Toronto fertility clinics with the shortest OFP waits (2026)
The clinics marketing no-waitlist or short funded-IVF waits — and why every number on this page has a shelf life measured in weeks.
Here's the honest version of this page's headline: most Toronto clinics don't publish their OFP wait times at all, so nobody — including us — can rank every clinic by actual funded-IVF wait. What we can verify is which clinics publicly market no-waitlist or short funded waits, and that's the criterion here. At our May 2026 verification, six clinics carried that signal: Pollin Fertility, Tripod Fertility, and IVF Canada explicitly advertise no OFP waitlist; Twig Fertility, Hannam Fertility Centre, and Ajax Fertility Centre publish or state short-wait signals for funded cycles. Why this matters more than brand: OFP funding is allocated per clinic per quarter by the Ministry of Health, so a funded cycle is identical wherever you use it — same coverage, same one-per-lifetime rule. The only variables are the queue and the clinic experience around it. For patients over 35, a twelve-month difference in queue length is a clinically meaningful difference, full stop. Now the equally honest caveat: wait times shift monthly as each quarter's allocation fills. A clinic advertising 'no waitlist' in May can have a six-month queue by September, and a long-wait clinic can clear its backlog. Treat this page as a calling list, not a promise — and check our wait-time comparison tool for the most recent signals we hold.
Ranking criterion: published or stated no-waitlist / short-wait marketing for OFP-funded IVF, re-verified in May 2026 against each clinic's own website and stated intake information. We do not rank by actual measured wait times because most clinics don't publish them and self-reported numbers can't be independently audited. The listing below shows every OFP-participating clinic in the GTA. Wait signals are the most perishable data we track — they move monthly as quarterly Ministry allocations fill — so always confirm directly. Last verified May 2026.
OFP-participating clinics in Toronto & the GTA, 2026
23 clinics in our directory. Ranked by Google rating, then review count.
- Vaughan (Maple) · 191 McNaughton Road East, Suite 401, Maple, ON L6A 4E2OFP-fundedLGBTQ+ welcoming
Why they fit: IVF, IUI and surrogacy in Vaughan (Maple). OFP-funded.
- 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.
- Oakville, ON L6M 1M1 · 3075 Hospital Gate, Suite 417OFP-fundedLGBTQ+ welcoming
Why they fit: Dr. Ade-Conde's bio names particular interest in unexplained infertility, PCOS, male factor infertility, and women with low ovarian reserve.
- 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).…
- Astra Fertility Group4.1(63)Mississauga · 4303 Village Centre CrtOFP-fundedVirtual consults
Why they fit: Dr. Essam Michael's bio specifically names Asherman's Syndrome, severe uterine anomalies, and recurrent pregnancy loss as areas of focus. Multiple Google reviews describe patients being referred to Astra after other clinics couldn't…
- 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.…
- IVF Canada Fertility Centre4.0(155)Toronto · 2347 Kennedy Rd, Suite 304, Toronto, ON M1T 3T8OFP-fundedNo waitlistLGBTQ+ welcoming
Why they fit: Dedicated Recurrent Pregnancy Loss treatment page. IVF treatment page explicitly lists 'women with diminishing ovarian reserve or egg quality' and 'female reproductive conditions (e.g., blocked fallopian tubes)' under who benefits from IVF.
- Lakeridge Fertility4.0(47)Whitby · 220 Dundas St W, Suite 404, Whitby, ON L1N 8M7OFP-fundedLGBTQ+ welcoming
Why they fit: Specialized recurrent pregnancy loss program working with Dr. Carl Laskin and Dr. Sony Sierra; satellite of TRIO Fertility (one of Canada's largest fertility teams) for advanced IVF and embryology requirements.
- 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.
- CHARM Fertility3.8(190)Etobicoke (Toronto) · 101 Westmore Drive, Suite 201OFP-funded
Why they fit: Website mentions handling cases that 'failed to respond to other medical or surgical interventions' for IVF, but no specific complex-case program described
- Ajax Fertility Centre3.7(17)Ajax · 300 Rossland Rd E, Unit 206OFP-fundedNo waitlist
Why they fit: IVF, IUI, egg freezing and PGT in Ajax. OFP-funded with no current waitlist.
