Discover the reasons behind your fertility challenges with advanced diagnostic testing at Conception IVF — designed to give you answers, clarity, and a personalized path forward.
Everyone has personal reasons for freezing their eggs. Here are the three main advantages to consider:
Preserve your eggs at a younger age when they’re healthier and more likely to result in a successful pregnancy. This is ideal if you wish to delay parenthood for career, personal, or medical reasons.
Egg freezing empowers you to focus on life today while keeping your future family options open. You decide when the timing is right for parenthood.
Freezing your eggs allows you to maintain reproductive flexibility, supporting your ability to build a family when you’re ready.
Everyone has personal reasons for freezing their eggs. Here are the three main advantages to consider:
Pause Your Biological Clock : Preserve your eggs at a younger age when they’re healthier and more likely to result in a successful pregnancy. This is ideal if you wish to delay parenthood for career, personal, or medical reasons.
Take Control of Your Timeline : Egg freezing empowers you to focus on life today while keeping your future family options open. You decide when the timing is right for parenthood.
Keep Your Options Open : Freezing your eggs allows you to maintain reproductive flexibility, supporting your ability to build a family when you’re ready.
What is my current fertility potential?
Fertility begins to decline gradually around age 30, with a more noticeable drop after 35.
Am I certain about having children?
Unsure about your plans? Egg freezing gives you time and flexibility to make decisions at your own pace.
When would I like to have my first (and last) child?
Consider financial stability, support systems, and your ideal age for parenting.
How many children do I want?
Egg freezing preserves your ability to grow your family on your own timeline.
Egg freezing is a multi-step process designed to protect your fertility while giving you options for future family building.

Meet with a fertility specialist to discuss your goals and undergo diagnostic testing.

Oral and injectable medications are used to stimulate egg production, monitored through regular appointments and ultrasounds.

Eggs are collected under sedation using transvaginal ultrasound guidance, ensuring comfort and safety.

Your eggs are assessed for quality and maturity, then frozen using advanced vitrification technology.

When you’re ready, your frozen eggs can be thawed, fertilized, and used to attempt pregnancy.
“Freezing my eggs at 29 gave me peace of mind. Now I feel in control of my future.”
– Emily R.
“The team at ConceptionIVF guided me every step of the way. I couldn’t have asked for better care.”
– Sarah M.
“I froze my eggs for career reasons and now feel empowered to plan my family on my timeline.”
– Priya K.
Our expert care team at ConceptionIVF is here to guide you from consultation to personalized plan.
One of our Patient Coordinators will contact you within 48 hours to book your first appointment.
Identify any underlying concerns and optimize your chances for future succes
Your doctor will tailor a plan to your needs and review it with you, ensuring confidence and clarity.
Deciding to freeze your eggs is a big step, and it’s natural to have questions. To make the process easier to understand and help you feel confident in your choice, we’ve put together this comprehensive Egg Freezing FAQ Guide.
Inside, you’ll learn about:
Egg freezing typically ranges from $6,000 to $15,000 per cycle, not including annual storage fees, which usually cost $500–$1,000. Costs can vary depending on medications, monitoring, and the clinic you choose. Many patients spread costs across multiple cycles if needed.
Most patients experience only mild discomfort. Hormone injections may cause slight soreness at the injection site, and ultrasounds or blood tests are generally painless. The egg retrieval procedure is done under sedation, so pain during the procedure is minimal. Some cramping or bloating afterward is common but usually short-lived.
Egg freezing involves five main steps:
Future Use: Eggs can be thawed, fertilized, and used when you’re ready to conceive.
If you never use your frozen eggs, they remain safely stored. You can choose to keep them frozen indefinitely, donate them to research, or donate to another individual/couple. Eggs do not expire while properly cryopreserved.
Egg freezing preserves unfertilized eggs, whereas embryo freezing involves fertilized eggs (embryos) with sperm. Egg freezing gives more flexibility if you don’t have a partner or aren’t ready to fertilize yet. Embryos may have slightly higher success rates, but eggs allow you to retain reproductive autonomy.
With modern vitrification, eggs can remain frozen indefinitely. Studies show eggs thawed after 10 years or more can still lead to successful pregnancies. The key is proper storage in a certified fertility lab.
The number of eggs needed depends on age and fertility goals. As a guideline:
Your doctor can create a personalized plan based on ovarian reserve testing.
Most patients need 1–2 cycles to retrieve enough eggs, though this varies by age and ovarian reserve. Younger patients often need fewer cycles, while older patients may require more to reach their target number of eggs.
Several factors influence success, including:
Fertility naturally declines with age, especially after 30, with a sharper decline after 35. Egg quality and quantity decrease over time, which can lower pregnancy chances and increase the risk of miscarriage. Egg freezing earlier can preserve higher-quality eggs for the future.
Our board-certified fertility specialists are ready to help you safeguard your reproductive future. Take the first step and schedule your consultation with a ConceptionIVF egg freezing expert.
You’ll find everything you need here: a full spectrum of services, our award-winning laboratory, and heartfelt support for your mind and body.
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