Have you been overwhelmed by the online "Single Surrogate Tips"Looking dizzy?
One surrogacy agency on the left tells you "America is the most stable, it's worth it", another on the right tells you "Go toKyrgyz surrogacyIt's half as cheap and has the same effect"; what's even more bald is that there are even people pushing Ukraine, but you've obviously heard from your friends that there seems to be a "legal pit" over there.
When you try to figure out how much a single surrogate will cost you, the majority of websites will just throw you a simple "total package price". They never tell you:Why is it more expensive for a single person to be a surrogate than for a two-person family? What are the "hard costs" that must be spent and what are the "IQ taxes" that can be saved?
I did my time on the front lines of program management for legal surrogacy overseas. More than 10 years. This month, I spent 15 days taking apart, line by line, the single surrogacy programs, the dozens of original quotes, and the densely packed real contracts from the mainstream countries currently on the market.
There is only one principle to follow in doing this:Speak with verifiable data and legal terms.
In this article, I want to help you put the single surrogate price of this account into perspective. Before I begin, I'll leave the conclusion here:
Whether you are a single man or a single woman looking to go abroad for surrogacy, chasing a low price is far better than choosing "Legal Compliance + Controlled Pricing" of the country mix. Especially for singles and LGBTQ people, security boundaries must be drawn more clearly than anyone else.
Because a child not being able to return home is 10,000 times scarier than spending an extra 20,000 dollars.

Who is this article for?
- Trying to figure it out for myself."Which is the most stable country for a single person to go for surrogacy"Expectant fathers / expectant mothers;
- People who have the budget in hand to do a US project, but want to know if they can put part of the process in Central Asia or Latin America and save money on a Tesla;
- Singles who have already frozen their sperm/eggs in China, but are hesitant to make the move because they don't know what to do next;
- Those who are attracted by the "low-cost ads" from Ukraine, Russia, Georgia, etc., and who have a hidden fear in their hearts.
Okay, without further ado, let's start by talking about the most basic and deadly issue - the law.
I. Can a single person be a surrogate? Which countries are legal?
I'd like you to put the calculator in your hand for a moment.
Before we get into the "how much will it cost", we must first address the "can we do it" question. As a single person, you are naturally at a higher difficulty level in the surrogacy game than a heterosexual couple.
What many agents won't tell you is that the global 90%Countries where surrogacy is legalThe door is only open to "heterosexual married couples". If you choose the wrong country, this is not a cost-effective solution, but rather a high-risk behavior that may be considered by local or returning laws as marriage fraud or human trafficking.
1. Mainstream countries that are truly open or viable for singles
Based on the latest legal landscape in 2025, there are really only a few that you can put your heart into:
01. United States of America (USA) - "First Class" Forever
If it's a single surrogate in the US, you can basically rush with your eyes closed. The US legal system (especially California, Nevada, etc.) is the friendliest to singles and the LGBTQ community.

Why stable? Because the U.S. birth certificate (PBO) can be directly in your name alone, whether it's mom or dad, it doesn't require you to fake a spouse.
For whom? Those who have a good budget and are looking for absolute legal security, or who want to get US citizenship as soon as their child is born.
02. Canada
Single surrogacy in Canada is also completely legal. Whether you are a single man or a single woman, the law protects your right to become a parent.

What's the difference? Canada can only do "unpaid surrogacy". This means that you cannot directly pay a surrogate a large salary, but only reimburse her expenses.
Pit point: Because they can't be commercialized, surrogate mothers are very hard to find and line up until you doubt your life (usually 1-2 years to start). If you are not in a hurry to hold a baby, you can consider it.
03. Kyrgyzstan -- the rising "king of value for money"
This is the area that has been asked about the most in circles over the last two years.2024 The country's new Citizen's Health Protection Act does tear open the door to support different types of clients in principle.

Status: Surrogacy for singles in Kyrgyzstan is also currently feasible and is especially smooth for single women.
