What it filters on
- Age bracket: some countries close at 46, others at 49 or 50; Greece and North Cyprus go further
- Situation: Czech Republic does not accept single women; all others do
- Donor identity framework: whether anonymous or open-ID donation is available is set by national law and varies significantly between countries
- Cost priority: influences which countries surface first when several fit your constraints
What it does not assess
- Your medical eligibility or individual suitability for treatment
- Clinic quality, waiting times, or success rates
- Final pricing, medication costs, or travel and accommodation
- Results are a starting point for deeper comparison, not a treatment recommendation
How to read your results
Countries that passed all four constraints and match your stated priority. Start here.
Countries that meet your constraints but are not a standout match for your stated priority. Worth exploring if your shortlist is small.
Excluded by a hard structural rule based on your answers. The specific reason is shown. Adjusting one answer may change the result.
If your shortlist is short, try adjusting your cost priority or donor type preference. Each country card links to a deeper page with more detail on access, costs, and what to expect.
Where to go next
Common questions
The tool applies structural rules: age limits, whether single women are accepted, and the donor identity framework in each country. These are factual constraints sourced from national law and documented practice across the eight covered countries. The tool does not assess clinic-level variation, individual medical circumstances, or real-time waiting times.
Results are editorially maintained but should be treated as a starting point, not as medical or legal advice. Verifying eligibility directly with a clinic is always the final step before committing to a destination.
A country is ruled out when one of three hard structural rules applies: the country's age limit is below your bracket, the country does not accept single women and you indicated you are single, or the country's donor identity framework does not match your preference. These are not soft preferences; they reflect legal and structural realities that cannot be changed at clinic level.
The ruled-out section always shows the specific reason, so you can assess whether to adjust your answers and rerun the tool.
Yes. The shortlist shows which countries fit your stated constraints, not which country you must choose. If a country appears in "Ruled out for you," it means there is a structural conflict with your current answers. If you are flexible on one of those inputs (for example, if you would consider either donor type), updating that answer will change the result.
Countries in "Also worth considering" are fully eligible options. They simply do not match the priority you selected as the tipping factor.
Read the country page for each shortlisted destination. Each page covers age access, donor system, typical costs, and what the treatment process looks like in practice. The countries comparison page lets you view all eight side by side.
Once you have identified one or two realistic destinations, the next step is to review two or three clinics in each country to understand the practical differences in eligibility, donor access, timing, and package scope. The questions for clinics page gives you a structured list to guide those conversations.