IVF is one of the most emotionally and financially significant medical decisions a person or couple can make. Success rates matter — but understanding what those numbers actually mean is equally important.
This article breaks down real IVF success rate data for Bulgaria, Greece, and the UK, explains how to interpret clinic statistics, and shows how much you can save without compromising on outcomes.
The headline numbers
| Country | Live birth rate per transfer (all ages) | Egg donation live birth rate | Avg cost (own eggs) | |---|---|---|---| | 🇧🇬 Bulgaria | 35–42% | 55–65% | €2,500–€4,000 | | 🇬🇷 Greece | 38–48% | 58–70% | €3,000–€5,000 | | 🇬🇧 UK (HFEA 2023) | 22–32% | 25–38% | £5,000–£8,000 | | 🇺🇸 USA (CDC 2023) | 28–41% | 42–55% | $15,000–$25,000 |
Live birth rate per embryo transfer cycle. Figures vary by age and patient profile.
The most striking finding: Bulgarian and Greek clinics outperform UK averages by 10–15 percentage points on both own-egg and donor cycles — at 40–65% lower cost.
Why do Balkan clinics have better success rates?
This seems counterintuitive. Here are the main reasons:
1. Patient selection
UK NHS clinics treat a broad mix of patients including those with very low prognosis. This pulls the aggregate success rate down. Private clinics abroad (and UK private) tend to see more motivated, better-informed patients.
2. Shorter waiting lists = younger eggs
In the UK, NHS waiting lists for IVF are 6–24 months. In Bulgaria and Greece, treatment starts within weeks. Younger eggs (or eggs frozen at a younger age) have better outcomes.
3. High-volume specialist centres
The top IVF clinics in Sofia and Athens perform 1,000–3,000+ cycles per year, compared to many UK private clinics at 200–500. Volume = experience = better lab culture conditions.
4. Donor pool quality
Both Bulgaria and Greece have legal, well-regulated anonymous donor programs with young, screened donors (18–30). The UK donor shortage means longer waits and a smaller, older pool.
How to read IVF clinic statistics
Clinics publish success rates — but not all numbers are equal. Here's what to ask:
✅ Ask for: Live birth rate per transfer (not per cycle started)
"Per cycle started" includes cancelled cycles. "Per transfer" is the number that reflects actual embryo quality and implantation success.
✅ Ask for: Success rate by your age bracket
A clinic may publish 50% for under-35 but only 18% for 40+. Get the number for your age group.
✅ Ask for: Their PGT-A embryo utilisation rate
This tells you what proportion of embryos survive to testing. Higher is better.
🚩 Red flag: "Success rate" without specifying what it means
"70% success rate" could mean positive beta hCG (chemical pregnancy) — far higher than live birth rate.
The egg donation advantage
For women over 40, or those with poor ovarian reserve, egg donation dramatically improves outcomes. Here's why the Balkans stand out:
UK egg donation:
- •Waiting list: 1–3 years (chronic shortage)
- •All donors are identifiable at age 18 (legal requirement)
- •Cost: £8,000–£15,000 per cycle
Bulgaria egg donation:
- •Waiting list: 2–8 weeks
- •Anonymous donation (legal under Bulgarian law)
- •Donor age: 18–30, screened per EU Tissues & Cells Directive
- •Cost: €4,500–€6,000 per cycle
Greece egg donation:
- •Waiting list: 2–12 weeks
- •Anonymous donation (Law 3305/2005)
- •Some of the highest egg donation success rates in Europe
- •Cost: €5,000–€8,000 per cycle
Who are egg donors in Bulgaria and Greece?
This is the most common question from patients considering anonymous donation.
Both Bulgaria and Greece require donors to:
- •Be aged 18–30
- •Have completed their own family or explicitly consent to donation
- •Undergo full medical screening: HIV, Hepatitis B/C, STIs, genetic karyotype, chromosomal analysis
- •Pass psychological evaluation
- •Provide family medical history
Clinics match donors to recipients based on blood type, physical characteristics (height, eye colour, hair, skin tone) and sometimes educational background.
Cost comparison: total IVF spend
Let's model the realistic total cost for a UK patient going to Bulgaria vs treating at home:
Scenario: 2 IVF cycles with own eggs, age 37
| Item | UK (private) | Bulgaria | |---|---|---| | Cycle 1 (fresh) | £6,500 | €3,200 (~£2,700) | | Cycle 2 (FET) | £3,200 | €1,500 (~£1,280) | | PGT-A (3 embryos) | £1,200 | €700 (~£600) | | Return flights × 3 trips | — | ~£400 | | Hotel 12 nights total | — | ~£800 | | Total | ~£10,900 | ~£5,780 | | Saving | — | £5,120 (47%) |
With two cycles saving £5,000+, many patients fund a third cycle with the money they save.
Legal framework for LGBTQ+ patients
| Country | Single women | Female couples | Male couples | |---|---|---|---| | 🇧🇬 Bulgaria | ✅ Yes | ⚠️ Case by case | ❌ Not currently | | 🇬🇷 Greece | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes | ❌ Not currently | | 🇬🇧 UK | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes | ✅ With surrogacy |
Greece is generally more accommodating for same-sex female couples. Bulgaria is expanding access. Always verify the current position with your chosen clinic, as policy evolves.
Questions to ask every IVF clinic
Before committing, get written answers to:
- •What is your live birth rate per transfer for my age group?
- •What embryo culture system do you use (time-lapse incubator)?
- •Do you do PGT-A as standard or add-on?
- •What is included in the quoted price?
- •What happens if my cycle is cancelled mid-stimulation?
- •Can I continue monitoring with my local GP during stimulation?
- •What is the waiting time for egg donation (if applicable)?
Ready to take the next step?
Browse BalcanCare-verified IVF clinics in Bulgaria and Greece. Free initial consultation, personalised quote within 24 hours.
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