Medical Disclaimer: Cost information on IVFFees is for educational purposes only and should not replace consultation with a licensed reproductive endocrinologist or financial counselor. IVF success rates and costs vary significantly by clinic, patient age, and medical factors.

Here’s the IVF math that catches people off guard: transferring two embryos costs almost nothing extra compared to one transfer. But a twin pregnancy can cost $50,000–$150,000 more than a singleton pregnancy — in higher-risk prenatal care, NICU stays, and long-term outcomes.

That gap is why the American Society for Reproductive Medicine (ASRM) has pushed hard for elective single embryo transfer (eSET). Here’s what you actually need to know about the cost and risk tradeoffs.

The Transfer Procedure Cost: Almost Identical

The embryo transfer procedure itself — whether you’re transferring one embryo or two — costs essentially the same:

Transfer TypeProcedure Fee DifferenceReason
Single embryo transfer (eSET)Base rateOne embryo thawed and transferred
Double embryo transfer (DET)$0–$500 moreOne extra embryo thawed; same procedure

At most clinics, transferring a second embryo adds nothing or a small fee for thawing a second embryo. The procedure time, anesthesia, and physician involvement are essentially the same.

So the per-procedure cost difference is negligible. The real cost difference lies downstream — in what happens if a twin pregnancy results.

ASRM’s eSET Guidelines

ASRM published updated guidelines in 2021 recommending elective single embryo transfer for most patients. Specifically:

  • Women under 38 with good-quality blastocysts and no prior failed cycles: ASRM recommends eSET as the standard of care
  • Women 38–40 or with prior failed cycles: Up to two embryos may be considered
  • Women over 40 or with poor embryo quality: Three embryos may be considered in some cases

The guidelines exist because the “two embryo = better odds” logic, while intuitively appealing, overstates the benefit and understates the risk. ASRM data shows that:

  • Transferring 2 embryos increases twin rate from ~2% to ~20–30%
  • Cumulative live birth rates over multiple cycles are similar whether you do eSET repeatedly or DET once — because frozen embryos from an eSET cycle can be transferred later
PGT-A Changes the Calculus

If your embryos have been tested via PGT-A and confirmed chromosomally normal (euploid), ASRM is even more emphatic: transfer one. A normal blastocyst has a 50–70% live birth rate per transfer. Transferring two doesn’t double your odds — it mainly increases twin risk.

The Real Cost of a Twin Pregnancy

This is where the numbers get serious. A twin pregnancy from IVF carries dramatically higher medical costs than a singleton, even when everything goes well:

Cost CategorySingletonTwinsDifference
Standard prenatal care$3,000–$6,000$8,000–$15,000+$5,000–$9,000
Hospital delivery (vaginal)$6,000–$15,000$15,000–$30,000+$9,000–$15,000
C-section delivery (more common in twins)$15,000–$25,000$25,000–$40,000+$10,000–$15,000
NICU stay (if needed — common in twins)Rarely needed$20,000–$200,000+Potentially +$100,000+
First-year pediatric care (two infants)$3,000–$6,000$6,000–$12,000+$3,000–$6,000

The National Perinatal Information Center reports that the average cost of a twin birth in the US is approximately $105,000 — versus $30,000 for a singleton birth — largely driven by higher NICU rates. About 60% of twins are born preterm (before 37 weeks), and about 12% are born very preterm (before 32 weeks).

Preterm Birth and NICU Costs

The central cost driver in twin pregnancies isn’t the delivery itself — it’s prematurity.

According to CDC data, twins are delivered at an average gestational age of 35–36 weeks, compared to 39 weeks for singletons. Very premature twins (under 32 weeks) face:

  • NICU stays of 2–4 months
  • Hospital costs of $100,000–$500,000 per infant
  • Higher rates of long-term developmental needs

Even without extreme prematurity, a standard twin NICU admission of 2–3 weeks costs $40,000–$80,000. That dwarfs any perceived “savings” from transferring two embryos to avoid a second IVF cycle.

