Why Surrogacy Laws Vary by State
There's no federal surrogacy law in the United States. Every state decides for itself — and the differences matter. Here's what "surrogacy-friendly" actually means, and the rough state-by-state landscape as of mid-2026.
The first surprise for a lot of prospective surrogates is that the United States doesn't regulate surrogacy at the federal level. Every state writes its own statute (or doesn't), and what's routine in California can be a months-long legal headache one state over. The state where you give birth — not where the intended parents live, not where the embryo was made — is the one that controls the legal piece. That's why agencies and matching services like Borne pay so much attention to your zip code.
This piece isn't legal advice. It's a clear map of the terrain, why it exists, and how it shapes your eligibility.
The three things state law actually controls
When people say a state is "surrogacy-friendly" or "unfriendly," they're usually referring to three specific protections that may or may not exist in the local statute or case law:
- Whether compensated gestational surrogacy is allowed at all. A small number of states either prohibit it outright or void the contracts.
- Whether a pre-birth order is available. A pre-birth order tells the hospital, before delivery, that the intended parents (not you) should be listed on the birth certificate. Without one, you can end up needing a post-birth adoption to fix parentage — a slow, intrusive process.
- Whether the law treats all intended parents equally. Single people, unmarried couples, same-sex couples, and intended parents who didn't contribute genetic material are protected in some states and excluded in others.
The rough three-tier map (mid-2026)
Most attorneys group US jurisdictions into roughly three tiers. This is a snapshot — the law moves, and Michigan flipped to fully permissive in April 2025 — but as of mid-2026 this is approximately where things stand:
The tier above is a planning shorthand, not the law itself. Within a "yellow" state, your county, your hospital, and your attorney can change the practical answer significantly. And the law moves: New York legalized compensated surrogacy in 2021, Michigan in 2025. The state-by-state picture in 2030 will not look like the picture today.
How this affects you as a surrogate
Three concrete ways:
Where you live determines whether you can carry
The law that matters is the law of the state where you'll deliver — which is almost always the state where you live. If you're in Louisiana or Nebraska, compensated gestational surrogacy isn't on the table at the moment, and we will tell you that clearly during your screening call rather than waste your time.
Where you live affects your pay
Compensation varies meaningfully by state. The general pattern is that green-tier states with strong protections — particularly California — sit at the top of the range because the legal certainty is more valuable to intended parents. Borne's overall range is $60,000–$75,000 for first-time surrogates and $75,000–$100,000+ for experienced surrogates, and where you fall in that range depends partly on geography.
Where you live affects how matching works
Some agencies match nationally; others concentrate their intended parents in a few states. If your state is yellow, the agency's network and your attorney's experience matter more — both can route around the wrinkles in your jurisdiction.
What "surrogacy-friendly" means for Borne
Our footer line — that Borne works only in surrogacy-friendly states — means we place candidates in jurisdictions where compensated gestational surrogacy is unambiguously legal, where pre-birth orders are available, and where the surrogate is protected as well as the intended parents. We don't bring on candidates from states where the legal picture would put them at risk. That's a no, not a maybe — and you'll never hear us promise around it.
If your state isn't a clear yes for compensated surrogacy, we'll say so on the screening call and explain why. It is not a verdict on you. It is a verdict on a statute.
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About 10 minutes. We'll check your state during screening and tell you exactly where you stand. No medical exams, no commitment.
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