Egg Freezing Cost in Australia (2026): Full Price Breakdown + Calculator
Egg freezing costs $8,000 to $15,000 per cycle all-in in Australia in 2026. The clinic’s cycle fee is usually $4,000–$8,000, with medications, day-hospital admission and the anaesthetist on top, then $300–$600 a year to keep the eggs in storage. Elective (“social”) egg freezing attracts no Medicare rebate for the procedure — though your medications are still PBS-subsidised, and NSW residents can claim a $2,000 state rebate.
Here is the part the per-cycle price hides. A woman under 35 collects about 10 mature eggs in one cycle, and published Australian data suggests you want closer to 20 banked eggs for a strong chance of a baby later. That means most people realistically need two cycles — so the honest budget is $19,000 to $36,000 including a decade of storage, before you have used a single egg. Thawing them and going through IVF later adds roughly $6,500 more. This guide gives you the real numbers, the success rates by age that clinics don’t always lead with, and exactly where Medicare and state rebates do and don’t help.
Egg freezing cost calculator (2026)
Set your age, how many cycles you are planning, how long you expect to store, and whether to include the future thaw-and-transfer cycle. The estimate covers the whole journey, not just the first invoice.
Indicative 2026 estimates based on published Australian clinic pricing and RTAC-accredited clinic data. Egg yield and success chance vary enormously between individuals — this is a budgeting tool, not a medical prediction. Not medical or financial advice.
Egg freezing costs at a glance (2026)
Clinics quote the cycle fee, but four other costs sit around it. This is the full picture.
| Cost | Typical range | When you pay it |
|---|---|---|
| Clinic cycle fee (out-of-pocket) | $4,000 – $8,000 | Per cycle |
| Medications (PBS-subsidised) | $2,000 – $5,000 | Per cycle |
| Day hospital admission | Up to $1,395 | Per cycle |
| Anaesthetist (Medicare rebate applies) | $300 – $600 | Per cycle |
| All-in per cycle | $8,000 – $15,000 | Per cycle |
| Annual storage | $300 – $600 / year | Every year until used |
| Thaw + IVF cycle to use them | ~$6,500+ | Years later |
NSW residents can claim $2,000 back
Why one cycle is usually not enough
This is the single most important thing to understand before you budget, and it is why comparing clinics on their advertised cycle fee alone will mislead you.
On average, a woman under 35 collects about 10 mature eggs in one stimulation cycle, and that number falls by roughly one egg per year after 35. Meanwhile, the published outcome data shows that 10 frozen eggs at under 35 gives about a 70% chance of a baby, while 20 eggs lifts that to about 90%. For a woman in her early thirties to reach a high chance, the evidence points to banking at least 20 eggs.

Put those two facts together and the arithmetic is unavoidable: most people need two cycles, and women over 35 often need three. So when a clinic advertises “$5,000 a cycle”, the realistic number to hold in your head is double that, plus storage.
Egg freezing success rates by age
Success depends overwhelmingly on how old you were when the eggs were frozen — not how old you are when you use them. That is the whole logic of freezing early. Australian and New Zealand outcome data shows live birth rates per embryo transferred of 26% for eggs frozen at 35 and under, 20% at 35–39, and 5% at 40 and over.
| Age at freezing | Eggs banked | Indicative chance of a live birth |
|---|---|---|
| Under 35 | 10 eggs | About 70% |
| Under 35 | 20 eggs | About 90% |
| Age 44 | 10 eggs | About 8% |
| Age 44 | 20 eggs | Under 15% |
Over 38, have a frank conversation first
Does Medicare cover egg freezing?
It depends entirely on why you are freezing, and this is the distinction that decides thousands of dollars.
Elective ("social") egg freezing — no rebate
If you are freezing because you are not ready to have children yet, that is classed as elective, and Medicare pays no rebate on the procedure. You carry the cycle fee, the hospital fee and the storage yourself. Two things do soften it: your medications remain PBS-subsidised even for elective cycles, which is a meaningful saving, and the anaesthetist attracts a Medicare rebate.
Medical fertility preservation — rebates apply
Where there is a genuine medical need, Medicare rebates significantly reduce the out-of-pocket on the cycle fee, medications, and hospital and anaesthetic fees. Common qualifying situations include:
- A cancer diagnosis where chemotherapy or radiotherapy is likely to damage ovarian reserve
- Severe endometriosis that may affect future fertility
- Premature ovarian insufficiency or a strong family history of early menopause
- Certain genetic conditions, or before gender-affirming treatment
There is also the ART Storage Program, which funds up to 10 years of storage for cancer patients and people with genetic conditions undergoing preimplantation genetic testing — worth up to $6,000 in avoided storage fees.
State rebates worth knowing
NSW is the standout: under an expansion of the state’s Affordable IVF initiative, NSW residents holding a Medicare card who incur an out-of-pocket cost with a registered ART provider can claim a $2,000 rebate for egg freezing — an Australian first. Other states run public and low-cost IVF programs whose scope changes from year to year, so check your own state health department’s current position rather than relying on a clinic’s summary.
Ask the clinic for a written Medicare estimate
Storage fees: the cost that keeps running
Freezing is an event; storage is a subscription. Australian clinics charge $300 to $600 a year, sometimes billed six-monthly (around $280 per six months) or monthly (about $42). There is usually a one-off initial freezing fee of roughly $320 on top.

