By Dr. Shweta Agarwal, MBBS, DGO Medically reviewed by Dr. Shweta Agarwal, MBBS, DGO Last updated: June 2026
Information on this page is educational and does not replace a medical consultation. Outcomes depend on individual clinical factors.
Aansh Hospital & IVF Center is a government-registered Level-2 ART clinic (Reg. No. MH/AC/2024/15441/L2/Chandrapur/132), part of a fertility network serving Vidarbha and northern Telangana, with our headquarters and in-house embryology lab in Chandrapur. Our ART registration covers IVF treatment using both own eggs and donor eggs. Donor egg IVF at Aansh is conducted solely through our registered ART Bank (ART Bank Reg. No. MH/AB/2024/11445/Chandrapur/91), issued by the National ART & Surrogacy Registry under India's ART (Regulation) Act, 2021. View our registrations →
This page is education for recipients facing this decision. It does not cover the donor recruitment or screening process — that is addressed on the ovum donor page, which is the dedicated education hub for the programme. What this page addresses is the question that comes up in consultation with women who have received a difficult test result or had a challenging IVF cycle: when does donor egg IVF become a path worth exploring, and when are own eggs still the right approach?
Clinical consultation on this decision is with Dr. Shweta Agarwal, MBBS, DGO.
What does ovarian reserve mean, and why does it matter for this decision?
Ovarian reserve refers to the quantity and functional quality of eggs remaining in the ovaries. It declines naturally with age and, in some women, at a faster rate than expected — or reaches very low levels at an unusually early age. The key markers used to assess ovarian reserve are AMH (anti-Müllerian hormone), antral follicle count (AFC) on ultrasound, and basal FSH level. For a detailed explanation of AMH and what levels mean, see what is AMH and what does a low AMH mean and AMH levels by age — what is normal.
Ovarian reserve matters for this decision because it is the primary predictor of how many eggs can be retrieved in an IVF stimulation cycle. If the reserve is very low, fewer eggs are retrieved; with fewer eggs, the probability of producing a viable blastocyst from a single cycle is lower. In some situations — particularly when reserve is very low and multiple prior cycles have produced poor results — the clinical conversation may shift toward whether donor eggs offer a more viable pathway.
Importantly, a low AMH or a reduced antral follicle count does not automatically mean donor eggs are necessary. Many women with low AMH conceive with their own eggs, through a tailored stimulation protocol. The threshold at which own eggs are no longer the recommended path depends on the combination of test results, age, prior response to stimulation, and embryo quality history — not on any single number in isolation.
When are own eggs still the viable and recommended path?
Own eggs are the starting point for the great majority of women. The following factors support continuing to attempt IVF with own eggs:
- Low but not absent ovarian reserve — even a low AMH (for example, below 1.0 ng/mL) does not rule out own-egg IVF. Many women with reduced reserve respond adequately to stimulation and produce eggs that lead to successful embryos. The clinical question is whether retrieval yields are sufficient to give the cycle a meaningful basis.
- First or second IVF cycle — unless reserve is markedly absent or the clinical picture is clearly unfavourable, at least one stimulation attempt with own eggs is the usual approach.
- Younger age with reduced reserve — a younger woman with a low AMH has a different prognosis from an older woman with the same AMH. Age contributes to embryo chromosomal health; a younger woman's eggs, even in smaller numbers, have a higher likelihood of being chromosomally normal.
- No prior cycles with poor embryo quality — if own-egg IVF has not yet been attempted, or if early cycles have produced embryos of reasonable quality, continuing with own eggs is appropriate.
- Emotional readiness to continue with own eggs — this is a personal dimension that matters. If a woman wants to attempt own-egg IVF before considering donor eggs, that is a valid and respected position, and it will be supported in the clinical plan unless medically contraindicated.
When does the conversation about donor eggs arise?
The clinical scenarios in which donor egg IVF is most commonly discussed are:
Premature ovarian insufficiency (POI) or premature menopause. When ovarian function is significantly reduced before the age of 40 — with very low or undetectable AMH, elevated FSH, absent or minimal antral follicles, and irregular or absent periods — the ability to retrieve eggs with stimulation is severely limited or absent. For women with confirmed POI, donor eggs are often the primary viable pathway toward a genetically related (to the partner) pregnancy. For more on POI and menopause and fertility, see the menopause conditions page.
Very low ovarian reserve with poor response to prior stimulation. If a woman has undergone IVF stimulation and produced very few or no eggs despite optimised protocols, and this pattern has repeated across cycles, the clinical evidence begins to point toward the limits of own-egg retrieval in that individual.