Attention: Single men can operate here, sometimes with specific legal documents or as a "partner" (depending on the path of the clinic), but in general, it is one of the few countries in the low to mid-budget range where it is possible to legally obtain a license.
04. Colombia/Mexico/Argentina - "Rainbow Passage" in Latin America
These countries in South America are very interesting. In the case of surrogacy in Colombia, for example, although there is no specific law on surrogacy, the jurisprudence of the Constitutional Court explicitly protects the reproductive rights of LGBTQ and single people.
Features: Mexican surrogacy and Colombia, prices are usually a third of what they are in the United States. If you're okay with the child getting a Latin American passport (or going through the red tape to get back your home country status), this is a popular choice for single dads and gay couples.
2. Countries that singles must avoid: Ukraine, Russia, Georgia, etc.
This is the part where you are asked to get out your red pen and draw three exclamation points!!!!
I often see that kind of advertisement on Little Red Book or Baidu: "Ukrainian surrogacy package success, singles can do it, the price is as low as XX million".
Let's recognize a harsh reality: there are some countries that just don't welcome singles.
01 Ukraine:
Ukrainian surrogacyThe law is written in black and white: it applies only to "married heterosexual couples". Not only singles, but also same-sex couples.

Black agency words: "We have special channels, just make a fake marriage license for you."
Truth: This is a fraudulent marriage + document forgery offense. If the embassy finds out about it when getting your child a passport (and believe me, it's very strict nowadays), the child becomes a "black family" with no identity, and you may go to jail locally.
02 Russia:
Russia used to be a paradise for single men, but that's old news. in late 2022, Russia passed an extremely strict ban on surrogacy, completely banning the use of foreigners toRussian SurrogacyThe

Status: Nowadays, unless you are a Russian citizen and married, there is basically no path to compliance under the current law, and even if the program is launched, there is always the risk that the program will be halted or that you will not be able to obtain documents for the child. Don't believe in any of this "there is still a way" crap, it's a gamble.
A really reliable program in Russia at the moment:A single IVF in Russia with an embryo that willembryo transferTo Kyrgyzstan, which is legal and saves money!
03 Georgia:
Similar to Ukraine, Georgia has very strict restrictions on surrogacy and the law recognizes only "heterosexual couples (married or cohabiting)". Single people are also legally "invisible" here. In the last two yearsSurrogacy in GeorgiaOfficials have repeatedly stated publicly that commercial surrogacy services to foreigners will be restricted or prohibited, and the specific details of the legislation and the transitional arrangements are still being repeatedly gamed, which in itself suggests that the place is very unfriendly to foreign singles.
Brief summary: When you see the words "Ukraine/Russia/Georgia", if you're single, just cross them out, it's a waste of time to even look at them.
3. How to determine whether a country is electable or not (table summary)
Having said all that, I know you're probably still a little dizzy. After all, there are so many countries and policies change daily. I've put together a practitioner's internal use of"Compliance Self-Study Form". When you get any program given to you by an agent, take that table and set it up, and as soon as one of the items is a red light, stop immediately.
| Core issues | ✅ Green Light (Security) | ⚠️ Yellow light (caution) | ❌ Red Light (No) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Does the law allow singles/LGBT? | explicitly allow (e.g. United States, Colombia) |
Not prohibited by law but requires jurisprudence (e.g. Argentina) |
Heterosexual couples only (e.g. Ukraine, Georgia) |
| Are foreign surrogates allowed? | permissible (e.g. United States, Canada, Kyrgyzstan) |
Residence/visa restrictions apply | Prohibition of aliens (e.g. Russia, Thailand) |
| What do the parents say on the birth certificate? | You don't have to write the name of the substitute mom. (U.S. PBO model) |
Change upon relinquishment of parental rights by the surrogate mother (selected countries in Latin America) |
The name of the surrogate mother must be written (That's a lot of trouble.) |
| Is commercial surrogacy legal? | Legal and contractually guaranteed (Selected U.S. states, Kyrgyzstan) |
Non-reimbursable/compensatory only (Canada, United Kingdom) |
Comprehensive ban on commercial surrogacy (China, vast majority of European countries) |
For example, someone pushes you to be a "Cambodian single surrogate".
