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TRIO Fertility vs Pollin Fertility — Toronto IVF comparison

TRIO Fertility vs Pollin Fertility — Toronto's largest established IVF practice against its leading digital-first challenger, compared on waits, experience, and case fit.

By Found Fertility Editorial Team·Last reviewed May 2026.
Clinic vs. Clinic · Toronto

TRIO Fertility and Pollin Fertility sit at opposite ends of Toronto's IVF clinic spectrum, which is exactly why patients compare them. TRIO, founded in 1983, is the established high-volume option: forty-plus years of practice, over 100,000 cases, the largest in-house team in Canada, an IVI-RMA affiliation, Canada's first recurrent pregnancy loss program, and ten satellite monitoring locations across southern Ontario. Pollin, founded in 2022, is the digital-first challenger: a modern midtown facility on Yonge Street, a patient app, a spa-like clinic environment, and — its headline claim — no waitlist for OFP-funded IVF. Both participate in the Ontario Fertility Program, both cover the full service set from IUI through IVF, egg freezing, donor programs, and surrogacy, and both list five-physician teams. The Google review picture differs the way you'd expect: Pollin holds a 4.2 rating on a small, newer base of 57 reviews, while TRIO sits at 3.8 across 345 — the usual pattern of a high-volume legacy clinic against a young boutique. Neither is universally better. The decision usually comes down to whether decades of case depth or speed-to-cycle and patient experience matters more to you.

Comparison verified May 2026 against each clinic's own website, pricing pages, and Google business listings. We re-verify quarterly. Wait-time claims shift between updates — confirm directly when you call. Last verified May 2026.

TRIO Fertility and Pollin Fertility

2 clinics in our directory. Ranked by Google rating, then review count.

  • Toronto · 2360 Yonge St., 2nd Floor, Toronto, ON M4P 2E6
    OFP-fundedNo waitlistLGBTQ+ welcomingVirtual consultsTransparent pricing

    Why they fit: Homepage lab section: lab designed to maximize successful outcomes 'even in the most challenging cases.' Dedicated Second Opinion service for patients seeking re-evaluation of prior diagnoses or treatment plans.

  • Toronto · 655 Bay Street, 11th and 18th floors
    OFP-fundedLGBTQ+ welcomingVirtual consultsTransparent pricing

    Why they fit: Explicitly welcomes patients transferring after failed cycles at other clinics; houses Canada's only early RPL program; Dr. Laskin's reproductive immunology practice; medical rounds 4x/week to review every IVF protocol collaboratively.

At-a-glance: Top 2 compared

The five highest-rated clinics in this list, side-by-side. Tap any row to open the full profile.

ClinicAreaRatingOFP-fundedPricing
Pollin FertilityToronto4.1 (63)Yes$14,600 base IVF cycle (excl. medication $6,000–$8,000+, embryo transfer $3,500, annual storage after year 1, PGT)
TRIO FertilityToronto3.8 (357)Yes$13,500 — excludes medication ($5,000–$10,000+), PGT, and some storage fees

TRIO vs Pollin — the decision

OFP-funded patients should start with the wait-time question, because this is where the two clinics differ most loudly. Pollin actively markets no waitlist for funded IVF; TRIO, as one of Toronto's highest-volume OFP clinics, typically carries a funded waitlist. If you're OFP-eligible and speed-to-cycle is the priority — especially at 35-plus, where months matter — call both, get the current actual from waitlist placement to cycle start, and weight it heavily.

For complex or atypical cases, TRIO's depth is the argument. Forty years of volume, the largest in-house team in Canada, an IVI-RMA affiliation, and Canada's first recurrent pregnancy loss program mean TRIO has likely seen a case like yours before. Pollin's team includes reproductive-surgery capability and the clinic handles a broad service set, but it simply hasn't accumulated the same case history since opening in 2022. Patients with prior failed cycles, RPL, or complicated histories will often find more sub-specialty depth at TRIO.

For patient experience and logistics, the trade-off inverts. Pollin was built around the modern patient: app-based communication, a new midtown facility at Yonge and Eglinton, and Saturday hours to 3PM. TRIO's advantage is geographic reach — ten satellite locations from Mississauga to Oshawa for monitoring visits — plus weekend monitoring downtown and service in French. If you live outside the core, TRIO's satellite network can save you dozens of early-morning commutes; if you live midtown and want care that feels like a consumer product, Pollin fits better.

Questions to ask at your first consult
  • What's your current OFP-funded IVF wait, measured from waitlist placement to cycle start — and is the no-waitlist claim still current?
  • How many REIs are on your team, and who would be my primary physician through the cycle?
  • What's your all-in private IVF cost including medication, monitoring, ICSI, embryo freezing, and PGT-A?
  • Where can I do cycle monitoring — which locations, and what are the earliest morning appointment times?
  • If my history includes recurrent pregnancy loss or failed cycles, what does your workup and protocol review look like?
  • How is communication handled between visits — patient app, portal, phone — and how fast are results turned around?

Frequently asked questions

Which is better — TRIO Fertility or Pollin Fertility?

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Neither is universally better. TRIO brings 40+ years of volume, the largest in-house team in Canada, and complex-case depth including Canada's first RPL program. Pollin brings a no-waitlist funded-IVF claim, a patient app, and a modern midtown clinic. Pick TRIO for case depth and satellite reach; pick Pollin for speed and digital-first experience.

Are both TRIO and Pollin OFP-funded for IVF?

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Yes — both participate in the Ontario Fertility Program. The difference is queue position: Pollin markets no waitlist for funded IVF, while TRIO typically carries a funded waitlist like other high-volume Toronto clinics. Wait positions shift quarter to quarter, so confirm the current actual with each clinic when you call.

How much does private IVF cost at TRIO vs Pollin?

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All-in private IVF at both clinics falls in the standard Toronto range of $13,000 to $20,000 per cycle once medication, monitoring, ICSI, freezing, and any genetic testing are included. Ask each for an itemized estimate — add-ons like PGT-A and time-lapse incubation are where quotes diverge.

Is Pollin too new to trust with IVF?

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Pollin opened in 2022, so it lacks TRIO's decades of case history, but its five-physician team includes experienced REIs and a reproductive surgeon, and it holds a 4.2 Google rating. For straightforward IVF, newness is rarely the deciding factor; for complex or atypical cases, TRIO's accumulated depth is the safer default.

Which clinic is more convenient for monitoring visits?

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Depends where you live. TRIO runs ten satellite locations across southern Ontario — including Mississauga, Brampton, Burlington, and Oshawa — plus weekend hours downtown. Pollin is a single midtown Toronto site (with Markham, Ottawa, and Sudbury locations) and Saturday hours. Count your likely monitoring visits and map the commute before deciding.