Fertility Clinics in Hawaii
2 IVF & fertility clinics across 1 cities
Fertility Care in Hawaii
Hawaii has 2 fertility clinics on Oahu serving patients from across the island chain. Geographic isolation makes the market unique—patients on neighbor islands must fly to Honolulu for most treatments.
Hawaii's fertility insurance mandate requires certain employers to provide a one-time IVF benefit, which helps offset costs in an expensive state. IVF cycles run $14,000 to $20,000, reflecting Hawaii's high cost of living. Tripler Army Medical Center also provides fertility services to military families. Inter-island travel adds logistical complexity that mainland patients don't face.
Insurance Coverage
Partial fertility insurance coverageHawaii requires employers with 50+ employees to cover one IVF cycle. Must have 5 years of infertility history.
Typical IVF Cost
Per cycle including medications. Costs vary by clinic and treatment plan. See full Hawaii cost guide →
Clinics & Cities
Limited number of clinics on the islands. Some patients travel to the mainland for specialized treatments.
Avg. IVF Success Rate (under 35)
Live birth rate per cycle, averaged across 2 Hawaii clinics. Source: CDC National ART Surveillance System (2022 data).
Browse by City
Frequently Asked Questions
How many fertility clinics are in Hawaii?
Our directory lists 2 IVF and fertility clinics across Hawaii. Browse by city to find clinics near you, or use the search to filter by service, insurance, and rating.
How much does IVF cost in Hawaii?
A single IVF cycle in Hawaii typically costs $14,000–$24,000, including medications and monitoring. Costs vary by clinic, treatment protocol, and whether add-ons like ICSI or PGT are needed. Contact clinics directly for current pricing.
Does Hawaii require insurance coverage for IVF?
Hawaii requires employers with 50+ employees to cover one IVF cycle. Must have 5 years of infertility history.
What is the IVF success rate in Hawaii?
Based on CDC data, the average live birth rate per IVF cycle for patients under 35 at Hawaii clinics is approximately 65.8%, averaged across 2 clinics reporting to the CDC. Rates vary by clinic, patient age, and diagnosis — always review individual clinic data before choosing.
What fertility services are available in Hawaii?
Fertility clinics in Hawaii offer a full range of treatments including IVF, IUI, egg freezing, embryo freezing, ICSI, PGT genetic testing, donor egg and sperm programs, surrogacy coordination, and fertility preservation. Use our directory to filter clinics by the specific service you need.
How do I choose a fertility clinic in Hawaii?
When comparing fertility clinics in Hawaii, look at CDC-reported success rates by age group, board certification of the reproductive endocrinologists, range of services, patient reviews, insurance acceptance, and financing options. Our directory lets you filter and compare clinics side by side.
Do patients travel for fertility treatment in Hawaii?
Limited number of clinics on the islands. Some patients travel to the mainland for specialized treatments.
Browse by Treatment in Hawaii
Not Sure Where to Start?
Tell us your treatment needs and location. We'll match you with top-rated clinics in Hawaii — free and confidential.
Get Matched with a Clinic →Related Articles
IVF Success Rates Are Lying to You — Here's How to Read Them
When a fertility clinic says it has a “70% success rate,” that number might mean almost nothing. Here’s how to decode the real data before you pick a clinic.
Read more →The CDC Publishes Every Clinic’s IVF Results. Almost Nobody Looks.
There’s a government database with success rates for every fertility clinic in the country. It’s free, it’s public, and most patients never find it. Here’s how to use it.
Read more →IVF Cost in 2026: State-by-State Breakdown ($12K–$30K Per Cycle)
A 2026 reference for what one IVF cycle actually costs in each U.S. state — the base price, the add-ons (ICSI, PGT, frozen transfer), what insurance covers, and how patients cut $5K–$15K off their bill.
Read more →IVF vs IUI: Which Fertility Treatment Is Right for You?
IVF and IUI are the two most common fertility treatments, but they differ significantly in process, cost, and success rates. Here's how to decide which is right for your situation.
Read more →Data sources: CDC National ART Surveillance System (2022 reporting year), clinic-submitted profiles, and Google Business ratings. Success rates are clinic-wide averages and may not predict individual outcomes. Last data update: March 2026. Read our full methodology.