Fertility Clinics in Saskatchewan
Saskatchewan has 1 fertility clinic in Saskatoon, providing reproductive services including IUI, fertility assessments, and specialist consultations. The province offers a 50% refundable Fertility Treatment Tax Credit (2025 tax year onward), providing up to $10,000 lifetime for eligible fertility expenses. The clinic serves patients from across Saskatchewan, including those in Regina and rural communities.
Saskatchewan's fertility care is centred in Saskatoon, serving patients from Regina, Prince Albert, and rural communities across the province. There is no funded cycle, but Saskatchewan's 50% refundable Fertility Treatment Tax Credit (2025 tax year onward) provides up to $10,000 lifetime for eligible fertility expenses — substantial relief on a private IVF cycle, which typically runs $10,000 to $20,000 before medication. Because IVF requires several monitoring visits over a short window, patients travelling from outside Saskatoon should plan accordingly. Compare clinics on services, success rates, wait times, and pricing.
All Clinics
Comparing fertility clinics in Saskatchewan
Fertility care access can vary widely across Saskatchewan, especially when clinics are concentrated in one or two cities. When comparing providers, look beyond distance and consider whether the clinic offers your treatment, whether referral is required, what wait time information is available, and whether provincial funding or tax credit rules may affect your costs.
Use the clinic cards above as a starting point, then review each profile for services, pricing signals, reviews, public funding notes, contact details, and nearby alternatives. Published clinic information can change, so confirm details directly with the clinic before booking or joining a waitlist.
Frequently asked questions
How much does IVF cost in Saskatchewan?
A private IVF cycle typically costs $10,000 to $20,000 before medication, with fertility drugs often adding $5,000 or more. Saskatchewan's 50% tax credit can refund up to $10,000 lifetime on eligible costs.
Does Saskatchewan help with fertility treatment costs?
Yes. Saskatchewan offers a 50% refundable Fertility Treatment Tax Credit (2025 tax year onward), providing up to $10,000 lifetime for eligible fertility expenses.
Do I need a referral for a fertility clinic in Saskatchewan?
It depends on the clinic — some accept self-referrals while others require a referral from your family doctor. Check the clinic's intake process 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 Saskatchewan
Surrogacy and egg donation are governed by federal law plus Saskatchewan's own parentage rules. Our plain-language guides explain what applies.
Surrogacy Laws in Canada
Surrogacy is legal across Canada on an altruistic basis — paying a surrogate is a criminal offence, but documented expenses can be reimbursed. How you become the legal parents depends on the province where the baby is born.
Read the guide →Egg Donation Laws in Canada
Egg donation in Canada is altruistic — paying for eggs is a criminal offence, though donors can be reimbursed for documented expenses. Most donor-egg cycles use a known donor or eggs imported from a licensed US bank.
Read the guide →