IVF Insurance Coverage in New Hampshire
New Hampshire mandates fertility coverage including IVF under legislation effective 2020.
What the law covers
New Hampshire requires fully insured group and individual health plans to cover the diagnosis and treatment of infertility, including up to 6 egg retrievals. The law is inclusive and provides comprehensive coverage for ART procedures.
Key Provisions
- Covers IVF and other ART procedures
- Up to 6 egg retrievals covered
- Applies to fully insured group and individual plans
- Inclusive eligibility requirements
Limitations & Exclusions
- Self-insured ERISA plans are exempt
- Small employer exemptions may apply
- Medical necessity documentation required
What this means for you in New Hampshire
Even though New Hampshire requires insurers to cover IVF on eligible plans — in force in New Hampshire since 2020, the practical experience varies plan-by-plan. The mandate only binds fully insured commercial policies regulated by New Hampshire; it does not reach federal employee plans, military Tricare, individual short-term plans, or — critically — self-insured employer plans governed by ERISA, which is how most large U.S. employers structure benefits. Reviewing your Summary of Benefits and Coverage (SBC), or asking your HR team in writing whether your plan is "fully insured" or "self-insured/ASO," is the single most important diagnostic step before you assume the mandate applies to you.
Once you've confirmed your plan is in scope, get the specific coverage rules in writing. Read the 2 official resources linked above for the statutory baseline, then ask your insurer for the IVF medical policy document — it typically spells out diagnostic criteria (often six to twelve months of documented infertility, age caps, prior treatment requirements), the exact services covered (monitoring, retrieval, transfer, ICSI, PGT-A), the lifetime cycle or dollar maximum, and which clinics or labs are in-network. Most New Hampshire clinics quote an all-in cycle in the $13,000 to $20,000 range before any insurance is applied, so confirming coverage details before you start can change your out-of-pocket bill by tens of thousands of dollars.
Common questions about IVF insurance in New Hampshire
- If New Hampshire mandates IVF coverage, why might my plan still deny it?
- The most common reason is that the plan is self-insured under federal ERISA law, which exempts it from state insurance mandates. Other denials happen when patients haven't met the plan's pre-authorization criteria (documented infertility window, prior less-invasive treatment, age limits) or when a specific add-on like PGT-A is excluded even though the base cycle is covered. Always request the denial reason in writing and ask for a copy of the medical policy.
- Does the New Hampshire mandate cover medications and add-ons?
- It depends on the specific statutory language and how your plan implements it. Many New Hampshire plans cover the base cycle and monitoring but treat injectable fertility medications under a separate pharmacy benefit with its own deductible and coinsurance. ICSI, PGT-A, assisted hatching, and donor gametes are also frequently subject to plan-specific exclusions even when "IVF" is generically covered.
- Where can I see the specific cost ranges for New Hampshire?
- Our cost calculator combines compiled clinic pricing with the add-on procedures most commonly recommended in New Hampshire so you can model out-of-pocket totals across one, two, or three cycles based on your age and plan design.