Honestly, there is no single answer. Twin surrogacy costs more than single baby surrogacy, but it is not simply double the price. What you end up paying depends on how the IVF cycle goes, what the surrogate needs medically, how delivery plays out, and which city and clinic you are working with.
Dr. Mohit Saraogi is direct about it: “Twin surrogacy costs more because the medical responsibility is greater. Every additional risk the surrogate carries has to be planned and accounted for, financially and emotionally.”
Is Twin Surrogacy Always More Expensive?
Yes. But not for the reason most people assume.
It is not just “two babies.” It is the medical weight that comes with a twin pregnancy from the very start. More prenatal visits. More monitoring. A much higher chance of a C-section. Preterm labour is a real possibility, and when twins arrive early, NICU care follows.
Clinics price for this. Some charge a flat additional fee for twin pregnancies. Others adjust surrogate compensation and hospital packages to reflect the higher medical load. Either way, you will pay more and knowing why helps you ask better questions before you sign anything.
Not everyone needs ICSI. But certain sperm issues make it essential.
Main Cost Components in Twin Surrogacy
Here is what the total cost is actually made up of:
IVF and Embryo Preparation
Ovarian stimulation, egg retrieval, fertilisation, embryo culture, and transfer. If a donor egg is needed, that is priced separately.
Surrogate Compensation and Care
Monthly allowance, nutrition, clothing, accommodation where required, and all medical costs through the pregnancy. For twins, this is higher than standard.
Legal and Documentation Fees
The Surrogacy Regulation Act requires all agreements to be formally drafted and registered. Legal counsel and court fees are part of this, not an optional add-on.
Delivery and Hospital Charges
Twin deliveries almost always end in a C-section. Operation theatre charges, anaesthesia, and post-delivery hospital stay all cost more than a standard delivery.
NICU and Newborn Care
Twins are often born before full term. NICU care is not guaranteed, but it is common enough that you should plan for it. This is one of the biggest unexpected costs families face.
Clinic and Coordination Fees
Surrogate matching, case management, and coordination are sometimes included in the package and sometimes not. Ask specifically.
Factors That Can Push the Final Price Higher
The components above are fairly predictable. These are not.
More than one IVF cycle
If the first transfer does not work, you go again. Each cycle adds to the total.
Donor egg requirement
If the intended mother cannot use her own eggs, donor charges apply on top of everything else.
Surrogate's location
Compensation expectations differ between metros and smaller cities.
Pregnancy complications
Gestational diabetes, bed rest, preeclampsia. Any of these increase medical costs through the pregnancy.
Premature delivery
Twins born before 34 weeks can need extended NICU care. That bill adds up fast.
Legal revisions
If documentation needs to be redone or there are court appearances, legal fees go up.
None of this is certain. But going in without a contingency for these possibilities is how couples end up financially stressed mid-journey.
How to Plan Your Twin Surrogacy Budget
Ask for an itemised cost sheet
Do not accept a single package number. Ask your clinic to break down every component. What is covered, what is billed separately, and what happens if something changes.
Add 15 to 20 percent on top of the quoted amount
Build in a buffer from the start. Not as a worst-case figure. As a normal part of your planning.
Ask what happens if the first transfer fails
Before you sign anything, get clarity on the additional cost for a second attempt if the first does not work.
Get specifics on NICU coverage
For twins this is not a hypothetical. Ask whether newborn NICU charges are inside the hospital agreement or billed separately.
Verify legal compliance
Your clinic must be registered under the ART and Surrogacy Regulation Act. Working with an unregistered clinic can create legal problems that cost far more than the surrogacy itself.
Ask about surrogate insurance
Some clinics arrange medical insurance for the surrogate during pregnancy. If yours does not, ask about it independently before the process starts.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the average cost of twin surrogacy in India?
Twin surrogacy in India typically falls between ₹25 to ₹40 lakhs. The range varies based on the clinic, city, number of IVF cycles needed, and delivery outcomes.
Does the surrogate receive higher compensation for twins?
In most cases, yes. Carrying twins places greater physical demands on the surrogate, and compensation is usually revised upward to reflect that.
Is a donor egg always needed for twin surrogacy?
No. If the intended mother has healthy eggs, her own are used. A donor egg is only needed when egg quality or ovarian reserve is a concern. Those charges are separate.
What hidden costs should we ask about?
Ask specifically about NICU standby charges, repeat transfer costs, legal revision fees, and surrogate accommodation. These are often left out of the standard quote.
How long does twin surrogacy take from start to finish?
Most couples complete the process in 18 to 24 months. That covers IVF preparation, surrogate matching, legal work, the pregnancy, delivery, and post-birth formalities.
Can complications significantly change the final cost?
Yes. Preterm labour, C-section, and NICU stays are the three biggest financial variables in twin surrogacy. Budget for them even if the pregnancy goes smoothly.