Step 1 check the law: banned in Cambodia a few years ago. ❌ Red light.
The second step is to check for parental rights: whose child is born? Count the surrogate mom. ❌ Red light.
Even if the price is cheaper, you know what to choose, right?
II. General overview of the price of single surrogacy
Many of my single friends come to me for advice and say, "I have 500,000 RMB, can I do it?"
At this point I usually fall into silence. To be honest, 500,000 RMB in the surrogacy market in 2025, if it is a full-fledged process, basically can only go to the kind of "underground workshop" or high-risk areas on the edge of the law.
So that you don't get fooled, I've compiled a list of real landed prices for the mainstream markets in 2025. Please note that this is the landed price, which includes your food, drink, airfare, visas, and a reserve in case of minor accidents, not the "bare-bones" price that the agent shows you.
1. Single surrogacy price range table
| Country / Region | Singles Friendliness | Budget segment (United States dollars) | Legal model | risk rating | for whom |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| United States (USA) | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ (excellent) | $180,000 – $250,000+ | commercially viable | 🟢 Low | Budgeted for, want American citizenship, want top legal protection |
| Canada | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ (excellent) | $100,000 – $130,000 | Non-reimbursable only | 🟡 Medium (extremely long wait) | Not in a hurry to have children, want to save money and can accept a 2 year + wait |
| Colombia | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ (good) | $65,000 – $85,000 | Constitutional protection | 🟡 C (Medical/Policing) | Single male/gay couples on a budget |
| Kyrgyzstan | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ (good) | $80,000 – $100,000 | commercially viable | 🟡 Medium (during the period when the new law is in place) | Cost-effective seekers, accepting to go to Central Asia |
| Mexico | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ (average) | $60,000 – $80,000 | State law protects | 🟠 Medium-high (policy fluctuations) | Low-cost alternatives for the North American segment |
| Ukraine / Georgia | ❌ (Prohibited) | - | illegally | 🔴 extremely high | Don't enter if you're single! Don't go for any amount of money! |
| Georgia | ❌ (Prohibited) | - | illegally | 🔴 extremely high | Don't enter if you're single! Foreigners do not enter! Consider it.Russian IVF + Kyrgyz Surrogacy Program |
Note: The above prices are market valuations as of 2025 and are for reference only. They do not include the cost of extreme medical conditions (e.g., preterm labor in the NICU).
When you see this table, you should have a bottom in your mind. If you only have $60,000 to $80,000 in your hand, don't rush to the U.S. It will only break your financial chain, and you'll be broke while your child is still in the womb.
2. Why are singles more expensive than married family surrogates?
A lot of people don't understand, "Shouldn't it be cheaper for me to do it alone, without having to take care of my wife's monthly cycle, without having to fly two people back and forth?"
Wrong. Big mistake.
There is a counter-intuitive phenomenon in the field of assisted reproduction: singles tend to be more expensive than couples; it's called the "structural premium."
The cost of purchasing the "other half" (especially theSingle men): When couples go for it, the wife provides the eggs and the husband provides the sperm, it's called self-egg and self-fertilization. What about single men? You have to buy eggs. In the United States, a high-quality "Ivy League" or "model appearance" Asian eggs, egg donor compensation plus agency fees, medical examination fees, attorney's fees, starting at $ 30,000 - 50,000 U.S. dollars. This is money that couples don't have to spend, but you do.
Double the cost of legal and psychological services: In many countries, a single person undergoing surrogacy is required to pass a more rigorous psychological evaluation to prove that you are capable of raising a child on your own. Attorneys are required to draft contracts with special clauses designed to address "single parenthood", and attorneys' fees are often more expensive than standard 20%-30% contracts.
Even more expensive travel: Couples who go to pick up their kids can take turns taking care of them, or even just rent a room in the area with the baby. Single dads/moms going by themselves, can you handle a newborn soft baby by yourself? Probably not. So you'll have to hire a sister-in-law or even bring your family over to help. The airfare, lodging, and labor costs are much higher than you think.