- 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…
- NewLife Fertility Centre3.4(25)Mississauga · 4250 Sherwoodtowne Blvd, Mississauga, ON L4Z 2G6OFP-fundedLGBTQ+ welcomingVirtual consults
Why they fit: Explicit on the success rates page: 'At NewLife there are no selection criteria for patients. Our specialty is treating difficult and complex cases.' Dedicated Recurrent Pregnancy Loss (RPL) service page. Beautifi clinic…
- 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…
- First Steps Fertility Clinic3.1(37)Toronto (North York) · 4025 Yonge Street, Suite 215, Toronto, ON M2P 2E3OFP-fundedLGBTQ+ welcoming
Why they fit: IVF, IUI, egg freezing and PGT in Toronto (North York). OFP-funded.
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 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FemWellness - Integrative Women's Health & Fertility | Vaughan (Maple) | 4.8 (42) | Yes | On request |
| EVOLVE Egg Freezing Clinic | Toronto | 4.5 (46) | Yes | Not applicable — EVOLVE does not offer IVF; IVF performed at sister clinic TRIO |
| Halton Fertility & Women's Health Centre | Oakville, ON L6M 1M1 | 4.4 (110) | Yes | On request |
| 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 |
How we ranked this — and how to actually shorten your wait
How we ranked: by no-waitlist and short-wait marketing signals, because that's the only wait-related claim we can verify against a public source. This is a weaker criterion than measured waits and we'd rather say so than pretend otherwise. A marketing claim is still information — a clinic advertising no waitlist is staking its reputation on it and usually has the quarterly allocation headroom to back it up — but it's a snapshot. The right way to use this page: call the shortlist, ask each clinic for its current wait from waitlist placement to cycle start, and compare answers gathered in the same week.
Ask the precise question, because 'wait time' hides three different clocks. Clock one: booking to first consult. Clock two: consult through eligibility paperwork and baseline workup to OFP waitlist placement — typically four to eight weeks, and 'no waitlist' marketing usually doesn't include it. Clock three: waitlist placement to cycle start, which is the number clinics quote. When a clinic says 'no waitlist,' confirm they mean clock three is roughly zero and ask what clocks one and two look like right now. Total time from first phone call to stimulation start is the number that actually matters to your ovaries.
Weigh the wait against everything else this list deliberately ignores. A short queue at a clinic ninety minutes from home gets painful during monitoring, when you're there at 7 a.m. several times a week. And if your history is complex — recurrent loss, severe male factor, prior failed cycles — a clinic with a published program for your situation may be worth a longer queue. For a straightforward first funded cycle, taking the shortest credible wait is usually the right call; the cycle itself is the same product everywhere. Our OFP wait-times page and comparison tool carry the most recent per-clinic signals we hold.
- What is your current OFP wait, measured from waitlist placement to cycle start?
- How many weeks between my first call and actually being placed on the OFP waitlist?
- You advertise no waitlist — does that include the consult, eligibility, and workup steps, or only the queue itself?
- How did your quarterly OFP allocation change this year, and do you expect the wait to hold?
- Is your waitlist first-in-first-out, or does clinical urgency move patients up?
- If your wait grows after I join the queue, will you tell me — and can I transfer to another clinic's list?
Frequently asked questions
Which Toronto clinics have no OFP waitlist in 2026?
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As of our May 2026 verification, Pollin Fertility, Tripod Fertility, and IVF Canada explicitly market no OFP waitlist, with Twig, Hannam, and Ajax Fertility Centre publishing short-wait signals. These are marketing claims verified against clinic websites, not audited queue data — and they can change within a quarter, so confirm when you call.
Why do OFP wait times differ so much between clinics?
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OFP funding is allocated per clinic per quarter by the Ministry of Health. A clinic that signs up more patients than its allocation develops a queue; one with headroom can start patients quickly. Waits reflect supply and demand at each clinic — not clinical quality. A longer wait does not mean a better clinic.
Is a funded IVF cycle worse at a clinic with no waitlist?
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No. The OFP cycle is the same product everywhere: retrieval, embryology, and one transfer, with medications and add-ons still out of pocket. Newer clinics often have shorter queues simply because their allocations are less oversubscribed. Judge the clinic on fit and lab quality, not on queue length in either direction.
How fast do these wait times change?
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Monthly, sometimes faster. Each quarter's allocation fills as patients join, so a no-waitlist clinic in May can carry a real queue by September — and backlogs also clear. We re-verify quarterly, but between our passes the clinics' own answers beat this page. Gather quotes from your shortlist in the same week to compare fairly.
Can I join the OFP waitlist at several clinics to hedge?
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Generally no — most clinics require an exclusive waitlist commitment and the Ministry tracks enrolment per patient. Pick the shortest credible wait among clinics you'd actually cycle at. If your wait later balloons, ask about transferring to another participating clinic's queue rather than quietly double-listing.




















