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Last updated May 17, 2026
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Fertility Georgia (GA) 4 metros covered

IVF Cycle Cost in Georgia

IVF Cycle in Georgia typically costs $11,460 to $23,875, with a state-wide median of $17,190 in 2026. Georgia pricing is 5% below the national average.

Low end
$11,460
GA Median
$17,190
High end
$23,875
National median: $18,000
Georgia index: 0.95x
Unit: per cycle

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Quick Answer

How much does ivf cycle cost in Georgia? IVF Cycle in Georgia costs between $11,460 and $23,875 in 2026, with most patients paying around $17,190. The state cost index is 0.95x the national average. Pricing varies by metro: ranging from $16,020 in Macon to $18,900 in Atlanta.

IVF Cycle Pricing by Georgia Metro

Median ivf cycle pricing in each tracked Georgia metro area. Click any city for full local cost intelligence including cost factors, included services, and verified providers.

Metro Population Cost Index Low Median High
Atlanta
Georgia
506,000 1.05x $12,600 $18,900 $26,250 Details →
Augusta
Georgia
200,000 0.92x $11,040 $16,560 $23,000 Details →
Macon
Georgia
153,000 0.89x $10,680 $16,020 $22,250 Details →
Savannah
Georgia
145,000 0.96x $11,520 $17,280 $24,000 Details →

About IVF Cycle

IVF (in-vitro fertilization) is the most-used assisted reproductive technology in the United States, with over 300,000 cycles performed annually. A standard cycle includes ovarian stimulation with fertility medications, egg retrieval, fertilization in the laboratory, embryo culture, and embryo transfer.

Read the full IVF Cycle guide →

Why Georgia Pricing Varies

IVF Cycle pricing varies across Georgia markets based on local cost of living, provider density, real estate costs, and the mix of provider credentials in each market. The state cost index of 0.95x national average reflects the blended pricing across all 4 Georgia metro markets we track.

Medications

+$4,000 to +$7,000

Stimulation medications are billed separately at most clinics.

ICSI

+$1,500 to +$3,000

Added when sperm count or motility is low.

PGT-A genetic testing

+$3,500 to +$7,000

Screens embryos for chromosomal abnormalities.

Donor eggs or sperm

+$5,000 to +$35,000

Donor eggs significantly increase total cost.

See all 4 cost factors →

Financing IVF Cycle in Georgia

Estimated monthly payments for the Georgia median cost of $17,190.

Financing Options at $17,190

Estimated monthly payments for the median cost. Actual rates depend on credit and provider.

Provider Term Est. APR Est. Monthly Apply
CareCredit 24 months 17.9% $857.36/mo Check rate →
Alphaeon Credit 36 months 14.9% $595.06/mo Check rate →
Proceed Finance 60 months 12.9% $390.25/mo Check rate →

ProcedureFinder may earn a commission from financing applications. Full disclosures.

Georgia Frequently Asked Questions

How much does ivf cycle cost in Georgia? +

IVF Cycle in Georgia costs $11,460 to $23,875 in 2026, with a state-wide median of $17,190. Pricing varies by metro - typically $18,900 in Atlanta and $17,280 in Savannah. Georgia pricing is 5% below the national average.

Where in Georgia is ivf cycle cheapest? +

Macon typically has the lowest ivf cycle pricing in Georgia, with a median of $16,020 (0.89x national average). Mid-size markets generally run lower than major coastal or wealthy suburban areas.

Where in Georgia is ivf cycle most expensive? +

Atlanta typically has the highest ivf cycle pricing in Georgia, with a median of $18,900 (1.05x national average). Larger metro areas with higher cost of living and more specialty providers tend to command premium pricing.

Is ivf cycle covered by insurance in Georgia? +

Insurance coverage for IVF varies dramatically by state. 21 states have some mandate as of 2026. Even with coverage, medications, PGT-A, and additional cycles are often partially uncovered. Most employer plans without state mandate offer no IVF benefit; some larger employers (Google, Meta, Bank of America, Starbucks) offer generous IVF benefits as a recruiting tool.

How does ivf cycle pricing in Georgia compare to other states? +

Georgia pricing is 5% below the national average. The state cost index is 0.95x the national average. Higher-cost states include California, New York, Massachusetts, and Washington DC; lower-cost states include Oklahoma, Mississippi, Kentucky, and Indiana.

How much does one round of IVF cost out of pocket? +

Total out-of-pocket for one IVF cycle including medications typically runs $18,000 to $30,000 in the United States in 2026. Multi-cycle packages with money-back guarantees run $25,000-$50,000 for 2-3 cycles. Specific cost components: cycle fee ($12,000-$18,000), medications ($4,000-$7,000), ICSI if needed ($1,500-$3,000), PGT-A genetic testing ($3,500-$7,000), frozen embryo transfer ($3,500-$6,500).

Does insurance cover IVF? +

21 states have some IVF insurance mandate as of 2026 (including Massachusetts, New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Illinois, Maryland, Texas - partial). Even with coverage, medications, PGT-A genetic testing, and additional cycles often remain partially or fully out-of-pocket. Most employer-sponsored plans without mandate offer no IVF benefit.

How many IVF cycles do most people need? +

Cumulative live birth rates reach approximately 65 percent after 3 cycles for women under 35. For women 35-37: 50 percent at 3 cycles. For women 38-40: 30 percent at 3 cycles. For women 42+: under 10 percent regardless of cycle count. Most successful patients complete 1-3 cycles.

What is the success rate of IVF? +

Per-cycle live birth rates vary significantly by age (most important factor): 50+ percent for women under 35, 40 percent at 35-37, 26 percent at 38-40, 13 percent at 41-42, under 10 percent at 42+. SART (Society for Assisted Reproductive Technology) publishes clinic-specific outcomes at sart.org for direct comparison.

Is IVF safe for the mother? +

IVF is considered safe with extensive published outcome data. Risks include ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome (under 1 percent severe with modern protocols), multiple pregnancies (reduced with single-embryo transfer policy), procedural risks of egg retrieval (under 1 percent: bleeding, infection, anesthesia), and emotional/psychological stress of the process.

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