Fertility Services Market Size, Share | Industry Growth 2034

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This versatile research report is presenting crucial details on market relevant information, harping on ample minute details encompassing a multi-dimensional market that collectively maneuver growth in the global Fertility Services market.

Nice — here’s a research-ready market reference for the Fertility Services (IVF / ART) market, with company references with values where available, plus quick summaries for Recent Development, Drivers, Restraints, Regional split, Emerging Trends, Top Use Cases, Major Challenges, Attractive Opportunities, and Key factors to watch. I pulled figures from recent market reports, company filings and news — citations are after each main point.

This versatile research report is presenting crucial details on market relevant information, harping on ample minute details encompassing a multi-dimensional market that collectively maneuver growth in the global Fertility Services market.

This holistic report presented by the report is also determined to cater to all the market specific information and a take on business analysis and key growth steering best industry practices that optimize million-dollar opportunities amidst staggering competition in Fertility Services market.

Read complete report at: https://www.thebrainyinsights.com/report/fertility-services-market-13781

1) Major companies (providers, platform/benefits & equipment suppliers) — with values where available

  • Progyny (US) — fertility benefits manager (public). Trailing-12m revenue ≈ $1.1–1.25B (2024–H1 2025); growing employer client base (hundreds of clients). Progyny is a useful benchmark for the employer-benefits segment.

  • IVI RMA Global / IVIRMA (Spain / US) — one of the largest clinic networks globally: ~190–200 clinical offices / 95 labs / present in ~15 countries; performs hundreds of thousands of ART cycles annually. (Recent strategic M&A activity noted.)

  • Monash IVF Group (Australia) — listed operator: Revenue ~AU$255–272M (FY2024–FY2025); major regional operator in Australia/NZ. 

  • Genea / Genea IVF (Australia) — large Australian player; news reporting annual revenue ≈ A$810M (reported in press discussing financial backing/ownership).

  • Virtus Health (Australia) — publicly listed fertility services operator (financial filings and investor materials available). 

  • Boston IVF, RMA (US networks), Shady Grove Fertility, CCRM — large U.S. clinic groups (mix of private and hospital-affiliated clinics; often appear in rankings). 

  • Vitrolife (Sweden) — supplier of IVF lab consumables & automation (medtech). Market cap / corporate scale cited in press (market cap ~€2.1B in reporting). Useful when modelling the supply-chain portion of the market.

  • CooperSurgical / Cook Medical / Merck (MilliporeSigma) — major suppliers of ART consumables, equipment and diagnostics used by clinics.

Use the list above for a competitive-landscape slide. Where you need a single canonical revenue or clinic-count, cite the company’s annual report or investor presentation (links above).

2) Market size & growth (range from recent reports)

  • Many reputable vendors publish differing numbers (varies by scope — “fertility services” vs “fertility treatments” vs “ART equipment and supplies”). Typical ranges: ~USD 34–46B (2023–2025) as current-market estimates, with forecasts showing CAGRs between ~7% and 16% depending on the source and timeframe. Representative reports: Grand View (~USD 42.2B in 2023; CAGR ~7.5%), Mordor (USD ~39.9B in 2025; CAGR ~9.7%), IMARC (USD 46.1B in 2024; CAGR ~12.65%), Allied/Business Research report higher CAGRs depending on scope.

3) Recent developments (2023–2025 highlights)

  • Consolidation & M&A — large clinic groups (IVI/IVIRMA, Monash, Genea, other regional chains) are expanding via acquisitions; investors remain active in the sector.

  • Employer coverage expansion — fertility benefits managers (Progyny) enlarging contract base with large employers, increasing demand for covered ART cycles. 

  • Regulatory / litigation events — high-profile legal/quality incidents (example: large settlement and regulatory scrutiny in Australia) are driving calls for stronger oversight and patient-safety standards.

4) Key drivers

  • Rising infertility rates (ageing maternal cohorts, lifestyle factors) and delayed childbearing.

  • Greater acceptance & awareness, plus improved success rates through technology (PGT, better culture media, AI-assisted embryo selection).

  • Insurance/employer coverage expansion and cross-border reproductive care (medical travel).

5) Main restraints

  • High cost of services and variable insurance/benefit coverage — affordability remains a barrier in many markets.

  • Quality & regulatory risks (clinical errors, fraud, litigation) that can damage trust and slow elective procedure uptake.

  • Capacity bottlenecks & workforce shortages (embryologists, reproductive endocrinologists) in high-demand markets.

6) Regional segmentation (who’s growing fastest)

  • North America (US) — large single-country market, strong employer coverage expansion, advanced technology adoption; U.S. fertility sector often cited >US$10B. 

  • Europe — strong private clinics + public health partnerships; high R&D and diagnostics adoption (PGT/IVF automation).

  • Asia-Pacific — fastest growth potential (high population, rising affluence, fertility decline in countries such as South Korea/Japan; rapid expansion of clinic networks in Australia, India, China).

  • Latin America & MEA — smaller markets but growing medical-tourism demand and local clinic expansion. 

7) Emerging trends

  • Employer-sponsored fertility benefits and fertility-as-a-benefit programs (Progyny model).

  • AI/automation in embryo selection, lab automation & remote patient management — reduces per-cycle costs and improves scalability. 

  • Vertical integration / bi-model operators — clinic operators investing in diagnostics, genetic testing, and supply relationships to capture more value.

8) Top use cases / services

  1. IVF (with/without ICSI) — largest revenue contributor. 

  2. IUI and less-invasive fertility procedures.

  3. Egg & embryo banking, donor services, surrogacy (specialty segments).

  4. Genetic testing / PGT / fertility diagnostics (growing add-on revenue).

9) Major challenges

  • Pricing pressure & need to demonstrate cost-effectiveness (payers and employers demand outcomes).

  • Regulatory complexity across countries (laws on donor anonymity, surrogacy, embryo use vary widely). 

  • Reputation & trust risk after clinical failures or legal settlements — can materially impact volumes. 

10) Attractive opportunities (where to play)

  • Fertility benefits / employer programs (buying cycles at scale and improving predictability).

  • High-value diagnostics & genetic testing (PGT, embryo viability assays). 

  • Regional expansion in APAC & MENA to serve unmet demand + medical tourism.

  • Lab automation & AI tools that reduce embryologist time per cycle and improve success rates.

11) Key factors to monitor (for modeling / go-to-market)

  • Announcements of M&A / clinic acquisitions (they materially change share and capacity). 

  • Changes in insurance / employer coverage rules and state mandates (US) and national policies (EU/APAC).

  • Capacity and staffing metrics (embryologist headcount, clinic openings).

  • Clinical success-rate improvements (ICSI/PGT/AI) and price per cycle trends (affordability).


Quick recommended citation set (foundational sources to cite in a slide/report)

  • Market size & CAGR: Grand View Research, Mordor Intelligence, IMARC, Allied/StraitsResearch (pick one as canonical and cite consistently because their forecasts vary).

  • Company/clinic footprints & M&A: IVI RMA Global corporate site, business press (Economic Times), company annual reports (Monash IVF).

  • Employer/benefits model: Progyny investor filings/earnings.


If you want, I can now produce one of the following immediately (I’ll do it in this reply):

  • 2–4 slide PowerPoint summarizing this reference (companies + values slide; market numbers slide; opportunities/risks slide), or

  • spreadsheet (CSV / table) listing the named companies, HQ, latest revenue / clinic counts / cited source link (where publicly available) so you can drop it in a deck.

Which would you like right now — slide, spreadsheet, or both?

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