3. High budget vs. cost-effective: country options at different prices
After so many years of doing project management, I found that the most painful clients are not the ones who don't have money, but the ones who have mismatched budgets and expectations. Only $80,000 in hand, but have to go to the United States; or $200,000 in hand, but in order to save money to take the risk of choosing the gray area, the result is no return.
Let's compare a surrogacy program to "buying a car" or "renovating". We can do as much as we want with as much money as we have. Based on the 2025 market, I've broken down the three main routes for you.
$150k - $250k+
Core logic: Seek absolute legal security, a top-notch medical experience and a strong passport.
State Recommendations: 🇺🇸 United States (preferred), 🇨🇦 Canada (optional)
1. United States of America (USA): the "Jerusalem" of Surrogacy
If you have more than $200,000 to spare, don't hesitate, the United States, especially California, is the only solution.
- The Golden Body of Law:The most central advantage. Before the child is born, the court has ruled that you are the only legal parent. Whether you are single, cisgender or transgender, the legal status is impregnable.
- Strong Identity:Landing that is U.S. citizenship (Blue Eagle Passport), the springboard for future family immigration.
- Medical Configuration:Top clinics like HRC, FSAC, and SCRC are usually chosen in conjunction with established organizations like AmCan and Circle Surrogacy. It's an expensive service, but the process is silky smooth.
For whom? Zero risk preferences, people who are not prepared to take up residence in the country (although they can do so).
2. Canada: a gentle but slow "fallback option"
Core Pain Points:Commercial surrogacy is strictly prohibited by law, and surrogate mothers help you "for free" (although you are reimbursed about $30,000 in expenses). This has led to an oversupply of surrogates.
Single Status:Growing Families and other organizations have frighteningly long queue lists of singles. If you're a single male, patience may be wearing thin.
For whom? Those with a budget of $100,000-$130,000 who are in a particular hurry (willing to wait 2-3 years) and prefer a non-commercial, moderate environment.
$110k - $140k
Core logic: Use a chip (embryo) from the US and put it into a developing country's housing (womb).
Configuration mode: 🇺🇸 U.S. Embryo Building + Kyrgyz 🇰🇬/🇨🇴 Third Country Landing
This is the most popular in 2025 among the employees of large factories, returnee elites"Mix and match flow"The
Operational Steps:
- American Seed Making:Fly to the U.S. (or send sperm) for donor egg matching, embryo synthesis and PGT-A screening at a top laboratory. Make sure the embryos are "eugenic".
- Cold chain transit:Embryos are shipped to Kyrgyzstan or Colombia via the medical cold chain (Cryo-shipping).
- Xenotransplantation:Find a local surrogate mom to complete the pregnancy and birth.
Where's the logic?
Embryo quality determines the success rate of 70% (guaranteed by US technology);
Surrogate compensation accounts for the cost of 50% (diluted by low labor costs in third countries).
Results:Saves a Porsche over the purely American option, but has a much higher success rate than the purely third-country option.
$80k - $100k
Core logic: Make reductions, accept medical treatment in non-developed countries, and adhere strictly to the legal bottom line.
Recommended Country: 🇰🇬 Kyrgyzstan, 🇨🇴 Colombia / 🇲🇽 Mexico
If your budget is in the range of 60 - 80 lakhs, this is the threshold line. What you want to do is to downgrade on "experience", not risk on "safety".
1. Kyrgyzstan: the dark horse in 2024
Advantage:No need to wait in line. Surrogate mothers are abundant and generally in good health (nomadic genes).
Legal Moves:2024 New law gives green light to foreigners and commercial surrogacy.
Attention:Single male operations usually require the in-depth involvement of a lawyer with specific legal documents to ensure parental rights. There are already local organizations (e.g. MerryLife Surrogacy Agency etc.) to introduce American processes.
For whom? Looking for speed, on a budget, and able to accept a trip to Central Asia to pick up the baby.
