Minnesotans are going into debt to have babies
To do so, though, the 36-year-old and her husband needed some medical help. After multiple rounds of in vitro fertilization (IVF), they now are thankful parents of a 2-month-old daughter, with embryos remaining.
But they also have a
“We grappled with, do we have kids at all?” said McDonald, of
As the
Demand for fertility care, which can cost tens of thousands of dollars that patients often must pay out-of-pocket, is growing. Roughly half the states now require insurance companies to cover the cost, but legislative efforts to do the same in
The 2026 legislative session marked the latest unsuccessful attempt to pass the Minnesota
Having insurance coverage can be the difference between starting an IVF cycle and holding off, said Dr.
“I think of the number of patients that I’ve had, even in the past couple weeks, like, ‘Oh, do you think that bill you were talking about, is it going to pass?’ And waiting to do IVF in hopes that it was going to pass,” she said. “It’s just so disappointing.”
Twenty-five states and
One round of IVF, in which a lab fertilizes a retrieved egg before doctors transfer the resulting embryo to the uterus, costs
Patients pursue IVF for myriad reasons. Many have been diagnosed with infertility, a condition that affects 1 in 6 adults worldwide.
Scar tissue from a ruptured appendix when
Miller, of
More than seven years later, she said, they’re still paying off credit card debt they accrued as a result.
“It did put a big financial strain on our household,” Miller said.
Lawmakers and advocates said the Minnesota
A 2023 state
“Most data suggest that the increase in total monthly premiums for an infertility coverage mandate would be less than 1%,” the department wrote.
Industry groups argue the increase could be more. In an
“We encourage continued restraint when considering new health insurance mandates, particularly as employers face ongoing cost pressures in providing coverage,” Cotter wrote.
Legislators narrowed the bill over the course of the session to include just large-group insurers and approved an exemption for religious objections. But after passing the
“I think the support is there, and I think it was very unfortunate,” said Rep.
He said negotiations continued “down to the wire” and included eliminating coverage for embryo storage. The final version of the bill carried no cost to the state.
“The good news is we were having a conversation about it, more so than we ever have in the past,” said Lakeville’s Sen.
The debate over making IVF and related health care more affordable comes at a time when the
Like every other state,
“It is an issue, it’s a change, and it’s something that will have impacts on the economy and on many different dimensions of our community,” said
Government policies aimed at encouraging people to have children haven’t historically moved the needle. And though the number of babies conceived through IVF and born in the
Still, for individual Minnesotans, insurance coverage for infertility treatment could change everything — especially when many families are already cutting back amid rising prices and economic uncertainty.
“There might have been people for whom 18 months ago, saving to have a child, to go through the infertility treatment process, was possible, [and today it is not,” said Sen.
“I’d love to give my daughter a sibling,” Gran said. “She asks for one all the time.”
©2026 The Minnesota Star Tribune. Visit startribune.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC



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