Repeatedly poor egg or embryo quality. If prior IVF cycles have consistently produced eggs that fail to fertilise, embryos that arrest early in development, or embryos that do not implant despite good uterine preparation — and other causes (sperm quality, uterine factors, thrombophilia) have been investigated and addressed — the egg itself may be the limiting factor. This is a conversation that arises after a pattern has been established, not after a single cycle.
Certain genetic conditions. If a woman carries a genetic condition with a high probability of transmission to any child, and preimplantation genetic testing for that condition (PGT-M) is not available or not applicable, donor eggs may be discussed as a way to avoid that transmission. This situation requires genetic counselling as part of the discussion.
Age-related decline in egg quality and quantity. With advancing age, both the number of available eggs and the proportion of chromosomally normal eggs decline. At some point — which varies between individuals — the combination of low yield and high aneuploidy rate in own eggs means that the probability of a successful outcome from own-egg IVF becomes very low. This is a gradual and individual assessment, not a fixed age cutoff.
What is the regulatory framework for donor egg IVF in India?
Egg donation and the use of donor oocytes in assisted reproduction are lawful in India under the ART (Regulation) Act, 2021. Under this law, donor eggs may only be used through a registered ART Bank — a facility specifically licensed to recruit, screen, and store donor gametes according to the Act's requirements.
Aansh Hospital & IVF Center holds ART Bank registration MH/AB/2024/11445/Chandrapur/91, issued by the National ART & Surrogacy Registry under the Ministry of Health & Family Welfare, Government of India. Donor eggs at Aansh are handled solely within this registered, regulated framework.
Under the ART Act 2021:
- Egg donors are anonymous; the identity of the donor is not disclosed to the recipient, and the identity of the recipient is not disclosed to the donor.
- Donors undergo a comprehensive medical, hormonal, genetic, and infectious-disease screening process mandated by the Act.
- The child born through donor eggs is legally recognised as the child of the recipient couple.
- No commercial surrogacy component is permitted under this framework (surrogacy is governed separately under the Surrogacy (Regulation) Act, 2021, and this post is education-only on that matter).
For full detail on the regulatory and clinical process — including how donors are screened and what recipients can expect — see the ovum donor page, which is the dedicated education hub for this programme.
Own eggs vs donor eggs: a comparison framework
| Factor | Own Eggs | Donor Eggs |
|---|---|---|
| When typically considered | Standard starting point for IVF; continues as long as ovarian reserve and response support it | Very low/absent ovarian reserve, POI, repeated poor response, repeated poor egg/embryo quality, certain genetic conditions, significant age-related decline |
| Genetic relationship | Child is genetically related to both partners | Child is genetically related to the male partner (if own sperm) and to the anonymous donor; the recipient carries and births the child |
| Ovarian reserve required | Yes — sufficient AMH, AFC, and response to stimulation for egg retrieval | Not required of the recipient — donor eggs are used; recipient's uterus must be prepared to receive the embryo |
| Stimulation protocol | Recipient undergoes ovarian stimulation and egg retrieval | Recipient undergoes endometrial preparation only (no stimulation/retrieval); donor undergoes stimulation and retrieval |
| Regulatory framework | Standard ART Act 2021 IVF regulations | ART Act 2021 + ART Bank registration required (MH/AB/2024/11445/Chandrapur/91); full anonymity of donor |
| Emotional considerations | Genetic link to both partners preserved; important to many couples | Grief and adjustment around loss of genetic link are real and valid; many recipients find acceptance and peace with time and support; no right or wrong response |
| Number of cycles typical | Depends on response; multiple cycles possible if reserve permits | Typically higher probability of blastocyst formation given donor age and screening, but no outcome is guaranteed |
| Timeline | Varies by stimulation response and clinic scheduling | Dependent on donor matching, screening, and synchronisation with recipient cycle |
How is this decision made — what does the process look like?
The conversation about donor eggs is never a single event or a pressure point. It arises naturally from a clinical review — typically after a challenging result on ovarian reserve testing, after a difficult IVF cycle, or after a pattern of poor outcomes has emerged over multiple cycles. It is not a decision that anyone pushes a patient toward; it is information that is offered so that all options are understood.
Dr. Shweta Agarwal discusses this with patients across Chandrapur and Nagpur in Marathi, Hindi, and English — because the language of this conversation matters. The clinical picture (AMH, AFC, cycle history, age, partner's sperm results, genetic history) is reviewed together, and the options — including whether further own-egg attempts are reasonable — are laid out without pressure.
If you are at this point in your journey and want to understand the options before deciding anything, a free second opinion is available. You can also reach us directly: WhatsApp or call +91 80056 85160.