| Who this is for: Gay couples who are seriously considering surrogacy and want a clear, honest overview of how the whole process works. |
| Key takeaway: Surrogacy is the most direct path to biological parenthood for gay couples. The process is well-established, legal in multiple countries, and achievable for couples at a range of budgets. |
| What’s inside: How gestational surrogacy works for gay couples, the role of egg donors, the legal rights picture, a step-by-step process overview, and how to choose an agency. |
| Tammuz has been doing this since 2008. Over 2,000 babies born. Most of those families looked exactly like yours. |
Somewhere between ‘we want a family’ and ‘where do we even start,’ most gay couples hit a wall. There’s a lot of information out there, but not much of it is written specifically for you. It’s either too general, too clinical, or it buries the important stuff under pages of disclaimers.
This guide is different. It’s written for gay couples who are serious about surrogacy and want to understand what they’re actually getting into before they talk to anyone. No fluff, no pressure. Just a clear walkthrough of how it works, what it costs, and what matters most when you’re choosing a partner to help make it happen.
Tammuz Family has been working specifically with gay couples and single men since 2008. Our founder went through surrogacy personally. That shapes everything about how we approach this, including how we explain it.
What Is Gestational Surrogacy for Gay Couples?
When most people say ‘surrogacy’ today, they mean gestational surrogacy. That means the surrogate has no genetic connection to the baby. She carries an embryo that was created through IVF, using sperm from one (or both) of the intended fathers and an egg from a separate egg donor.
This is important for two reasons. First, it’s legally cleaner. Because the surrogate isn’t genetically related to the child, parental rights are cleaner to establish. Second, it means the baby can be biologically connected to one or both partners.
Traditional surrogacy, where the surrogate uses her own egg, is rarely practiced anymore and is legally complicated in most places. Gestational surrogacy is the standard for good reason.
Related: What Is Gestational Surrogacy?
The Egg Donor Question
Since neither partner can provide eggs, an egg donor is a required part of the process. This is where a lot of gay couples have questions, and it’s worth spending a moment here.
At Tammuz, every egg donor in our database has been through the same rigorous medical and psychological screening as our surrogates. You’ll see a full profile that includes health history, genetic background, education, employment, and photos. The decision is yours.
A common question: can we use eggs from a known donor, like a friend or family member? Yes, in most cases. Known donors go through the same screening. Some couples prefer it, others prefer an anonymous match. Both options are valid.
Another question that comes up often: can both partners contribute genetically? Also yes, in many cases. You can create embryos using each partner’s sperm with different eggs, and either alternate transfers or genetically test all embryos before deciding which to transfer. This isn’t always necessary, but it’s an option worth discussing.
Learn more: Egg Donors at Tammuz
A Step-by-Step Look at the Process
The surrogacy journey has a lot of moving parts, but it follows a predictable sequence. Here’s what the full process looks like, from first call to bringing your baby home:
| Step | What Happens | Typical Timeframe |
| 1. Free Consultation | Meet the Tammuz team, discuss your goals, get a realistic cost and timeline estimate | 30 minutes |
| 2. Program Selection | Choose your destination (USA, Colombia, Mexico, Georgia, or Armenia) and plan type | 1-2 weeks |
| 3. Contract & Legals | Sign agreements with Tammuz and begin legal preparation in your destination country | 2-4 weeks |
| 4. Sperm Banking | Both partners can bank sperm for embryo creation. HIV+ partners go through sperm washing | 2-4 weeks |
| 5. Egg Donor Selection | Review screened donor profiles. Choose your donor. IVF is coordinated by Tammuz’s clinic partners | 4-8 weeks |
| 6. Embryo Creation (IVF) | Eggs are retrieved, fertilized with your sperm, and embryos are tested for health | 3-6 weeks |
| 7. Surrogate Matching | Tammuz matches you with a pre-screened surrogate. You can review her profile before finalizing | 4-12 weeks |
| 8. Embryo Transfer | The surrogate receives the embryo. Pregnancy test approximately 10-14 days later | 1-2 weeks |
| 9. Pregnancy & Monitoring | Tammuz coordinates all prenatal care and keeps you updated throughout the pregnancy | 9 months |
| 10. Birth & Legal Exit | Baby is born. Birth certificate and legal parental rights are established. Travel home | 2-6 weeks |
Start to finish, most families should budget 18-24 months. The biggest variable is how quickly the surrogate match happens and how many embryo transfer attempts are needed. Guaranteed programs remove the financial uncertainty from that second variable.
Choosing a Destination: Where Will Your Baby Be Born?
One of the first real decisions you’ll make is which country to pursue surrogacy in. This affects cost, legal process, and how long you’ll need to be present in the destination country around the birth.
Tammuz operates in five countries:
- United States: Highest cost ($150,000-$200,000+), strongest domestic legal protections, pre-birth orders in most states
- Colombia: Very popular with gay couples ($80,000-$110,000), fully legal, experienced Tammuz team on the ground
- Mexico: Similar to Colombia in cost and legal structure ($85,000-$115,000), good option for US/Canada-based couples wanting to minimize travel
- Georgia: Strong legal framework, lower cost ($60,000-$90,000), excellent medical infrastructure
- Armenia: Most affordable option ($55,000-$85,000), high medical standards, well-managed legal process
No destination is objectively ‘best.’ The right choice depends on your budget, legal priorities, and how much you want to travel. In your consultation, our team will walk you through the tradeoffs honestly.
Compare destinations: Surrogacy Programs by Country
Legal Rights for Gay Couples: What You Need to Know
Legal parenthood is not automatic in surrogacy. The specific process depends on your destination country and, if you’re pursuing US surrogacy, the state.
