The Critical Considerations
Per cycle is not per baby
The single most important honesty point in IVF pricing: the headline number is the cost of one cycle, and IVF does not work every time. Many patients need two or three cycles, which is why a peer-reviewed analysis put the US cost per successful case near $48,627 as of 2016 — multiples of any single-cycle sticker. A cheaper cycle abroad is only cheaper if the number of cycles is the same, and that depends on the patient, not the country.
Age is the dominant variable, not the country
Per the CDC, IVF success is strongly age-dependent: roughly 43% of egg retrievals led to a live birth under 35, about 19% at ages 38–40, and around 3% over 42. That swing dwarfs the difference between any two countries' price tags. No clinic and no border changes the underlying biology, so a candid conversation about age and realistic cycle count matters more than the sticker price.
No neutral registry means no outcome promise
The United States publishes clinic- and age-level outcomes through the CDC's national ART system. Turkey has no equivalent neutral national registry, so there is no honest, source-backed way to claim a Turkish success advantage — and this comparison makes none. Accredited centers can offer comparable credentials; what cannot be verified is a "better odds abroad" promise. Treat any such claim as marketing, not data.
Why the foreign number is an estimate
The roughly $2,500 medical-only figure comes from Yildiz & Khan's 2016 peer-reviewed study; the ~$8,500 all-in number adds travel, a two-week stay, and aftercare, triangulated rather than quoted from a high-trust published list. The savings versus the US are real; the exact figure is honestly approximate. As always, build a relationship with a home provider for monitoring and follow-up before booking any travel.
A note on the 2016 data
The core per-cycle and per-successful-case figures here are roughly a decade old, which is a real limitation in a 2026 comparison. We use them anyway because they remain the most neutral published, peer-reviewed cross-country IVF cost analysis available — no equivalent independent study has since replaced it, and inventing fresher-looking numbers would be less honest than citing the dated ones plainly.