For years, fertility care in New York City meant traveling to Manhattan. That meant Manhattan prices, Manhattan wait times, and Manhattan commutes for patients living in Astoria, Long Island City, Sunnyside, and across the outer boroughs. Queens residents now have local access to the same fertility treatments that used to require a trip into Midtown or the Upper East Side.
A fertility clinic in Astoria brings IVF, egg freezing, and LGBTQ+ family planning to the borough at a fraction of what most Manhattan clinics charge. This guide covers what fertility services are available in Queens, who qualifies for treatment, what it costs compared to Manhattan, and what patients can expect from their first consultation.
Fertility Services Available in Queens
Queens-based fertility clinics offer the core treatments that cover the majority of patient needs. The table below outlines what is available locally and who each service is designed for.
|
Servicio |
What It Does |
Who It Serves |
|
IVF (In Vitro Fertilization) |
Eggs are retrieved, fertilized in a lab and transferred as embryos to the uterus |
Couples and individuals facing fertility challenges, age-related decline, same-sex female couples using donor sperm |
|
Congelación de óvulos |
Eggs are retrieved and cryopreserved for future use |
Individuals who want to preserve fertility for later family building |
|
FIV recíproca |
One partner provides eggs and the other carries the pregnancy |
Same-sex female couples where both partners want a biological role |
|
Donor Sperm Coordination |
Anonymous donor sperm from certified sperm banks |
Single individuals, same-sex female couples, anyone needing donor sperm |
|
Preservación de la fertilidad |
Egg freezing before medical transition |
Transgender individuals who want to preserve reproductive options |
Open Fertility’s egg freezing calculator estimates the probability of at least one live birth based on the number of eggs frozen and the patient’s age at the time of freezing. Patients considering egg freezing can use this tool to set expectations before a consultation.
Some services fall outside the scope of what Queens-based streamlined clinics offer. Donor eggs, gestational carriers, known donor sperm, and IUI typically require referral to a partner clinic with the resources to support those cases.
That referral is a normal part of fertility care. Clinics that are upfront about what they do and do not offer are doing right by their patients, and a good clinic will help connect patients to the right provider when the need falls outside their scope.
Who Is a Candidate for Fertility Treatment
Fertility treatment serves a wider range of patients than many people expect. Candidacy depends on individual circumstances, and a first consultation is the best way to determine the right path. Common candidates include:
- Couples who have been trying to conceive for 6 to 12 months or longer without success, with or without a diagnosed cause
- Patients with diagnosed fertility conditions such as blocked fallopian tubes, low sperm count, endometriosis, PCOS, or unexplained fertility challenges
- Individuals concerned about age-related fertility decline, particularly those over 35 who want to understand their options
- Same-sex female couples planning to build a family using donor sperm, whether through standard IVF or reciprocal IVF
- Single individuals pursuing parenthood on their own with anonymous donor sperm
- Transgender and non-binary individuals who want to preserve fertility through egg freezing before starting medical transition
Fertility clinics that focus on more straightforward cases can serve the majority of these patients effectively. Patients with complex medical histories or those needing multi-specialist coordination may benefit from a full-service reproductive center. A good clinic will guide that conversation honestly during the initial consultation.
What Fertility Treatment Costs at Open Fertility
Cost is one of the biggest factors that keeps people from pursuing fertility care.
|
Treatment |
Open Fertility |
National Average |
|
IVF cycle (with fresh transfer) |
$9,174 |
~$25,000 |
|
Estimated medications |
~$2,500 |
~$3,000 – $5,000 |
|
PGS (genetic testing, optional, up to 4 embryos) |
$1,025 |
~$1,500 – $5,000 |
|
Egg freezing cycle |
$5,074 |
~$12,000 |
The price difference is not about the quality of care. FIV protocols follow the same clinical standards whether a clinic operates in Astoria or on Park Avenue. The gap comes from three factors:
- Lower real estate overhead in Queens compared to Manhattan commercial rents
- Streamlined staffing models that pair Nurse Practitioners with consultations and monitoring, while board-certified physicians handle procedures
- Transparent pricing that bundles most costs into one clear number rather than layering hidden fees
Many patients in Queens pay out of pocket. Employer fertility coverage is not universal, and people working in education, the arts, freelancing, and small businesses often lack fertility benefits. New York State does mandate fertility coverage under certain fully insured health plans, but many employees at large national employers are on self-funded plans that are exempt from that mandate. Patients should check with their HR department or benefits administrator to confirm what their plan covers. Financing options like PatientFi offer flexible payment plans, and FSA or HSA funds can be applied toward treatment costs.
