I AM LOOKING FOR

Am I Ready To Be A Surrogate Mother?

Guide for Surrogate Mothers

Share this on

It is vitally important that you consider the following before you promise yourself to any family. You want to make sure that your expectations match exactly with those of the Intended Parents. This specific toning of anticipations, beliefs, hopes, and expectancies will deliver a strong establishment for your relationship with the Intended Parents during the course of the surrogacy journey.

Begin with the most important aspects of the surrogacy agreement:

  • How many embryos will be transferred?
  • Do I want to carry multiples?
  • Are you willing to consider selective reduction should all the embryos progress?
  • Am I able to terminate if there is a medical issue with the fetus(s)?
  • Am I willing to let them attend your IVF and/or OB appointments?
  • Who will be in the room during the birth?
  • Do I want yearly updates and photos on a child after you deliver for the intended parents?

Surrogacy necessitates the enormous weight of caring and commitment as you are relied on heavily to make the cycle a success. The favorable rewards entail financial compensation, and most importantly the overwhelming satisfaction of knowing you have exasperated all efforts to help struggling Intended Parents have a child.

The gift a Surrogate Mother gives is beyond what words can amount to. Without hesitation there is not anything more fitting than the delivery of a beautiful, healthy baby on this journey.

Are you ready? Find a Surrogacy Provider today.


WARNING: FindSurrogateMother.com is a unique platform that does not interfere with the connections being made in its community. The connections are non-intrusive and made organically between members. While you are in control of your FindSurrogateMother.com experience, your safety is still very important to us. There are certain safety steps that you should always consider: 1) Protect Your Finances & Never Send Money or Financial Information 2) Protect Your Personal Information and 3) Report Suspicious Members and All Suspicious Behavior. You are always the best judge of your own safety, these guidelines are not intended to be a substitute for your own judgment.