IVF Clinics in Canada
In vitro fertilization (IVF) is the most effective fertility treatment for most causes of infertility. We list 84 Canadian fertility clinics offering IVF — from large urban centres to regional clinics. IVF in Canada typically costs $10,000 to $16,500 per cycle before medications, with significant variation by clinic and province. Public funding is uneven across the country: Ontario, Quebec, BC, and several other provinces have introduced programs that cover some or all of one cycle for eligible patients, while other provinces offer only tax credits or no support at all. Use the directory below to compare clinics, and the province-by-province pricing section to see what to expect financially in your area.
What to look for in a IVF clinic
- Live birth rates per embryo transfer in your age group (ask for current SART or CARTR data)
- Clear pricing breakdown including monitoring, retrieval, anesthesia, lab fees, and embryo freezing
- On-site embryology lab vs. outsourced (most established clinics have in-house labs)
- Whether the clinic participates in your province's IVF funding program if eligible
- Wait times for both initial consultation and starting a cycle
IVF pricing & coverage by province
Price ranges are aggregated from clinic-published pricing on Fertility Finder. Funding notes summarize public programs and tax credits — see linked guides for full details.
| Province | Clinics | Price range | Funding & coverage |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ontario | 62 | $8,900 – $14,650 Typical: $12,500 Based on 42 of 62 published prices | Ontario funds one IVF cycle per lifetime through the Ontario Fertility Program for eligible patients under 43. Medications are not covered. Wait times at funded clinics are typically 12 to 24 months. Read guide → |
| British Columbia | 8 | $8,400 – $11,500 Typical: $10,600 | As of July 2, 2025, BC offers up to $19,000 toward one IVF cycle for eligible residents on an income-tested basis. This is a major shift — BC previously had no IVF funding. |
| Quebec | 5 | $6,350 – $8,500 Typical: $7,500 | Quebec resumed publicly funded IVF in 2021 through RAMQ. One cycle is covered for eligible patients (with conditions on age and family circumstances), making Quebec one of the most accessible provinces for funded IVF. Read guide → |
| Alberta | 4 | $8,300 – $9,500 Typical: $9,300 Based on 3 of 4 published prices | No public funding for IVF in Alberta. Diagnostic assessments and specialist referrals are covered by Alberta Health, but IVF itself is paid out-of-pocket. |
| Nova Scotia | 1 | $9,200 | Nova Scotia's Fertility and Surrogacy Tax Credit provides a 40 percent refundable tax credit up to $8,000 per year for eligible IVF and surrogacy expenses. Read guide → |
| Saskatchewan | 1 | $9,620 | Saskatchewan offers a 50 percent refundable Fertility Treatment Tax Credit (2025 tax year onward), up to $10,000 lifetime. IVF cycles are paid out-of-pocket but partially recovered at tax time. |
| New Brunswick | 1 | $8,770 | New Brunswick's Fertility Treatment Reimbursement Program (FTRP) provides a one-time reimbursement of up to $20,000 for IVF, covering 100 percent of eligible costs per household. Read guide → |
| Manitoba | 1 | $11,367 | Manitoba offers a Fertility Treatment Tax Credit worth up to 40 percent of eligible IVF expenses (up to $8,000 per year in credits). Treatment itself is not directly funded. Read guide → |
| Newfoundland & Labrador | 1 | $9,000 | Newfoundland & Labrador's Fertility Assistance Program offers financial support to eligible residents pursuing IVF, helping offset the significant cost of treatment in a province where many patients also travel for care. Read guide → |
Ontario funds one IVF cycle per lifetime through the Ontario Fertility Program for eligible patients under 43. Medications are not covered. Wait times at funded clinics are typically 12 to 24 months.
Read funding guide →As of July 2, 2025, BC offers up to $19,000 toward one IVF cycle for eligible residents on an income-tested basis. This is a major shift — BC previously had no IVF funding.
Quebec resumed publicly funded IVF in 2021 through RAMQ. One cycle is covered for eligible patients (with conditions on age and family circumstances), making Quebec one of the most accessible provinces for funded IVF.
Read funding guide →No public funding for IVF in Alberta. Diagnostic assessments and specialist referrals are covered by Alberta Health, but IVF itself is paid out-of-pocket.
Nova Scotia's Fertility and Surrogacy Tax Credit provides a 40 percent refundable tax credit up to $8,000 per year for eligible IVF and surrogacy expenses.
Read funding guide →Saskatchewan offers a 50 percent refundable Fertility Treatment Tax Credit (2025 tax year onward), up to $10,000 lifetime. IVF cycles are paid out-of-pocket but partially recovered at tax time.
New Brunswick's Fertility Treatment Reimbursement Program (FTRP) provides a one-time reimbursement of up to $20,000 for IVF, covering 100 percent of eligible costs per household.
Read funding guide →Manitoba offers a Fertility Treatment Tax Credit worth up to 40 percent of eligible IVF expenses (up to $8,000 per year in credits). Treatment itself is not directly funded.
Read funding guide →Newfoundland & Labrador's Fertility Assistance Program offers financial support to eligible residents pursuing IVF, helping offset the significant cost of treatment in a province where many patients also travel for care.
Read funding guide →84 IVF clinics in Canada
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does IVF cost in Canada?▼
A single IVF cycle typically costs $10,000 to $16,500 before medications. Medications add roughly $4,000 to $8,000 per cycle. Add-ons like ICSI, PGT-A genetic testing, and embryo freezing are extra.
What provinces fund IVF?▼
Ontario, Quebec, British Columbia, New Brunswick, Manitoba, Nova Scotia, Saskatchewan, PEI, and Newfoundland & Labrador all have some form of IVF funding or tax credit as of 2026. Eligibility, coverage amount, and what's covered varies significantly.
How successful is IVF?▼
Live birth rates per embryo transfer range from roughly 45 to 55 percent for patients under 35, declining significantly with age. Cumulative success across multiple cycles is higher. Donor egg cycles have higher per-transfer success rates.
How long is the IVF waitlist in Canada?▼
Wait for an initial consultation can range from 2 weeks to 6+ months depending on the clinic. Funded IVF programs (especially Ontario's) often have longer waits — 12 to 24 months is common.
Can I do IVF without a referral?▼
Many Canadian fertility clinics accept self-referrals — you can book a consultation directly. Some still require a referral from a family doctor or OB/GYN. Check the clinic's intake page or our directory's self-referral filter.
Related treatments
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