Patients should always request a written cost estimate that covers every anticipated charge before starting a cycle. A clinic quoting $12,000 with $8,000 in add-ons costs more than one quoting $15,000 all-inclusive.
What to Expect at a First Fertility Consultation
A first fertility consultation typically takes about one hour. That single visit covers a lot of ground and gives the care team enough information to build a personalized treatment plan.
During the appointment, patients can expect:
- Bloodwork including hormone levels like AMH (anti-Müllerian hormone) that indicate ovarian reserve
- A transvaginal ultrasound to assess antral follicle count and uterine health
- A full medical history review covering menstrual cycle patterns, previous pregnancies, surgeries and any known diagnoses
- Semen analysis for patients with a sperm-producing partner, completed via an at-home testing kit after the consultation
Results from that visit inform the treatment plan. The care team reviews the data, recommends a course of action, and walks patients through timelines, costs, and next steps. Patients do not need a referral from another doctor to schedule a fertility consultation, and there is no obligation to begin treatment after the first visit.
Questions worth bringing to the appointment:
- How many treatment cycles should I expect based on my age and diagnosis?
- What medications are involved and what do they cost?
- What is the total out-of-pocket cost for my recommended treatment?
- What are realistic success rates for someone in my situation?
- What happens if the first cycle does not result in pregnancy?
Arriving prepared helps patients make the most of that hour and leaves room for the care team to address concerns specific to each situation.
Which Queens Neighborhoods Are Close to Fertility Care
The Astoria clinic at 3613 30th Avenue, Astoria, NY 11103, sits in a central location for patients across western Queens and neighboring boroughs. Office hours run Monday through Friday, 7 AM to 4 PM EST.
|
Neighborhood |
Approximate Travel |
Transit Access |
|
Astoria |
Walking distance for many residents |
N, W trains; Q101, Q102 buses |
|
Long Island City / LIC |
~10-15 minutes |
N, W, 7 trains |
|
Sunnyside |
~10-15 minutes |
7 train to Queensboro Plaza, transfer N/W |
|
Woodside |
~15-20 minutes |
7 train connection |
|
Jackson Heights |
~15-20 minutes |
E, F, M, R to Queensboro Plaza area |
|
Greenpoint / Williamsburg (Brooklyn) |
~15-20 minutes |
G train connections or a short drive via Pulaski Bridge |
Early morning hours starting at 7 AM accommodate patients who need monitoring appointments before work. Fertility treatment requires multiple visits over a stimulation cycle, so proximity and scheduling flexibility matter.
Most of the process happens at the local clinic, including consultations, bloodwork and ultrasound monitoring. Egg retrieval and embryo transfer procedures take place at Spring Fertility, Open Fertility’s partner lab, with a board-certified Reproductive Endocrinologist.
Street parking is available in the Astoria area, and the clinic is accessible by car from the BQE and Grand Central Parkway for patients driving from further out in Queens or Brooklyn.
Getting Started With Fertility Care in Queens
Open Fertility operates the Astoria clinic with a care model built around accessibility and transparent pricing. The initial consultation costs $195, and that visit includes a medical history review, transvaginal ultrasound and a discussion of findings and next steps with a dedicated provider.
PatientFi financing is available for patients paying out of pocket, and FSA/HSA funds can be applied toward treatment.
All of the services outlined earlier in this guide are available at the Astoria location, from IVF and egg freezing through reciprocal IVF and fertility preservation. LGBTQ+ family planning services are available for qualifying patients, and the care team will provide referrals to Spring Fertility for services not offered at Open.
An egg freezing calculator is available online for patients who want to estimate their probability of a future live birth based on age and number of eggs frozen.
Patients across Astoria, Long Island City, Sunnyside, Woodside, Jackson Heights and Brooklyn can schedule an appointment online to take the first step.