Egg freezing in the US costs $15K to $40K.


Your clinic only quotes one number.

A 14-document bundle that breaks down every line item, gives you the questions that pull a real number out of any clinic, and surfaces the employer benefits HR may not have told you about. $37.


If you've spent any time researching egg freezing, you've probably had a moment that goes something like this:
You sit down with a glass of wine and 15 browser tabs. You're going to figure this out tonight. An hour later, you have one clinic saying $8,500, another saying $12,000, a Reddit post saying it cost her $40,000 in total, a TikTok comment saying her cousin did it in Vietnam for $3,000, and a friend who just shrugs and says "honestly I don't even remember what I paid." You close the tabs. You open them again three days later. Same outcome.
This isn't a you problem.Egg freezing is one of the few major medical decisions in the US where the consumer is expected to make a five-figure commitment based on a single round number from a clinic homepage. There's no closing disclosure. No itemized invoice. No real comparison tool. Pricing is genuinely fragmented — some line items live with the clinic, some with a specialty pharmacy, some with the hospital or anesthesiologist. Some only show up if your body responds a certain way and the doctor adjusts the protocol. The system isn't designed to be understood. It's designed to get you to a deposit.That's what this bundle is for.It's not a course. It's not a coaching program. It's not "egg freezing 101 by an influencer." It's 14 plain-English documents and tools — designed for the moment you're in right now: trying to figure out the actual number, not trying to book a procedure.


"The clinic quoted $10,500. Eight months later, the bills added up to $32,000. Nobody lied to me. Nobody told me either."


— The 5 fees your clinic leaves out of the quote
— What the real all-in number looks like
— The exact questions that pull a real number out of any clinic
— Why the gap between $10K and $32K exists
— A preview of the full 14-document bundle


Hi. I'm Marissa.I work in healthcare in the US, and I started researching egg freezing for myself a while back. I expected it to be hard to figure out. I didn't expect it to be this hard. After three months of clinic websites, contradictory Reddit posts, and consults that left me with more questions than answers, I started taking notes.
Then I started building spreadsheets. Then I realized — if it's this confusing for someone who literally works in healthcare, it's worse for everyone else.
So I built the bundle I wished I'd had. Everything in this bundle is information I aggregated from real clinic pricing pages, real patient cost reports, and a year of researching this for myself.Marissa


What this bundle does.

It gives you the structure you wish a friend who already did this would walk you through:
— What egg freezing actually is, in one paragraph, no medical jargon
— A 5-question filter for whether you should even be considering this right now
— A glossary of the 12 words you'll see in every article and consult, defined simply
— A cost calculator with the defaults already filled in — you don't need to enter anything to see your realistic number
— The 11 line items that make up a real US egg freezing quote, including the ones clinics leave out
— A timeline of what the cycle actually feels like, day by day
— The questions to ask if and when you go to a consult
— The employer benefits templates

I wish someone had handed me at the beginning, organized by stage of the decision so you don't have to read it all at once.


What's inside the $37 bundle.

Stage 1 — Deciding (start here)

1. Start Here PDF — Plain English. Six pages. Tells you what egg freezing is, the 5-question filter for whether you should be considering it, the 12 words you'll see everywhere, and the order to use the rest of the bundle.2. Plain-English Glossary Card — AMH, ICSI, vitrification, OHSS, M2 — defined in one sentence each. Print it. Keep it nearby.3. The Cost Calculator — Defaults pre-filled. You don't need to enter anything to see your realistic all-in number. Plain-English labels. A second tab explaining every line item if a label confuses you.4. The Costs Guide — Every line item in a real US egg freezing quote — what it is, what it costs, why it's often missing from the headline price. With inline definitions every time medical terms come up.5. The Egg Funnel Cheat Sheet — Why "15 eggs is a great cycle!" doesn't mean "15 babies." The biology that explains the gap, in plain English. Plus age-based banking targets.

Stage 2 — Booking consults & comparing clinics

6. The 47-Question Consult Script — Bring it to the consult. Cross off questions as you get answers. Six starred questions are deal-breakers if a clinic refuses to answer.7. The Clinic Comparison Spreadsheet — Three clinics, same questions, side by side. The clinic with the most clean answers usually wins, even if it's not the cheapest.8. The Red Flags Checklist — What "today-only pricing," vague success rate claims, and reluctant contracts actually mean. Print and bring to consults.9. The Insurance & Benefits Decoder — Three buckets of money decoded — health insurance, employer benefits (Carrot/Progyny/Maven), and HSA/FSA. What's covered, what's not, what to ask.10. The Employer Benefits Email Templates — Four ready-to-send templates including one that surfaces fertility coverage from HR without disclosing your decision.

Stage 3 — You've picked a clinic and you're starting

11. The Medication Cost Cheat Sheet — The drug-by-drug breakdown plus 5 tactics that can save $500–$1,000 on meds.12. The Cycle Day Calendar & Retrieval Packing List— Day by day from baseline to recovery. What you'll feel. What to bring to retrieval day.13. The OHSS Risk Self-Assessment — Questions to bring to your doctor about protocol safety.14. The 5 Hidden Fees Guide — The free guide that started it all, also bundled. Bring it to a consult or hand it to a friend who's just starting to research.


You're going to spend hours on this either way.The question isn't whether you research it. The question is whether you research it with a $37 folder that lays out the real number, or with 15 browser tabs that contradict each other.


Information aggregated from publicly available clinic pricing pages, fertility journalism, and patient cost data. Not medical advice. Not financial advice. Egg freezing is a personal medical decision and pricing varies meaningfully by clinic, region, protocol, and individual response. Always consult a licensed reproductive endocrinologist for medical decisions.