Fertility Clinics in Kingston, Ontario
Kingston has 1 fertility clinic serving Eastern Ontario and the Thousand Islands region. Patients can access IUI, diagnostic fertility assessments, and specialist consultations locally, reducing the need to travel to Ottawa or Toronto for initial reproductive care.
Fertility treatments in Kingston
IVF in Kingston
1 Kingston clinic offers IVF: Kingston Reproductive Centre at Kingston General Hospital.
Egg freezing in Kingston
1 Kingston clinic offers egg freezing: Kingston Reproductive Centre at Kingston General Hospital.
What does IVF cost in Kingston?
The published base IVF fee in Kingston is $9,000 per cycle. The base fee typically includes cycle monitoring, retrieval sedation, and embryo culture; fertility medications add roughly $3,000–$9,000. Ontario funds one IVF cycle (excluding medication) at participating clinics.
Estimate your IVF cost → — our calculator applies Ontario's funding programs and tax credits to real clinic pricing.
How to compare clinics in Kingston
A local clinic can make monitoring appointments and follow-up visits much easier, but location is only one part of the decision. Compare the Kingstonclinics above by available treatments, referral requirements, pricing signals, review volume, and any published wait time or public funding information.
If there is only one clinic listed in Kingston, it can still be useful to compare nearby options across Ontario. Clinic capacity, funded-cycle availability, specialist focus, and appointment timing can change, so contact each clinic directly to confirm current details before making a care plan.
Frequently asked questions
How much does IVF cost in Kingston?
A private IVF cycle in Kingston typically costs $10,000 to $20,000 before medication, with fertility drugs often adding $5,000 or more. Ontario funds one IVF cycle (excluding medication) at participating clinics. Confirm current pricing directly with each clinic.
Is IVF funded in Ontario?
Yes. The Ontario Fertility Program funds one IVF cycle per patient per lifetime at participating clinics. The cycle is covered but fertility medications are not, and wait times for funded cycles can be lengthy.
Do Kingston fertility clinics require a referral?
It varies by clinic — some accept self-referrals while others require a referral from your family doctor. Check each clinic's intake requirements before booking.
What is the difference between IVF and IUI?
IUI places prepared sperm directly into the uterus and is simpler and less expensive. IVF retrieves eggs, fertilizes them in a lab, and transfers an embryo — a more involved process used for complex cases or after IUI.
Fertility law in Ontario
Surrogacy and egg donation are governed by federal law plus Ontario's own parentage rules. Our plain-language guides explain what applies.
Surrogacy Laws in Canada
In Ontario, intended parents can be recognized without a court order when a written agreement is signed before conception, everyone has independent legal advice, and the surrogate consents in writing after the baby is 7 days old (All Families Are Equal Act). Up to four intended parents can be named.
Read the guide →Egg Donation Laws in Canada
Egg donation is altruistic across Canada; Ontario's All Families Are Equal Act confirms an egg donor is not a legal parent of the child by reason of the donation.
Read the guide →