

Asian Egg Bank specializes in Asian egg donation and works with intended parents around the world. Donors choose AEB because we offer a supportive team, competitive compensation, travel coordination when needed, multilingual support, and an organized donation process.
Some intended parents need donor eggs because of infertility, low egg quality, age-related fertility challenges, genetic concerns, prior IVF failure, or medical conditions. Donor eggs can give them the opportunity to grow their family.
Egg donation is a process where a healthy woman donates eggs to help intended parents create embryos through IVF. These embryos may then be transferred to a recipient or frozen for future use.
Yes. Many egg donors have never had children. Your eligibility will depend on your age, health history, ovarian reserve, screening results, and overall donor profile.
Intended parents may be looking for donors of Chinese, Indian, Korean, Japanese, Vietnamese, Filipino, Taiwanese, Thai, Singaporean, Malaysian, Indonesian, mixed-Asian, or other Asian backgrounds.
Asian Egg Bank was created to help meet the growing need for Asian egg donors, so donors of Asian and Indian descent are often in high demand. However, AEB may accept qualified donors from other racial and ethnic backgrounds depending on program needs.
You may qualify to become an egg donor if you are: • Between 21 and 31 years old • In good physical and mental health • Within a healthy BMI range • A non-smoker • Free from drug or substance abuse • Having regular menstrual cycles • College-educated or currently pursuing higher education • Willing to complete medical, genetic, and psychological screening • Able to attend required appointments
Asian Egg Bank may provide and cover health insurance for donors during the donation process. Coverage may be limited for international donors after departure. Our team will review details before you begin.
Yes, approved travel expenses may be covered when travel is required. This may include airfare, hotel accommodations, mileage reimbursement, and a daily allowance for qualifying cycles.
Compensation is provided for your time, effort, commitment, and participation in the egg donation process.
Eligible egg donors may receive $10,000–$50,000 in compensation, depending on qualifications, donor profile, experience, availability, and program details.
Yes. Donors typically complete genetic carrier screening as part of the evaluation process. This helps identify whether a donor carries certain inherited genetic conditions.
Not every applicant will qualify, and that is okay. If screening results show that donation is not the right fit, our team will let you know and explain next steps when appropriate.
Screening helps protect donor safety and supports intended parents by confirming that each donor meets program, medical, and regulatory requirements.
Egg donor screening may include: • Medical history review • Family health history review • Hormone testing • Ultrasound evaluation • Infectious disease testing • Genetic carrier screening • Psychological evaluation • Urine drug screening • Physical examination
Appointment frequency depends on your treatment plan. During the stimulation phase, you may have several monitoring visits to check hormone levels and follicle development.
Yes. During the treatment portion of the process, donors take hormone medications to help the ovaries produce multiple mature eggs. You will receive detailed instructions and monitoring throughout the cycle.
The timeline can vary depending on screening, donor availability, cycle type, travel needs, and scheduling. Our team will provide a more specific timeline once your application is reviewed.
The process generally includes: • Online application • Donor coordinator call • Profile completion • Medical, genetic, and psychological screening • Treatment planning • Ovarian stimulation medication • Egg retrieval Our team will guide you through each step.
Many donors return to normal daily activities within a few days, but recovery can vary. Your care team will give you specific post-retrieval instructions.
Most donors tolerate the process well. You may feel bloating, cramping, or mild discomfort during stimulation and after retrieval. Our medical team will explain what to expect and how to care for yourself afterward.
The egg retrieval procedure usually takes about 15–20 minutes. Most donors return home the same day.
Egg retrieval is a short outpatient procedure where mature eggs are collected from the ovaries. The procedure is performed by a physician while you are under sedation.
Possible side effects may include bloating, mood changes, temporary discomfort, bruising at injection sites, cramping, or fatigue. Rare complications can occur, and our clinical team will monitor you closely throughout the process.
Current medical understanding does not show that egg donation reduces a donor’s future fertility when performed appropriately. Your physician will review your health, ovarian reserve, and any personal risk factors before you move forward.
Egg donation is generally considered safe for qualified donors when performed under medical supervision. As with any medical process, there are risks, and our team will review them with you before you begin.
Legal documents may be required depending on the cycle type and program. Asian Egg Bank may cover attorney review so you can understand the agreement before signing.
An Open-ID donor agrees that identifying information may be released to a donor-conceived child upon request once the child reaches adulthood, subject to program terms and applicable laws.
A Non-Identifying donor does not release personal identifying information as part of the donation process. Intended parents may still receive non-identifying profile information, medical history, family history, photos, and other available details.
This depends on the donor identity option and program terms. Some donors are Non-Identifying, while others may choose Open-ID participation.
You will work with a donor support team that helps answer questions, coordinate appointments, explain next steps, and support you throughout the process.
Asian Egg Bank offers multilingual support, including English, Mandarin, Chinese, Japanese, Spanish, Hungarian, Arabic, and Turkish.
Yes. For qualifying cycles, Asian Egg Bank may help coordinate travel and accommodations.
Some donors may need to travel to San Diego depending on location, cycle type, and program requirements. Our team will explain what is needed before you commit.
Whether pregnancy or birth information is shared depends on program terms, privacy rules, and legal agreements.
Your donated eggs may be frozen and made available to intended parents or used in a fresh donor cycle, depending on the program.
Some donors may be eligible to donate more than once, depending on medical response, recovery, screening results, and program guidelines.
If you are interested in becoming an egg donor, Asian Egg Bank is here to help you take the next step.
Our team will review your application, answer your questions, and explain what to expect before you make a commitment.
Every journey is unique. These are the words of people who found hope, support, and life-changing results with Asian Egg Bank.

All nurses treated me so well even though I was nervous. In all, staff treated me well, and the process wasn’t that difficult what so ever. 10/10! Thank you for making this a comfortable experience for me.

It was really great working with whole team…I have worked with them twice and both of my experiences went great just because of the staff.

They flew me out from Miami and made the whole process feel really easy and stress-free. Overall everyone was kind, professional, and supportive throughout the experience.