Fertility and IVF services in Mount Eden, Auckland

Compare fertility specialists practising in Mount Eden, Auckland, registered with the Medical Council of New Zealand.

Private IVF $15,000–$25,000 per cycle; FET $3,000–$5,000 Registered practitioners Auckland

About Mount Eden

Mount Eden is a central-Auckland residential suburb running from Eden Terrace south to Three Kings, anchored by the Mount Eden Road retail strip. The area mixes long-established family housing with newer townhouses and apartments around the Mount Eden train station.

Mount Eden has 12,400 (suburb) residents and a population skewed toward families, education-sector workers and CBD professionals — a mix of sedentary office workers and active parents. The area is served by the Mount Eden train station on the Western Line, Outer Link buses, and easy CBD access via Dominion or Mount Eden Roads.

What fertility and IVF services involves

Fertility care covers investigation of subfertility, ovulation induction, intrauterine insemination (IUI), in-vitro fertilisation (IVF) including ICSI, frozen embryo transfer (FET), preimplantation genetic testing, donor sperm and egg programmes, and fertility preservation (egg or sperm freezing). A typical investigation pathway includes blood tests, semen analysis, pelvic ultrasound and a tubal patency test before deciding on treatment. Outcomes vary considerably with patient age, ovarian reserve and underlying diagnosis.

Consultation length: New patient appointments are typically 60 minutes; review consultations 30 minutes. A full IVF cycle takes 4–6 weeks.

Follow-up: Patients undergoing IVF have frequent monitoring during stimulation (every 2–3 days), an egg-collection procedure, an embryo transfer, and a pregnancy test 10–14 days later. Follow-up includes an early pregnancy scan at 7–8 weeks if positive.

Conditions fertility specialists commonly see

In Mount Eden, where a population skewed toward families, education-sector workers and CBD professionals — a mix of sedentary office workers and active parents, fertility specialists most often see:

  • subfertility after 12 months of trying (or 6 months over age 35)
  • PCOS and ovulatory disorders
  • endometriosis affecting fertility
  • tubal disease and male-factor infertility
  • recurrent miscarriage investigation
  • fertility preservation before chemotherapy or gender-affirming care

Cost & ACC funding in Mount Eden

Typical fees: Private IVF $15,000–$25,000 per cycle; FET $3,000–$5,000. Private IVF cycles in New Zealand run roughly $15,000–$25,000, with ICSI typically adding $1,500–$3,000. Frozen embryo transfer (FET) costs $3,000–$5,000. Freezing and storage is usually $1,500–$2,500 plus an annual storage fee. Some health insurers (Southern Cross, nib) fund parts of the workup but do not generally fund IVF treatment itself.

ACC cover: ACC does not fund fertility treatment except in narrow treatment-injury cases. Public funding is available for one or two cycles via the Clinical Priority Assessment Criteria (CPAC) scoring, administered through Te Whatu Ora — eligibility depends on age, BMI, smoking status, prior children together and a CPAC score above the regional threshold.

Choosing a fertility specialist in Mount Eden

Fertility specialist services in New Zealand are medical specialty work regulated by the Medical Council of New Zealand and the Human Assisted Reproductive Technology (HART) Act 2004. Assisted reproductive procedures must be provided through a clinic licensed by the Advisory Committee on Assisted Reproductive Technology (ACART) and overseen by a fertility specialist with a vocational scope of Obstetrics and Gynaecology and reproductive endocrinology training.

Verify the fertility specialist on the MCNZ register and confirm a vocational scope of Obstetrics and Gynaecology with subspecialty fertility training (Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility). Confirm the clinic is HART-licensed and ask for current self-reported live-birth rates by age band — reputable clinics publish these and discuss them honestly. Outcomes vary considerably and no clinic can guarantee a pregnancy.

You can verify any Mount Eden fertility specialist on the public register at mcnz.org.nz before booking.

Areas served from Mount Eden

Mount Eden fertility specialists typically take patients from across the wider Auckland region:

Mount Eden
Three Kings
Sandringham
Epsom
Kingsland
Eden Terrace

Most Mount Eden residents reach a clinic within 5–10 minutes by car. After-hours emergencies can be presented to Auckland City Hospital (Grafton) is roughly 10 minutes away by car.

Plan your fertility and IVF services treatment

fertility and IVF services in other locations

Or compare at suburb level:

Related care

Fertility and IVF services in Mount Eden: questions

Do I need to live in Mount Eden to see a fertility specialist there?

No. Mount Eden fertility specialists accept patients from across the wider Auckland region. Most Mount Eden residents reach a clinic within 5–10 minutes by car.

Where are fertility specialists usually located in Mount Eden?

Most fertility specialists working in Mount Eden are based in Mount Eden, Three Kings, Sandringham, Epsom and surrounding areas. Mount Eden Road has time-limited parking; most clinics offer 1–3 dedicated patient parks or rear-of-building parking.

Do I qualify for publicly-funded IVF in New Zealand?

Public IVF funding is allocated through the Clinical Priority Assessment Criteria (CPAC) scoring system administered by Te Whatu Ora. Eligibility depends on age, BMI, smoking status, length of subfertility, prior children with the current partner and CPAC score — your fertility specialist will assess and submit the application.

How long is the wait for public-funded IVF?

Wait times vary by region. After CPAC approval most centres offer treatment within 12–18 months, but timeframes change with annual funding rounds — your fertility clinic can give a current estimate at consultation.

What success rate should I expect from IVF?

Live-birth rates per fresh cycle vary considerably with age — published New Zealand data sits broadly in the range of 40% for women under 35 and falls to under 10% for women aged 42 and over. Reputable clinics publish their own results by age band; ask for the figures relevant to your situation.

Are donor sperm and donor egg programmes available?

Yes — licensed New Zealand fertility clinics run donor sperm and donor egg programmes regulated under the HART Act. Donations are non-anonymous: any child born from a donor gamete has a legal right to identifying information at age 18.