IVF Clinics in New York City

32 CDC-reporting fertility clinics in this metro area.

32
Clinics
43,981
Total Cycles
22.8%
Avg Success Rate
51.7%
Best Rate
Success rates depend on patient selection, case complexity, and treatment type. Consult a board-certified reproductive endocrinologist for personalized guidance.

What the CDC NASS Data Shows for New York City

The New York City metropolitan area has 32 fertility clinics that report annually to the CDC National ART Surveillance System, with a combined volume of 43,981 ART cycles in the most recent reporting year. Reporting is mandatory under the Fertility Clinic Success Rate and Certification Act of 1992, which means every ART clinic in the region is covered here — not a curated subset. The average overall success rate across these clinics is 22.8%, with individual clinic rates ranging from 0.6% to 51.7%.

A gap of 51.1 percentage points between the best- and worst-performing clinic in a single metro is common in CDC data, but it rarely reflects quality of care alone. Clinics that accept older patients, treat more complex infertility diagnoses, or serve a higher share of donor-egg cases will show different headline rates than clinics with a narrower patient mix. This is why the CDC publishes rates by age group and cycle type rather than a single clinic score. The clinic comparison table below lets you filter by the age band that applies to you, which is a more decision-relevant view than a raw overall average.

Regional concentration also matters for access: metro areas with 32 clinics typically offer more choice on cycle protocols, wait times, and ancillary services like donor egg or gestational carrier programs, while thinner markets can mean longer waits or travel. Insurance coverage is another variable — some states mandate infertility benefits while others do not, and coverage often varies by employer plan type. Every figure on this page is a public federal disclosure. PlainFertility is not affiliated with the CDC or any clinic shown. These statistics are informational, not medical advice, and should be reviewed with a board-certified reproductive endocrinologist who can interpret them in the context of your diagnosis and goals.

Clinic Comparison

Clinic City Cycles Under 35 35–37 38–40 Over 40 Overall Donor
Center for Advanced Reproductive Services Farmington 2,258 57.9% 39.9% 27.4% 7.6% 36.7% Yes
Greenwich Fertility and IVF Center, PC Greenwich 547 47.6% 48.0% 30.5% 10.1% 32.8% Yes
Illume Fertility Norwalk 3,113 50.9% 42.0% 23.9% 8.0% 32.2% Yes
New England Fertility Institute Stamford 761 N/A N/A 9.1% 3.1% 5.5% Yes
Park Avenue Fertility and Reproductive Medicine Trumbull 324 53.3% 25.8% 11.1% 4.7% 26.3% Yes
Rejuvenating Fertility Center Westport 159 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
Yale Fertility Center Orange 956 48.5% 27.2% 30.3% 6.9% 29.7% Yes

Data: CDC NASS. Clinics shown are in the same state as this metro. "Over 40" = combined 41+ age group.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many IVF clinics are in the New York City area?

The New York City metropolitan area has 32 CDC-reporting fertility clinics, which collectively reported 43,981 ART cycles. All clinics are required to report outcomes to the CDC under the Fertility Clinic Success Rate and Certification Act of 1992.

What is the average IVF success rate in New York City?

The average overall IVF success rate across clinics in the New York City metro area is 22.8%. Rates range from 0.6% to 51.7%. These reflect live births per ART cycle started. Your individual chances depend on age, diagnosis, and treatment type.

How do I compare fertility clinics in this metro area?

Start by filtering clinics by your age group — success rates under 35 differ dramatically from rates over 40. Then compare cycle volume (higher volume often means more experience), single embryo transfer rates (higher is generally better), and whether the clinic offers services you need like donor eggs or gestational carriers.

Where does this fertility clinic data come from?

All data is sourced from the CDC's National ART Surveillance System (NASS), which mandates annual reporting from every ART clinic in the United States. PlainFertility is not affiliated with the CDC.

Related

Data sourced from official U.S. government datasets. See our methodology for details. Retrieved and formatted by PlainFertility Editorial