In cross-border fertility projects, a country determines much more than cost. It affects intended-parent eligibility, donor documents, gestational-carrier arrangements, birth registration, parentage documents, travel documents and exit or onward arrangements.
Countries and legal context
Different countries solve different legal and document problems.

Country selection is a legal and document decision.
Georgia
Georgia has long been associated with assisted reproduction and gestational-carrier practices, with a legal and document environment that developed after 1997. It is commonly discussed for married couples or long-term heterosexual partner arrangements that meet local requirements. Special structures should not be copied from a past case and must be reviewed by local counsel.
Armenia
Armenia has a legal basis for reproductive health and assisted reproductive technology, with the relevant legal framework adopted in the early 2000s and continuing to evolve. It is often considered for single men, independent women and certain diverse-family structures, subject to case-specific legal review.
United States
The United States depends heavily on state law and specific parentage-document structures. It may offer mature court and parentage practices in certain states, but costs are usually much higher. For children born outside the United States, U.S. documentation should be reviewed separately with appropriate legal advice.
What AVORELIS helps review
We coordinate review of intended-parent status, donor documents, gestational-carrier agreements, birth certificates, parentage documents, travel documents, exit arrangements and post-birth file requirements. AVORELIS does not replace lawyers or government authorities.
A first meeting is not a sales close.
The first conversation is used to clarify family structure, medical information, donor or carrier needs, budget boundaries and post-birth objectives before any country or program is recommended.
