Before You Apply

How Surrogate Compensation Actually Adds Up

When candidates ask "how much do surrogates make," the honest answer is a stack of numbers, not a single one. Base pay is the headline. The rest of the package — allowances, benefits, reimbursements — is what makes the total land where it lands.

Published May 29, 2026

The most common question we get on first calls is some version of, "Is it really $60,000 to $100,000?" The answer is yes, but the way it adds up surprises most candidates. Base pay is only one line. The rest of the package is built from monthly allowances, paid benefits, and reimbursements that show up across the year. Some of it lands in your bank account. Some of it pays for things you would otherwise have paid for yourself. Both count as compensation, and both belong in the math.

Here's how the layers stack.

Layer one: base compensation

Base pay is the number people quote when they talk about surrogate compensation. For first-time surrogates in 2026, base is typically $60,000 to $75,000, depending on the state and the agency. For experienced surrogates — meaning you've completed at least one prior journey — base typically runs $75,000 to $100,000+. California and a handful of other high-cost states sit at the top of those ranges; Texas, Florida, and many Midwest states sit slightly lower.

Base is paid in monthly installments once you start cycle medications, with the largest portions paid after a confirmed heartbeat and through pregnancy. You don't get a lump-sum check at the end. The schedule is laid out in your contract before the cycle begins, so you can plan around it.

Layer two: monthly allowances

Allowances are flat monthly payments that cover the recurring costs of being pregnant. They're on top of base. Most agencies pay these from the start of medications through delivery.

Layer three: medical and insurance coverage

The intended parents pay every medical bill connected to the surrogacy pregnancy, from cycle medications through delivery and your six-week postpartum follow-up. That includes copays, deductibles, prescriptions, ultrasounds, lab work, hospital stays, and any complications.

If your existing health insurance excludes surrogacy (many policies quietly do), the intended parents purchase a separate surrogacy-friendly policy in your name for the duration of the pregnancy. Either way, you pay nothing out of pocket for pregnancy-related care. The premium for any supplemental policy is paid by the intended parents.

On top of medical coverage, the intended parents pay for a life insurance policy taken out in your name, naming a beneficiary you choose (typically your spouse or children). Coverage is usually $250,000 to $500,000, and it's in effect from the start of medications through several months postpartum.

Layer four: lost wages and time off

If you have a job, you're reimbursed for any wages you lose because of surrogacy. That includes appointment days, bedrest if it's medically ordered, recovery after delivery, and any time off your doctor signs you out for. Reimbursement is usually paid at your documented hourly or salary rate, and your partner's wages are covered too if they take time off for appointments or delivery.

If you don't work outside the home, you're typically paid a flat caregiver or non-working spouse allowance — often $2,000 to $4,000 — to account for the unpaid family work you're stepping back from during recovery.

Layer five: per-procedure fees

Specific milestones and procedures carry their own one-time payments. These come on top of base and allowances. The most common:

Layer six: legal, travel, and the things you don't see on the invoice

Some of the package isn't paid to you — it's paid for you. That still counts as part of what surrogacy is worth.

What "$60,000 to $100,000+" really refers to

The headline range refers to the cash that lands in your account — base plus allowances plus per-procedure fees. It does not include the value of medical coverage, life insurance, legal fees, travel, or supportive care, all of which the intended parents pay separately. If you added all of that in, the total economic value of a surrogacy journey is meaningfully higher than the cash number.

How agencies and states change the math

Three things shift compensation more than anything else.

State of residence. California, Connecticut, Illinois, New York, and Oregon tend to anchor the top of the range. Texas, Florida, and most Midwest states sit a tier lower. This is partly cost of living and partly how competitive the local surrogate pool is. We screen against state law and don't place candidates in states where surrogacy is restricted or off-limits, including Louisiana and Nebraska.

Experience. A surrogate who has completed a prior journey, especially one that ended in a healthy delivery, brings a known result to the table. Agencies pay a premium for that, sometimes $15,000 or more above what they'd pay a first-time surrogate at the same location.

The agency itself. Two agencies in the same state can have compensation packages that differ by $5,000 to $20,000. We know the partner agencies we work with and what each one pays. When we send you a profile that fits, we tell you the comp range up front so you can compare apples to apples.

When the money actually arrives

This is the part that surprises most candidates the most. Base pay doesn't start at signing. It starts when the medical cycle begins — typically two to four months after match. From there, base is paid out across the cycle, the pregnancy, and the postpartum window. The biggest payments come after a confirmed heartbeat (around week 8) and across the second and third trimesters.

Allowances start at the same time and run monthly through delivery. Per-procedure fees are paid as the procedure happens. Lost wages are reimbursed monthly against documentation.

The practical implication: you'll feel the effects of surrogacy compensation about three months after you sign your contract, and steadily across the next twelve. Nothing arrives all at once.

A note on taxes

Surrogate compensation is generally treated as taxable income in the United States. Agencies typically issue a 1099 at the end of each year for the cash compensation paid to you. Reimbursements for documented expenses (mileage, lost wages) and the value of medical and life insurance coverage are typically not taxable, but the line between "compensation" and "reimbursement" varies, and your contract will spell it out. We recommend setting aside a portion of base pay for taxes and talking to a CPA familiar with surrogacy in your first year. The agencies we work with can usually refer one.

Where comp gets matched to you

The questionnaire is where we learn enough to match you to the right comp range.

About 10 minutes. State of residence, pregnancy history, work situation. From there we know which partner agencies fit, and what each one pays. No commitment to apply further.

See if you qualify →