It sounds minor next to a $12,000 cycle, and that is exactly why people underestimate it. If you freeze at 30 and use the eggs at 38, that is eight years of storage — $2,400 to $4,800. Freeze at 28 and never use them, and you may pay for a decade or more before deciding. Two practical points: set a calendar reminder for the annual invoice, because clinics can dispose of eggs if storage fees lapse and contact details go stale, and tell the clinic promptly if you move or change your email.
| Storage period | Cost at $300/yr | Cost at $600/yr |
|---|---|---|
| 1 year | $300 | $600 |
| 5 years | $1,500 | $3,000 |
| 10 years | $3,000 | $6,000 |
What it costs to actually use your frozen eggs
Freezing your eggs is only the first half of the transaction. Using them means a vitrified oocyte thaw (VOT) cycle: thawing the eggs, fertilising them (usually with ICSI, since the shell hardens slightly during freezing), growing embryos, and transferring one. In Victoria one clinic prices a full VOT cycle at $6,551, and that is broadly representative — expect $6,500 and up, with medications, embryo freezing and any additional transfers extra.
The good news is that this stage is IVF, so Medicare rebates apply to eligible items, which softens it considerably compared with the freezing stage. The important thing is simply to know the cost exists. Here is the whole journey for a woman freezing at 32 and using her eggs at 38:
| Stage | Cost |
|---|---|
| Two freezing cycles (~20 eggs) | $16,000 – $30,000 |
| Six years of storage | $1,800 – $3,600 |
| Thaw + IVF cycle to use them | $6,500+ |
| Realistic all-in total | $24,300 – $40,100 |
The process, step by step
One cycle takes roughly two to three weeks from the start of stimulation to collection. Knowing the sequence helps you plan time off work and understand what each fee is for.

- Initial consultation and testing — blood tests including AMH (a marker of ovarian reserve) and an antral follicle count on ultrasound. This is what tells you how many eggs to realistically expect, and it is worth doing before you commit financially.
- Stimulation, about 10–12 days — daily hormone injections you give yourself at home to bring multiple follicles to maturity, with monitoring scans and blood tests every few days.
- Trigger injection — timed precisely, usually about 36 hours before collection.
- Egg collection — a day procedure under light general anaesthetic or sedation, taking about 20–30 minutes. Most people take the day off and are fine the next day, though some have cramping and bloating for several days.
- Vitrification — the mature eggs are flash-frozen the same day. You are usually told within 24 hours how many eggs were mature enough to freeze — and that number is often lower than the number of follicles seen on the scans, which can be a genuine disappointment.
Worth planning for: the injections and monitoring appointments are time-consuming (early-morning clinic visits are common), and the hormonal effects can be significant for some people. If you are on a student or temporary visa, also confirm your Medicare or OSHC position before starting, since fertility treatment is generally excluded from overseas student health cover.
How to reduce the cost
- Do the AMH test and follicle count first. It costs little and tells you whether one cycle will realistically bank enough eggs — or whether the whole plan makes sense at your age. It is the highest-value dollar you will spend.
- Claim every rebate you are entitled to. NSW residents should claim the $2,000 state rebate. If there is any medical indication, ask directly whether you qualify for Medicare rebates rather than assuming you don’t.
- Compare all-in quotes, not cycle fees. Ask each clinic for cycle fee, expected medication cost, day hospital fee, anaesthetist fee, initial freeze fee and annual storage — in writing.
- Ask about multi-cycle packages. Since most people need two cycles, some clinics price two together more favourably than two separate rounds.
- Consider a lower-cost or bulk-billing clinic — cycle fees across accredited Australian clinics vary by thousands, and all are RTAC-accredited to the same standard.
- Don’t pay for add-ons without evidence. Ask what any optional extra actually does to your live birth rate, and whether there is good evidence behind it.
Planning other major costs at the same time? Our cost of living and services price guide brings them together, and if you are weighing up other health decisions see our breakdowns of laser eye surgery costs and breast implant costs in Australia.
Frequently asked questions
This guide is general information, not medical or financial advice. Prices are indicative 2026 figures from published Australian clinic pricing and RTAC-accredited clinic data, and vary by clinic, medication protocol and individual circumstances. Success rates are population averages — your own outcome depends on factors only a fertility specialist can assess. Always speak with your GP or a fertility specialist, and confirm current fees, Medicare eligibility and state rebates directly with the clinic before committing.
