Toronto fertility clinics with transparent pricing
The clinics that publish full fee schedules online — and why that disclosure tends to travel with a better patient experience.
Most Toronto fertility clinics will tell you what IVF costs — at your initial consult, after you've waited weeks for the appointment and are already emotionally invested. A minority publish the full fee schedule on their website, where you can read it before you ever call. This page lists that minority. The distinction matters beyond convenience. A published fee schedule is a small, verifiable signal about how a clinic treats patients as decision-makers: the clinics that publish tend to be the same clinics that run online booking, self-referral intake, and responsive patient communication — the digital-first clinics like Pollin and Twig built their entire patient experience around this kind of disclosure. That doesn't mean non-publishing clinics are hiding anything. Most legacy clinics simply quote during consults, and their prices land in the same $13,000–$20,000 all-in range as everyone else's. But when you're comparing a shortlist, the clinic that lets you see its ICSI fee, storage renewal, and cancellation policy in advance has handed you negotiating information and spared you a surprise. This page is about disclosure, not price level — for the affordability angle on the same clinics, see our most-affordable-IVF page.
Inclusion criteria: clinic maintains a public pricing page on its own website. This is the same gate as our most-affordable-IVF page, but the evaluation differs — here we care about completeness of disclosure: does the schedule cover add-ons, storage, and cancellation, or just the base fee? Re-verified quarterly. Last verified May 2026.
Clinics that publish their fee schedules
14 clinics in our directory. Ranked by Google rating, then review count.
- EVOLVE Egg Freezing Clinic4.5(46)Toronto · 655 Bay Street, Suite 1106OFP-fundedLGBTQ+ welcomingVirtual consultsTransparent pricing
Why they fit: EVOLVE focuses exclusively on egg freezing; complex fertility cases (IVF, donor cycles, surrogacy, recurrent loss) are referred to sister clinic TRIO Fertility.
- Twig Fertility4.2(90)Toronto, Ontario M5N 1A1 · 313 Eglinton Avenue WestOFP-fundedNo waitlistLGBTQ+ welcomingVirtual consultsTransparent pricing
Why they fit: Offers a dedicated 'Second Opinion Consult' for patients who have completed IVF cycles elsewhere; in-house genetic counselling for recurrent pregnancy loss and rare conditions; reproductive urology for male-factor cases; surgical sperm retrieval…
- Tripod Fertility4.2(74)Toronto (North York) · Atria III, Suite 901, 2225 Sheppard Ave EOFP-fundedNo waitlistLGBTQ+ welcomingVirtual consultsTransparent pricing
Why they fit: One of the only clinics in Canada specializing in reproductive immunology — treats RPL (recurrent pregnancy loss) and RIF (recurrent implantation failure) on-site with Intralipid, IVIg, Humira, and Lymphocyte Immunization Therapy (LIT).…
- Pollin Fertility4.1(63)Toronto · 2360 Yonge St., 2nd Floor, Toronto, ON M4P 2E6OFP-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.
- Hannam Fertility Centre4.0(223)Toronto · 160 Bloor Street East, 15th Floor, Toronto, ON, M4W 3R2OFP-fundedNo waitlistLGBTQ+ welcomingVirtual consultsTransparent pricing
Why they fit: Site language explicitly serves patients who have switched from other clinics ('Can I switch clinics if I'm on another Clinic's Waitlist? Yes'). Dr. Robb specializes in recurrent pregnancy loss and fertility preservation.…
- Dream Fertility4.0(26)Whitby · 198 Des Newman Blvd, 4th floorOFP-fundedLGBTQ+ welcomingVirtual consultsTransparent pricing
Why they fit: Recurrent pregnancy loss is named as a focus, but no general 'complex cases' positioning
- Reproductive Care Centre (RCC)3.9(350)Mississauga · 2180 Meadowvale Blvd, Mississauga, ON L5N 5S3OFP-fundedLGBTQ+ welcomingVirtual consultsTransparent pricing
Why they fit: Marketing copy describes 'a passion for solving even the most complex fertility challenges.' Dedicated High BMI Program for patients turned away elsewhere; Recurrent Pregnancy Loss is a Medical Director special interest; Endometriosis…
- Markham Fertility Centre3.9(105)Markham · 379 Church Street, 5th FloorOFP-fundedLGBTQ+ welcomingTransparent pricing
Why they fit: Site explicitly states clinic is 'equipped to manage medically complex patients' and lists work with high-BMI patients, RPL, recurrent implantation failure, reproductive immunology, and balanced translocations. LinkedIn lists 'Immune Therapy' as a…
- TRIO Fertility3.8(357)Toronto · 655 Bay Street, 11th and 18th floorsOFP-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.