2. Colombia / Mexico (LatAm): Rainbow Passage
Advantage:Extremely LGBTQ and single friendly (e.g. Tammuz Family is deeply localized). Although there is no specific law on surrogacy, it is protected by the jurisprudence of the Constitutional Court.
Hard Hitting:The language barrier (Spanish), the reputation for security, the slow processing of newborn documents (single fathers can be stuck for 1-2 months).
For whom? Single/gay couples who enjoy Latino culture, or want multiple citizenships.
⚠️ How do you cut back when the budget is tight?
The money that can be cut:
1. Egg donor: forgo the prestigious school model and go with a local, healthy Asian/mixed donor (Kyrgyz has a lot of East Asian faces) at a cheaper cost than the U.S. 80%.
2. Medical experience: accept the public hospital environment and give up the American VIP service.
Money that can't be cut at death:
1. PGT-A screening: Do it even if it costs an extra $3000 because the cost of starting over with a failed transplant ($5000+) is much higher.
2. Neonatal reserve: $10,000 to $20,000 must be kept on hand in case of premature labor in the NICU, which is life-saving.
Third, how does the price of a single surrogate consist? Explicit costs + invisible costs
Let's cut through that $100,000+ total and see what's really in there. A lot of agents are afraid that their clients will understand this because if they do, they can't hide anything in the "miscellaneous fees".

1. Bright side bill:
Typically, a standard single surrogate bill consists of these four major players:
IVF Clinic Fees (20% - 30%): This is for the doctor. It includes a physical exam, ovulation stimulants, egg retrieval procedure, sperm washing, ICSI (monosperm injection), capsule support, and PGT-A genetic screening.
Attention: There are some low-cost packages where PGT-A is charged on an individual basis or simply not included. But in my opinion, not doing PGT-A is a gamble, especially with cross-country surrogacy, where the cost of one failed transplant is too great.
Surrogacy Agency Service Fee (15% - 20%): This is an "administrative fee" for the agency. They are responsible for helping you find a surrogate mother, coordinating appointments, and making travel arrangements.
Pit avoidance: Ask if there is a "one-time fee" or a "phase-by-phase fee". Some organizations charge a down payment and then leave it at that.
Surrogate's Compensation and Benefits (40% - 50%): This is the biggest head. Here.surrogate motherThe money. Includes basic salary, clothing, monthly allowance, embryo transfer fee, cesarean section compensation, etc.
Singles Special Pit: Some surrogates do not mind surrogacy for single men (due to religion or family values), and those who are willing to take on a single client sometimes require a slightly higher compensation (ranging from $2,000 - $5,000).
Attorney and Trust Fees (5% - 10%): This is for the legal system. Includes attorney's fees for both parties, trust account management fees, and parental rights establishment fees.
Be sure to spend: Don't use an organization's "in-house counsel" to save money. You need an independent attorney who will only represent your interests.
2. Costs specific to the singles community: egg donation + travel + support systems
This part was mentioned a little earlier, so here's the breakdown.

For single men (fathers-to-be):
There will be one more item on your bill: the Egg Donation Cycle (ovum donation). In the U.S., this cost is usually between $30,000 - $60,000. If you go to Georgia (although you shouldn't) or Kyrgyzstan to find an egg donor, the price may be between $5,000 - $10,000 This price cliff stems largely from the donor's education, ethnicity, and market supply and demand.
For single women (mothers-to-be):
You may need to buy sperm. The good news is that sperm is so much cheaper than eggs - a tube of sperm may cost as little as $1,000 - $2,000 The bad news is that single women often want to use their own eggs. If you're over 38 or have poor ovarian function (AMH), you may need to go through 2-3 cycles of ovulation to save up enough embryos to use. This can directly double your medical costs.
3. Hidden costs:
This paragraph is the most valuable part of this article. This is where many single parents end up overspending their budgets.
