IVF Cost in Wyoming

IVF costs in Wyoming vary considerably depending on which clinic you choose, what treatment protocol your doctor recommends, and whether your insurance covers any portion of fertility treatment. A single IVF cycle in Wyoming typically costs between $12,000 and $25,000 including medications, monitoring appointments, egg retrieval, and embryo transfer — though patients who need additional procedures like ICSI, PGT-A genetic testing, or assisted hatching can expect costs at the higher end of that range or beyond.

Insurance coverage is one of the biggest variables in what you'll actually pay out of pocket. Some states mandate that insurers cover fertility diagnosis, treatment, or both, while others have no fertility insurance requirements at all. Even in states with mandates, the details matter — some laws only require coverage of diagnosis but not treatment, while others cap the number of covered cycles or exclude IVF specifically. Review Wyoming's insurance coverage requirements to understand what protections may apply to you. If your employer is self-insured, state mandates may not apply, but many large employers voluntarily include fertility benefits.

Beyond the base cycle cost, patients should budget for the possibility of needing multiple cycles. Success rates vary significantly by age — patients under 35 may need only one or two cycles, while those over 40 often require three or more. The calculator below lets you model cumulative costs across multiple cycles based on your specific age and the add-on procedures you're considering, giving you a more realistic picture of total treatment expenses.

What Affects IVF Cost in Wyoming

Several factors drive the variation in IVF pricing across clinics within Wyoming:

Clinic Competition

Areas with multiple fertility clinics tend to have more competitive pricing. Metropolitan regions in Wyoming may have several clinics within a reasonable driving distance, giving patients negotiating leverage and more choices. Rural areas with a single nearby clinic often see higher prices.

Cost of Living

Clinic overhead — rent, staff salaries, and equipment costs — directly affects what patients are charged. Clinics in high cost-of-living areas naturally have higher base prices. Some patients reduce costs by traveling to clinics in less expensive parts of the state for monitoring and procedures.

Insurance Mandates

State-level insurance requirements shape how clinics price their services. In states with strong IVF mandates, clinics negotiate rates with insurers and patients pay less out of pocket. In states without mandates, clinics set cash-pay prices that must cover the full cost of service delivery.

Clinic Volume & Success Rates

High-volume clinics may offer lower per-cycle costs due to economies of scale, but clinics with exceptional success rates sometimes charge a premium. Published SART success rates can help you evaluate whether a higher-priced clinic delivers meaningfully better outcomes for your age group.

Medication costs add another $3,000 to $7,000 per cycle and are influenced by your specific stimulation protocol, dosage requirements, and where you purchase your medications. Using a specialty pharmacy rather than buying directly through your clinic can often save hundreds to thousands of dollars per cycle.

IVF Success Rates by Age in Wyoming

Age is the single most important factor in IVF outcomes. The live birth rates below reflect national CDC/SART averages — use the calculator to see how age affects your projected costs across multiple cycles.

Age <35

54%

live birth rate

Age 35-37

40%

live birth rate

Age 38-40

26%

live birth rate

Age 41-42

13%

live birth rate

Age >42

4%

live birth rate

Fertility Care in Wyoming

1

fertility clinics

0

SART-reporting

0.6M

population

1.7

clinics per million

Healthcare Landscape

Wyoming is the least populated state in the country, and its fertility care landscape reflects this reality in stark terms. The state has no dedicated IVF clinic and no SART-reporting fertility center. Some OB/GYN practices offer basic fertility evaluations and ovulation induction, but patients requiring IVF must travel out of state. This makes Wyoming essentially a fertility care desert — a distinction it shares with no other state, as even other small states maintain at least one full-service fertility clinic.

The state's geography — vast open spaces, mountain ranges, and communities separated by hours of driving — compounds the access challenge. Cheyenne, the state capital and largest city (population approximately 65,000), is located in the southeastern corner, about 100 miles from Denver. Casper, the state's second-largest city, is in the center. Jackson, in the far west, is closer to Salt Lake City or Idaho Falls than to any Wyoming population center.