Important: Watch Out For

Insurance covers most NICU costs — but out-of-pocket maximums, specialist fees, follow-up developmental care, and related costs still add up. More importantly, a NICU stay with a premature infant is an experience that has consequences far beyond the financial bill.

When Double Transfer Makes Sense

Despite the strong eSET recommendation, there are situations where transferring two embryos is medically reasonable:

  • Older patients (38+) with limited embryo supply and time constraints — increasing the chance in one transfer may outweigh twin risk
  • Multiple prior failed transfers with good embryo quality — unexplained implantation failure sometimes leads to a DET recommendation after other workup
  • Poor embryo quality — if available embryos are Day 3 transfers (not blastocysts) or have morphological abnormalities, a second embryo may be warranted
  • Patient autonomy — patients can make informed decisions to accept higher twin risk after counseling

The key word is “informed.” If you’re considering a double transfer, ask your RE to quantify:

  1. Your estimated live birth rate with one embryo
  2. Your estimated live birth rate with two embryos
  3. Your estimated twin rate with two embryos
  4. The anticipated additional cost and risk if a twin pregnancy results

The Full Financial Picture

ScenarioIVF CostPregnancy/Birth CostEstimated Total
eSET, successful singleton$20,000–$28,000$15,000–$25,000$35,000–$53,000
eSET × 2 cycles (2nd cycle needed), singleton$38,000–$50,000$15,000–$25,000$53,000–$75,000
DET, singleton result$20,000–$28,000$15,000–$25,000$35,000–$53,000
DET, twin result (uncomplicated)$20,000–$28,000$50,000–$90,000$70,000–$118,000
DET, twin result (one NICU admission)$20,000–$28,000$80,000–$200,000+$100,000–$228,000+

When you look at expected value — probability × cost — eSET usually wins financially for younger patients with good embryos, even accounting for the possibility of needing a second cycle. The 20–30% twin risk from DET, multiplied by the $50,000–$150,000+ additional cost of a complicated twin pregnancy, makes the math unfavorable.

ASRM’s guidelines aren’t just about safety. They’re also, financially, the smarter choice for most patients.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much more does a twin pregnancy cost compared to a single pregnancy after IVF?
A twin pregnancy typically costs $50,000–$150,000 more than a singleton pregnancy, primarily due to higher-risk prenatal care, more frequent monitoring, and potential NICU (neonatal intensive care unit) stays. The embryo transfer procedure itself costs roughly the same whether you transfer one or two embryos—usually $3,000–$5,000—but the downstream pregnancy and delivery costs are significantly higher for multiples.
Does insurance cover the cost difference between single and double embryo transfer?
Most insurance plans cover the IVF transfer procedure itself the same way regardless of embryo number, but coverage varies widely by state and plan regarding prenatal care and delivery complications associated with twins. The additional $50,000–$150,000 in extra costs for a twin pregnancy—such as extended hospital stays, specialist visits, and NICU care—are typically subject to your plan’s deductible, copays, and out-of-pocket maximums, which can leave families with $10,000–$50,000+ in out-of-pocket expenses.
Why does ASRM recommend elective single embryo transfer (eSET) instead of transferring two?
ASRM recommends eSET because transferring two embryos carries a 20–30% risk of a twin pregnancy, which significantly increases maternal and fetal complications (gestational diabetes, preeclampsia, preterm birth) and neonatal costs without meaningfully improving live birth rates per cycle in most patient groups. For women under 35 with good-quality embryos, eSET achieves similar cumulative pregnancy rates to double transfer over multiple cycles while avoiding the $50,000–$150,000 in additional costs and health risks tied to multiples.

IVFFees Editorial Team

Fertility Cost Writer

Our writers collaborate with licensed reproductive endocrinologists to ensure fertility cost content is accurate and current.