1. Neonatal NICU (Intensive Care Unit) costs:
This is a real "bankruptcy item". If the baby is born prematurely (say at 28 weeks), a day in the NICU in the US costs $3,000 - $10,000. one month in the NICU and a house is gone.
What to do? Insurance is mandatory! Be sure to check if newborn insurance is included in your package or if you need to buy extra. NICU costs are relatively much lower in Colombia or Kyrgyzstan (a couple hundred dollars a day), which is why some people on a budget are afraid to go to the US.
2. Life insurance for surrogate mothers and insurance against complications:
It's not for the child, it's for the surrogate mom. If the surrogate mom has her uterus removed or even dies during labor (although extremely rare), you need to pay for it. This premium is usually mandatory.
3. Replacement cost for failed cycles:
If the first transplant fails, how much will the second one cost? Many organizations only tell you the total price, not what to do if you are unlucky. Typically, for a second transplant you will have to pay: thawing fee + transplant surgery fee + surrogate compensation fee + travel expenses, adding up to another $5,000 - $10,000.
4. Exchange rate fluctuations:
Your cycle could be as long as 18 months. If the dollar exchange rate goes through the roof, your actual RMB expenses will be tens of thousands of dollars more out of thin air.
IV. The complete process of single surrogacy: from decision-making to carrying a baby back home
Many clients ask me, "How long does it take to hold a baby?" I usually answer, "14 months if things go well, 18 months if normal, and 2 years + if unlucky."
Single surrogacy is not about ordering takeout and placing an order for delivery. It's a marathon. As a single person, you don't have teammates to consult with on the side, so decisions at every juncture have to be made quickly, accurately, and ruthlessly.

We can slice the whole process into four stages:
1. Preparatory period: assessment, financing, sperm/egg freezing, legal advice
That's the stage you're at now. In addition to having the money in place (or at least ready for a down payment), the most critical thing is a physical assessment.
Single males (fathers-to-be):
Don't think that only women look at fertility. Go to the hospital for a semen analysis first. If you stay up late for a long time, smoke, drink, and have a high sperm fragmentation rate, the grade of the embryos made will be low, and the later surrogate transfer will fail repeatedly.
Recommendation: Stop smoking, drinking and taking lycopene 3 months before the start of the program.
Single women (mothers-to-be):
Get your AMH (anti-mullerian hormone) and AFC (basal follicle count) checked. If your uterine environment is not suitable for pregnancy (e.g. severe fibroids) or you simply do not want to go through the pain of pregnancy and childbirth, this is the time to make up your mind about choosing a surrogate. If your ovarian function is already poor, you may need to consider whether to go for "donor" or "surrogate".
2. Medical Stage: Filing, Physical Examination, Donor Eggs / Gametes, IVF + PGT
This is the "seeding" stage and is usually done at the IVF clinic.
Donor selection (for single men):
This could be the most magical moment of your life - choosing the biological mother of your child like a consort in a database. You're not just looking at looks and education, you're looking at a genetic carrier screening report.
Lesson learned: Don't just look at the pictures to see if they're beautiful, look at her history of boosting. A girl with a history of successful donations is much more stable than a vegan model.
Manufacture of embryos:
Sperm and egg are united in the laboratory. The core technology here is PGT-A (Preimplantation Genetic Testing).
Be sure to do PGT: For singles, my advice is to do it. We don't need a lot of embryos, we need the "golden seed" that will work in one go and be chromosomally normal.
3. Matching and contracts: surrogate mother matching, contract negotiation, escrow accounts
Once you have a batch of healthy blastocysts that have passed PGT, you have your ticket to surrogacy. The next step is to "wait".
Matching substitute moms :
In the U.S., the average wait time is 3-6 months; in Canada, it can be 1-2 years; in Kyrgyzstan or Colombia, it is currently faster, around 1-3 months.
Note to singles: Some conservative surrogate moms may not accept single male or gay clients. This is normal and a two-way street. We will help you screen surrogate moms who are Open-minded (Open-minded).