Wyoming does not mandate fertility insurance coverage, and the state's economy — driven by energy, ranching, and tourism — means many residents are self-employed or work for small employers with limited health benefits. Wyoming's situation is the extreme case of what happens when a small, dispersed population cannot sustain specialty medical services locally.

Access to Fertility Care

Wyoming has effectively no in-state IVF services. Patients across the state must travel to neighboring states for treatment. Cheyenne residents typically travel to Denver (1.5 hours), which offers the closest large fertility market. Casper patients face longer drives — about four hours to Denver or five to Billings, Montana. Jackson residents may opt for Salt Lake City (about five hours) or clinics in Idaho.

The out-of-state nature of Wyoming fertility care means that patients must factor in travel costs — gas, lodging, meals, and time off work — on top of treatment costs. Telehealth consultations with out-of-state clinics are crucial for minimizing trips, and some Denver-area clinics have developed specific protocols for managing Wyoming patients, including coordinated monitoring with local OB/GYN practices.

Notable Programs & Research

Wyoming has no dedicated fertility research programs or specialized fertility centers. However, the University of Wyoming's College of Health Sciences has explored telehealth models for extending specialty care access to the state's dispersed population, and these models have relevance for fertility care. Denver-area clinics, particularly those in the northern suburbs closest to Wyoming, have effectively become the de facto fertility providers for Wyoming residents and have adapted their practice patterns to accommodate out-of-state patients.

Major Fertility Centers in Wyoming

  • True Health OB/GYN (limited fertility services)
  • Wyoming patients typically travel to Denver, Salt Lake City, or Billings
InfertileTruthSources verified Feb 23, 2026Transparent pricing methodology

Know your real IVF cost and odds in under a minute.

InfertileTruth combines state-level pricing, add-on costs, and age-based success rates to show what IVF could actually cost across multiple cycles.

What you’ll get

  • Itemized IVF estimate tailored to your state.
  • Multi-cycle total range with add-on truth meter.
  • Success odds that reflect age-based live birth rates.

Built to answer questions like “Is PGT-A worth it at 38?”

Build your success path

Adjust your state, age, and add-ons to see an all-in estimate that scales with the number of cycles.

Add-on truth meter

Your IVF truth report

Estimated total range

$54,000$66,000

$20,000 per-cycle estimate × 3 cycles

Itemized estimate

Wyoming baseline
$20,000

Matches the national average

Cumulative success rate

90%

Based on 54% live birth rate for ages <35 across 3 cycles.

Common questions

  • IVF cost in Wyoming vs national average.
  • Is PGT-A worth it at age <35? Compare costs with success rate.
  • Hidden costs of ICSI, donor eggs, and assisted hatching.

Trust & data transparency

Cost estimates are compiled from published self-pay pricing and state-level cost guides. Adjustments reflect add-on selections and cycle count.

Sources last updated Feb 23, 2026.

Methodology snapshot

State baselines are derived from compiled clinic pricing and public cost guides. We use all-in basic ranges to estimate a mid-point state cost, then apply your add-on selections and cycle count.

  • Baseline = state all-in basic midpoint.
  • Add-ons reflect typical published pricing.
  • Cycles scale linearly for total estimate range.

Quick FAQ

Does insurance change this estimate?

Yes. These are self-pay style ranges; coverage can lower your out-of-pocket total substantially.

Why is the range so wide?

Medication dosing, lab services, and clinic pricing vary by region, which can swing totals by thousands.

How often is this updated?

We refresh the state data set regularly and log the last verified date above.

IVF Resources in Wyoming

In Wyoming, accessing clinical IVF care often involves regional travel, making strong virtual support networks and state-based advocacy groups crucial in assisting families building their path to parenthood.

Local Resources