinted with permission from the source.https://www.surrogacyjourneys.com/en/926.html

Overseas surrogacy
Surrogacy Journeys

作者: Surrogacy Journeys

With 10 years of surrogacy experience, I have some knowledge about foreign surrogacy laws, process, and surrogacy agency selection, and I hope to share useful surrogacy knowledge to families in need through this blog. Free public service for netizens, you have any confusion about surrogacy, or wish to get any advice about surrogacy, welcome to WeChat consultation!

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look for sth.