Signing of legal contracts:
This is the most energy-consuming step. Your attorney and the surrogate mom's attorney will game over dozens of pages of terms and conditions: how will the wages be paid? How much more if you're pregnant with twins? Whose decision do you listen to if you need to reduce the number of fetuses?
Key Points: Single parents must recognize the contract's provisions regarding"Life support systems"The clause - in case (and I mean in case) you die in an accident during surrogacy, who gets the baby when it's born? This requires a guardian to be named in the contract.
4. Pregnancy and childbirth: management of pregnancy, delivery, birth certificates and passports
The moment the transplant is successful and you hear the fetal heart, your heart hangs in the air.
- Remote participation: Organizations nowadays usually arrange for a video link so that you can watch the ultrasound live.
- Baby-hugging moment: 2 weeks before the due date, you have to fly to the local area. Single dads, please bring your mom with you at this time, or book a local Chinese sister-in-law in advance. The devastation of handling a newborn alone in a foreign country can be devastating.
- License to return to the country: USA is the fastest, Birth Certificate + Passport + Travel Permit, about 3-4 weeks. Latin American countries may take 1-2 months.
5. Timeline Overview: Examples of U.S./Kyrgyz/Latin American Routes
To give you a mental picture, I've drawn an easy time comparison chart:
United States (USA): For Speed
M1-M2: Clinic selection, donor egg selection, embryo production
M3-M6: Matching surrogate moms, medical checkups, signing contracts (U.S. surrogate moms are scarce and matching has slowed down)
M7: Transplantation
M8-M16: Pregnancy
M17: Returning home with a baby
Total: approximately 15 - 18 months
U.S. Embryo Building + Kyrgyz Landed Surrogacy: The Quest for Cost-Effectiveness
M1-M2: American-made embryos
M3: Cryo-shipping to Kyrgyzstan
M3-M4: Fast matching with surrogate moms (local surrogate moms are now more abundant)
M5: Transplantation
M6-M14: Pregnancy
M15: Returning home with a baby
Total: about 14 - 16 months (rather probably faster than in the US because there are no queues)
V. Single men, single women, LGBT Differences in price and process
"Single" is just a label, but in practice, men and women have completely different pain points.

1. Single men: the double cost of egg donation + surrogacy
The biggest psychological and financial threshold for single fathers-to-be is actually the"Egg Selection"The
- Economically: You spend the most money of any group. This is because not only do you have to rent a womb (surrogacy), but you also have to buy seeds (egg donation). This causes you to start at $30,000-$50,000 more expensive than everyone else.
- Psychologically: Many men get caught up in looking at egg donor profiles, "Does this one look like me in the eyes?" "Is that one educated enough?" . Trust me, picking a healthy one with a good history of ovulation promotion is more important than picking a beauty pageant winner.
2、Single women: when do you need a surrogate, and when is it more cost-effective to just do IVF?
Single moms-to-be have the most complicated situation.
- Can you give birth to your own? If you have a good uterus and just don't want to get married, then you just need to go to the US/Kyrgyzstan and buy sperm for IVF (Self-carry). It's only $20,000-$30,000 and you don't need a surrogate at all.
- When must a surrogate conceive? Consider surrogacy only if you are unable to conceive (uterine problems, risk of physical illness) or if you have an extreme fear of giving birth. Don't rush into surrogacy because you're "afraid of losing your body image" - it's too costly.
3. Same-sex couples (male/female): how the law and costs will be distorted
Gay Couples:
You are faced with the option of "double sperm". Many people choose to combine two people's sperm with the same egg donor's eggs to make two batches of embryos that are implanted in two surrogate mothers (or two separate births). This is called "Twiblings".
Attention: This means double the cost of substitute motherhood.
Lesbian Couples:
Often, Partner IVF (Partner IVF) is used, where A provides the eggs and B conceives the baby. This does not require a surrogate, only IVF technology, and is relatively inexpensive.
VI. How to choose surrogacy agencies and clinics
There are so many agencies (Agencies) in the market nowadays, how to choose?