- Generation Fertility3.6(147)Vaughan · 955 Major MacKenzie Dr W #400, Maple, ON L6A 4P9OFP-fundedLGBTQ+ welcomingVirtual consultsTransparent pricing
Why they fit: Dr. Gurau bio explicitly mentions welcoming patients seeking second opinions or who experienced treatment in the past. Dr. Campanaro (Waterloo) treats immunology infertility and recurrent pregnancy loss. Dr. Hartman (Toronto West Medical…
- ONE Fertility3.4(140)Burlington · 3210 Harvester RoadOFP-fundedLGBTQ+ welcomingTransparent pricing
Why they fit: Reproductive Endocrinology page explicitly addresses complex conditions (Turner's syndrome, premature ovarian insufficiency, hyperprolactinemia, amenorrhea); Dr. Karnis is internationally recognized for managing pregnancy in women with Turner syndrome; multiple physicians have advanced reproductive…
- CReATe Fertility Centre3.3(289)Toronto · 790 Bay Street, Suite 1100OFP-fundedLGBTQ+ welcomingVirtual consultsTransparent pricing
Why they fit: Largest cancer fertility preservation program in Canada (oncofertility); largest in-house genetics program for PGT-A/M/SR; in-house surgical hysteroscopy for polyps, septums, scarring, and fibroids; large research arm. Reviews consistently describe patients arriving after…
- North York (Toronto) · 25 Sheppard Ave. W., Unit 650OFP-fundedLGBTQ+ welcomingTransparent pricing
Why they fit: Clinic markets clinical excellence and a 150+ years combined team experience but does not explicitly publish a complex-cases statement on its services pages.
- Mount Sinai Fertility3.2(116)Toronto · 250 Dundas Street West, 7th Floor, Toronto, ON M5T 2Z5OFP-fundedLGBTQ+ welcomingVirtual consultsTransparent pricing
Why they fit: About page states the clinic is 'recognized around the world for successfully treating even the most challenging fertility cases'; faculty research and clinical interests include recurrent pregnancy loss, recurrent implantation failure, severe…
At-a-glance: Top 5 compared
The five highest-rated clinics in this list, side-by-side. Tap any row to open the full profile.
| Clinic | Area | Rating | OFP-funded | Pricing |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| EVOLVE Egg Freezing Clinic | Toronto | 4.5 (46) | Yes | Not applicable — EVOLVE does not offer IVF; IVF performed at sister clinic TRIO |
| Twig Fertility | Toronto, Ontario M5N 1A1 | 4.2 (90) | Yes | $13,500 base IVF cycle; excludes embryo transfer ($1,250 fresh / $2,850 FET) and medication ($4,000–$8,000+) |
| Tripod Fertility | Toronto (North York) | 4.2 (74) | Yes | $11,495 stim cycle / $6,500 natural — excludes medication, ICSI, PGT, anesthetist |
| Pollin Fertility | Toronto | 4.1 (63) | Yes | $14,600 base IVF cycle (excl. medication $6,000–$8,000+, embryo transfer $3,500, annual storage after year 1, PGT) |
| Hannam Fertility Centre | Toronto | 4 (223) | Yes | $14,650+ (excludes medications and PGT) |
How to read a clinic fee schedule
Know what complete looks like. A genuinely useful fee schedule covers the base cycle fee, ICSI, embryo freezing and storage renewals, frozen embryo transfer cycles, PGT-A, a medication estimate, and the cancellation policy. A pricing page that shows only the base fee reproduces the consult-quote problem in a prettier format — you still can't compute what a full cycle costs, which is the entire point of disclosure.
Use transparency as a screening signal, with appropriate humility. Publishing a fee schedule correlates with the operational choices that make patients' lives easier: self-referral intake, virtual consults, functioning portals, direct answers to direct questions. If patient experience matters to you, it's one of the lowest-effort filters available before you've spoken to anyone. But it's a proxy, not proof — verify with reviews and your own consult impressions, and don't write off an excellent legacy clinic solely because its prices arrive by conversation.
Then put the schedule to work. Bring one clinic's published pricing to another clinic's consult and ask them to match the itemization — any clinic should be willing to give you the same breakdown in writing, published or not. Ask whether published prices are current and whether the price at booking is honored through your cycle. A fee schedule is a starting position, and you're allowed to treat it like one.
- Can you give me your full fee schedule in writing, including add-ons, storage renewals, and cancellation fees?
- Is your published pricing current, and is the price at booking honored through my cycle?
- Which line items on your schedule would actually apply to a typical cycle for my diagnosis?
- What's your policy if a cycle is cancelled before retrieval — what portion do I pay?
- Is medication included in any published figure, or estimated separately?
- How do you notify patients if fees change mid-treatment?
Frequently asked questions
Which Toronto fertility clinics publish their prices?
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The digital-first clinics — Pollin and Twig among them — actively publish itemized pricing online, and a number of established GTA clinics maintain public fee schedules too. The verified list is below; we re-check each clinic's pricing page quarterly.
Why don't all clinics publish pricing?
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Habit more than concealment. Legacy practice is to quote during the initial consult, tailored to your protocol — and those quotes land in the same range as published prices. The real cost of the consult-quote model is that you can't compare clinics until you've invested weeks in each one.
Does transparent pricing mean cheaper IVF?
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No. Published prices sit in the same $13,000–$20,000 all-in Toronto range as consult quotes. What transparency buys is comparability and timing — you see the numbers before you're emotionally and logistically committed. For the cost-comparison angle on these same clinics, see our most-affordable-IVF page.
Are published prices binding?
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Treat them as current estimates. Your protocol determines which line items apply, and clinics update fee schedules periodically. Ask two things at booking: is this pricing current, and is the price at booking honored through my cycle? Get the answer in writing with your itemized estimate.
What should a complete fee schedule include?
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Base cycle fee, ICSI, embryo freezing and annual storage, frozen embryo transfer pricing, PGT-A, a medication cost estimate, and the cancellation policy. If a published schedule covers only the base fee, ask the clinic for the rest in writing — completeness is the real test of transparency.











