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ivf fertility · TR
E-visa available for most nationalities. 90-day stay within 180-day period. No specific medical visa category.
IVF involves stimulating the ovaries to produce multiple eggs, retrieving those eggs, fertilising them with sperm in a laboratory, and transferring resulting embryos to the uterus. A single cycle typically spans 4-6 weeks. Success rates vary significantly by age, clinic, and protocol used.
Full procedure guide →IVF is jurisdiction-dependent in ways many other procedures are not: legal status of donor anonymity, embryo storage, surrogacy, and pre-implantation genetic testing varies materially between countries and may have implications for the legal status of any resulting child. Turkey's fertility sector is concentrated in Istanbul; Turkey requires every clinic and intermediary marketing to international patients to hold a Sağlık Turizmi Yetki Belgesi (Health Tourism Authorisation) issued through USHAS; the authorisation list is published on the Ministry's portal. Confirm in writing the legal status of donor anonymity, embryo storage, and any genetic testing planned, and how the resulting parentage will be recognised on return — fertility law is highly jurisdiction-specific.
Source: Turkish Ministry of Health (USHAS health-tourism portal)
Turkey operates a layered framework. Clinical negligence claims are governed by the Turkish Code of Obligations (Law No. 6098) under general tort principles, with the statute of limitations typically running five years from the discovery of harm. Disciplinary oversight sits with the Turkish Medical Association's regional chambers (Tabip Odaları) and, for facilities marketing internationally, with USHAS — the Ministry of Health agency that licenses health-tourism providers under the Sağlık Turizmi Yetki Belgesi scheme. Patients can lodge complaints free of charge through SABİM, the Ministry's Patient Communication Centre. Civil compensation claims for proven negligence have no statutory damages cap but are commonly resolved within published court guidance for moral and material damages. International patients pursuing cases in Turkey are well-advised to retain a local lawyer admitted to the relevant bar; Turkish-language proceedings and document submission are mandatory.
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Most nationalities can obtain a Turkish e-visa online before travel, which permits a stay of up to ninety days within any one-hundred-and-eighty-day period. Turkey does not have a dedicated medical visa category, so the standard tourist or e-visa applies to most medical tourists. Patients should check current visa requirements for their specific nationality.
Turkey uses the Turkish Lira (TRY). Major private hospitals and internationally oriented clinics typically accept payment in euros, US dollars, or pounds sterling in addition to Lira, which is useful for patients who have budgeted in their home currency. Currency exchange facilities are widely available.
English is spoken well at JCI-accredited hospitals and the larger internationally oriented private clinics in Istanbul, where dedicated international patient coordinators handle communication. In smaller clinics and hair transplant centres, English proficiency varies and patients should confirm language support arrangements before booking.
Check whether the facility holds Ministry of Health health tourism certification or JCI accreditation, both of which indicate baseline quality standards. Independently verify the surgeon's medical licence through the Turkish Medical Association, and be cautious of clinics that communicate primarily through social media, offer unusually low prices, or cannot provide verifiable before-and-after outcomes data.
Patients can file complaints with the Turkish Ministry of Health or Turkish Medical Association. Civil litigation is available but pursuing a case from abroad is practically and financially challenging. The 2014 mandatory malpractice insurance law means physicians should carry insurance, but claim resolution can be slow. Choosing a reputable, accredited facility substantially reduces the likelihood of adverse outcomes.
Flying timelines depend on the procedure performed. For hair transplants, most patients fly home within three to five days. For surgical procedures, patients should remain for the post-operative review and until cleared to fly by the treating team. DVT risk from immobility during flights is a genuine concern for all surgical patients and should be discussed with the surgical team.
Before leaving Turkey, obtain comprehensive written discharge notes, operative records, and any implant or product documentation. Identify a local physician or specialist who is willing to provide follow-up care before travelling, and share the Turkish records with them at the first appointment. Many Turkish hospitals have dedicated aftercare coordinators who can respond to email or telephone queries.
Standard travel insurance generally excludes complications from planned elective procedures. Medical tourism-specific insurance — available from specialist providers — covers both the procedure and post-operative complications including emergency care and repatriation. This should be purchased before travel and the policy read carefully for exclusions.
Istanbul has an extensive public transport network including metro, tram, and ferry services, and taxis and ride-hailing apps are widely available. Many clinics offer airport transfers and can arrange transport to appointments. Patients with limited mobility post-procedure should confirm accessible transport options with their clinic or hotel in advance.
The main risks are choosing a clinic where graft extraction and placement are performed by unqualified technicians rather than medical staff, and procedures conducted in facilities not registered with the Ministry of Health. Patients should confirm in writing who performs each stage of the procedure and verify that the clinic holds appropriate health tourism certification.
Success rates vary considerably with age and clinic quality. In women under thirty-five, live birth rates per transfer at well-performing units typically exceed forty per cent. Rates decline progressively with age, falling to around fifteen to twenty per cent for women aged forty to forty-two using their own eggs.
Most guidelines now recommend single embryo transfer (SET) in suitable patients to minimise the risk of multiple pregnancy, which carries significant risks for both mother and babies. In older patients or those with previous failed cycles, two embryos may be considered after discussion of the risks.
The daily hormone injections during stimulation are generally well tolerated. Egg retrieval is performed under sedation or light anaesthesia and is not painful during the procedure; mild cramping and bloating for one to two days afterwards are common. Embryo transfer is a brief, largely painless outpatient procedure.
There is no fixed answer, as it depends on the cause of infertility, age, and embryo quality. Cumulative success rates improve with successive cycles — many programmes report that most successful patients achieve pregnancy within three cycles. However, the decision to continue treatment is deeply personal and financially significant.
Intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) involves injecting a single sperm directly into each egg and is recommended when sperm count, motility, or morphology is significantly impaired. It is now used routinely at many clinics even without severe male factor infertility, though evidence for its benefit in normal sperm parameters is debated.
OHSS is a potential complication of ovarian stimulation in which the ovaries over-respond to hormonal medication, causing bloating, abdominal pain, and in severe cases fluid accumulation and blood clotting complications. Women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) or high ovarian reserve are at greater risk, and clinics adjust protocols to minimise this.
Viable embryos that are not transferred in the current cycle are typically cryopreserved (frozen) for use in future frozen embryo transfer cycles. Couples must make decisions about long-term storage, donation to other patients, use for research, or disposal if they do not wish to use remaining embryos.
Large studies suggest that IVF-conceived children have a marginally higher rate of certain birth defects compared with naturally conceived children, though the absolute risk difference is small. It is unclear whether this is attributable to the IVF process itself or to the underlying fertility conditions that necessitated it.