IVF Insurance Coverage in Washington
Washington does not have a comprehensive fertility treatment mandate, though legislation is under discussion.
What the law covers
Washington state does not currently mandate IVF coverage, though legislative efforts are ongoing. Seattle-area clinics offer competitive pricing and the state's general healthcare framework provides some diagnostic coverage. Several major employers headquartered in Washington (including tech companies) voluntarily offer generous fertility benefits.
Limitations & Exclusions
- No state mandate for fertility treatment coverage
- Coverage depends on employer plan design
- Some diagnostic services may be covered under general plans
What this means for you in Washington
Without a state mandate in Washington, IVF coverage is determined entirely by individual employer plan design. Some large employers headquartered or operating in Washington — particularly in tech, finance, healthcare, and major retail — voluntarily include fertility benefits to remain competitive in their hiring market, sometimes through carve-out programs run by Progyny, Carrot, Maven, or Kindbody rather than traditional health insurance. These programs often provide better coverage than mandate-state plans (multiple cycles, donor benefits, surrogacy support), but they're employer-by-employer and not guaranteed.
If your current Washington employer doesn't offer fertility benefits, the practical paths are: ask whether benefits leadership would consider adding a fertility carve-out at the next renewal (employee-resource groups have successfully advocated for this at many companies), explore whether a spouse or partner's plan offers better coverage, look at federal employee FEHB plans or Tricare if either of you qualifies, or pursue clinic-direct financing, multi-cycle bundles, and grant programs. Reviewing the official resource linked above can clarify what — if any — assistance exists at the state level. Most Washington clinics quote an all-in cycle in the $20,000 to $30,000 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 Washington
- If Washington has no mandate, how do most patients pay for IVF?
- The most common combinations are: employer-provided fertility benefits (now offered by roughly 40% of large U.S. employers per recent SHRM and Mercer surveys), clinic financing with major lenders like Future Family or LightStream, multi-cycle "shared risk" packages from the clinic itself (often $25,000–$35,000 for up to three cycles with a partial refund if no live birth), HSA/FSA dollars on out-of-pocket portions, and grant programs from organizations like Baby Quest, the Tinina Q. Cade Foundation, and BUNDL.
- Does my Washington employer have to cover anything fertility-related?
- Federal law requires group health plans of 15+ employees to comply with the Pregnancy Discrimination Act and ACA preventive-care rules, which generally cover diagnostic testing for infertility but not treatment. Some plans cover fertility medications under a separate pharmacy benefit even when IVF itself is excluded. Always read your Summary of Benefits and Coverage carefully — coverage often varies by service category.
- Are there Washington-specific grants or assistance programs?
- Some smaller, regional non-profits offer assistance to Washington residents, but most fertility grants are nationally administered. Our resources page maintains a current list of national grant programs; eligibility usually depends on income, prior treatment history, and the specific cause of infertility rather than state of residence.