In the United States, surrogacy-friendly states like California, Nevada, and Washington issue pre-birth orders that establish parental rights before the baby is even born. Your names go directly on the birth certificate. This is the gold standard from a legal standpoint.
In international destinations, the process is slightly different but equally valid. Tammuz partners with experienced local legal teams in every country we operate in. The goal is always the same: both dads leave with clear, recognized parental rights and the documentation needed to bring their child home.
One thing worth knowing for US citizens doing international surrogacy: you’ll need to establish the baby’s US citizenship and obtain a US passport before departure. It’s a well-established process, and Tammuz will guide you through it. It just requires planning.
What About HIV-Positive Intended Parents?
This is something most agencies don’t talk about, so we will. A significant portion of gay men in North America are either HIV-positive or have partners who are. This does not have to be a barrier to having a biological child through surrogacy.
Through a process called sperm washing, viable sperm can be separated from the cells that carry the HIV virus, enabling safe IVF with no transmission risk to the egg donor, surrogate, or baby. Tammuz has been offering this program since before most agencies were willing to acknowledge it existed.
Learn more: Surrogacy for HIV-Positive Intended Parents
How to Choose the Right Surrogacy Agency
Not all agencies are the same. Some are referral networks that outsource most of the actual work. Others, like Tammuz, handle everything in-house, from clinic coordination and egg donor matching to legal oversight and case management.
When you’re evaluating an agency, ask these questions:
- How many surrogacy journeys have you completed? (Tammuz: 2,000+)
- How long have you been operating? (Tammuz: since 2008)
- Do you specialize in gay couples and single men, or are we one audience among many?
- Do you offer guaranteed programs? What does ‘guaranteed’ actually mean in your contract?
- What happens if something goes wrong with the surrogate match or the pregnancy?
- Who manages the relationship with the fertility clinic? Is that in-house or outsourced?
- Can I talk to families who’ve gone through your program?
The answers will tell you a lot. An agency that handles everything in-house and has 18 years of track record with gay couples specifically is a very different thing from one that spun up in 2020 and serves everyone.
See how Tammuz works: How Our Process Works
One Last Thing: You’re Not Starting from Zero
Over 2,000 families who came to Tammuz with the same questions you have right now are parents today. Gay couples from 32 countries. Single men who decided they didn’t want to wait. Couples who thought the cost was out of reach until they learned about Colombia or Armenia.
The path exists. It’s well-traveled. The people who’ve done it are mostly very glad they did.
When you’re ready to start, we’re here.
Start with a Free 30-Minute Consultation
Our consultations are free, completely online, and available in over 10 languages. Thirty minutes with our team and you’ll have a realistic picture of your timeline, your cost range, and your best destination options. No commitment required.
Book a meeting: Schedule Your Free Consultation
Frequently Asked Questions: Gay Surrogacy
Can gay couples do surrogacy in any country?
No. Surrogacy laws vary widely by country. Tammuz operates in five destinations that are all legal and gay-friendly: the USA, Colombia, Mexico, Georgia, and Armenia. We only work in countries where we’ve confirmed the legal framework protects our intended parents.
Do both partners have to be at all appointments?
No. Most of the process can be managed remotely. You’ll need to be present in the destination country for key milestones like the embryo transfer (optional for some clinics) and most importantly, around the birth and for the legal exit process. Our team will be clear about what requires travel and what doesn’t.
Can we choose the sex of the baby?
In most of Tammuz’s destination countries, yes. Preimplantation Genetic Testing (PGT) can screen embryos for chromosomal health and can identify sex. Sex selection for non-medical reasons is legal in some but not all destinations. It’s worth asking about in your consultation if this matters to you.
What if our surrogate wants to keep the baby?
This is one of the most common fears and one of the least common outcomes. Gestational surrogates have no genetic connection to the baby. In Tammuz’s programs, legal parental rights are established before or shortly after birth. Our surrogates are thoroughly screened and have their own families. In 18 years of operation, this has not been an issue for our clients.
How are surrogates screened at Tammuz?
Every surrogate in our program has previously delivered at least one healthy baby. They go through comprehensive medical and psychological screening, including physical health review, family history, motivation interviews, and lifestyle assessment. We’re not just looking for someone who qualifies medically. We’re looking for someone you’ll trust.
Is it possible to use a surrogate we already know?
Yes. Known surrogates are welcome in all of Tammuz’s programs. They go through the same screening as agency-matched surrogates. Many couples find this option more comfortable. Others prefer the structure of agency matching. Both paths work.
Can single men do surrogacy through Tammuz?
Absolutely. Single men are a primary audience for Tammuz, and we have dedicated programs and experience supporting single fathers. Learn more about single-man surrogacy here.
What makes Tammuz different from other surrogacy agencies?
Founded by someone who personally went through surrogacy. Operational since 2008. Over 2,000 babies born. Five destination options. In-house team handling every step. One of the only agencies in the world with an active HIV-positive surrogacy program. Specialization in gay couples and single men is built into who we are, not a marketing add-on.
How do we get started?
The first step is a free 30-minute consultation with our team. It’s online, available in over 10 languages, and there’s no commitment. Book a meeting here.
What countries are most popular with gay couples at Tammuz?
Colombia and the USA are the most popular destinations for gay couples in North America. Colombia offers 40-50% cost savings with equivalent medical standards. The USA is preferred by couples who prioritize a domestic birth certificate and US legal protections from the start.

繁體中文