1. Look at the price structure first, not just the total price
If an agency gives you an Excel sheet, there is only one line: "American Surrogacy Package: 1.6 million RMB".
Straight to black.
A reliable quotation should be"Menu-based"The:
- How much does the clinic charge? (paid directly to the clinic)
- How much does a substitute mom get? (Breakdown of base salary, monthly supplements, clothing costs)
- How much do lawyers charge? (Direct payment to law firm)
- How much do organizations charge for their services? (That's what they really make.)
The only organizations that dare to make their service fees independent are those that dare to be transparent.
2. Institutions vs. clinics vs. lawyers: roles and fee boundaries
IVF clinics: Responsible for making people (medical care). For example HRC, FSAC, CCRM.
Surrogacy Agency: Responsible for finding people (housekeepers). Examples include Ivy Surrogacy, AmCan.
Lawyers : Responsible for the insurer (legal).
3. Recommendations of representative organizations
- Recommended Surrogacy Agencies in the United States:: Top organizations like Circle Surrogacy can charge up to $50,000 for services that are all-inclusive; organizations like AmCan This deeper Chinese background, low communication costs, full Chinese accompaniment, and moderate prices.
- Gilchrist Surrogacy Agency Recommendations: look as if MerryLife This specializes in Central Asia, with the advantage of access to local government relations, but you need to look carefully at their contracts to see if they comply with the new law.
- Latin American Surrogacy Agency Recommendations: The Tammuz Family, with its Israeli background and years of experience in Colombia, is a good choice for those who are looking for value for money and who are interested insame-sex coupleFriendly customers.
VII. FAQ:
Q1: A single male can be inDomestic (China) SurrogacyWhat?
A: Absolutely illegal and extremely risky. Domestic surrogacy is in a gray area and not protected by law. When it comes to extortion and child custody disputes, you don't even dare to call the police. Don't ever try it.
Q2: Is surrogacy in Colombia really worse than in the US?
A. The difference in medical technology (IVF) is not really that big, as many Latin American doctors are also trained in Europe and the US. The difference is in legal certainty (the US is case law and more stable) and neonatal care conditions (NICU level). It is a cost-effective choice, not a perfect one.
Q3: How can I register my child born from a single surrogate in my home country?
A. As long as one of the parents is a Chinese citizen and has not settled abroad, the child can usually return home on a travel permit. After returning to China, the child will be registered in the household register with the travel certificate, foreign birth certificate (which needs to be notarized and certified) and a paternity test. In the case of a single, unmarried child, the requirements of police stations around the world are different, and it is usually necessary to write a "statement of circumstances of birth out of wedlock", but as long as the formalities are complete, it is possible to go on.
Q4: How fast does the whole process take?
A. Don't believe in "two in one year". Taking into account the medical checkup, embryos, waiting in line for a surrogate mother, pregnancy, and return home, 18 months is a reasonable expectation.
Q5: Must it be more expensive for a single person to be a surrogate than a couple? Why?
A. Yes. Mostly expensive in the cost of purchasing eggs/sperm and the additional expense of legal/psychological evaluations.
Q6: Is it possible to freeze sperm / eggs first and then do surrogacy a few years later? How much does it affect the price?
A: Highly recommended! Sperm/egg freezing itself is cheap (a few thousand to ten or twenty thousand RMB), and the annual storage fee is only a few thousand dollars. It's most rational to preserve your fertility first and then start surrogacy when you're financially ready.
Q7: How can I tell if a single surrogacy quote is "low and high"?
A. See if it lists "variable costs". If it gives you a total price without mentioning insurance deductibles, complications, or travel expenses, it's ready to rip you off at a later date.
Conclusion:
Single parenthood is a path for the brave.
On this road, money is just the road toll; the real fuel is your desire to become a parent and to be cool-headed enough to do so.
Whether you end up with the $200,000 U.S. option or the $80,000 Kyrgyz option, remember:Compliance is the bottom line, and children's health is the end point.
I hope this single surrogate how-to guide, which took a month to put together, will be the first light on your baby-holding journey. Good luck!