Anxiety is one of the most common mental health conditions in the United States, and it’s one of the most common questions Lucina receives from prospective donors. The honest answer: it depends on the severity, your treatment history, and what comes up in your psychological evaluation.
Mild to moderate anxiety that is well-managed, with or without medication, is generally not a disqualifier for egg donation. What screening looks for is stability, insight, and the ability to handle the physical and emotional demands of a donation cycle without being put at undue risk.
Here’s how the evaluation actually works, what types of anxiety affect eligibility, and what you should know before you apply.
Key Takeaways
- Anxiety alone is not an automatic disqualifier for egg donation.
- Mild to moderate anxiety that is stable and well-managed typically does not prevent donation.
- Every applicant undergoes a psychological evaluation as part of standard screening.
- Severe, unstable, or untreated anxiety that could be worsened by the donation process may result in deferral.
- Anxiety medications are evaluated individually and many do not disqualify donors.
Why Psychological Screening Is Part of Egg Donation
Egg donation involves hormone injections over several weeks, medical appointments, a retrieval procedure under sedation, and a recovery period. It also carries emotional weight, and some donors find certain parts of the process more intense than expected.
Quick Answer
Can you donate eggs if you have anxiety? Often yes. Mild to moderate anxiety that is stable and managed, whether through therapy, medication, or both, is generally not disqualifying. Severe anxiety, active crisis, or conditions that would be worsened by the process are more likely to result in deferral or disqualification. The psychological evaluation is where this gets assessed properly.
The psychological evaluation exists to protect donors, not to screen them out. A licensed mental health professional reviews your history and current functioning to assess two things: first, whether you fully understand what you’re agreeing to, and second, whether the donation process poses a disproportionate psychological risk to you given your mental health.
American Society for Reproductive Medicine (ASRM) guidelines require psychological screening for all egg donors. This applies regardless of whether you have a mental health history. The published donor screening research supports this as a protective measure for donor wellbeing.
📊 By the Numbers
The National Institute of Mental Health estimates that 31.1% of U.S. adults experience an anxiety disorder at some point in their lives. Among adults aged 18-29, anxiety disorders are among the most prevalent mental health conditions reported. A blanket disqualification for anxiety would eliminate a large portion of the eligible donor pool.
Can You Donate Eggs If You Have Anxiety? What Screening Evaluates
The psychological screening for egg donors is not a pass/fail test for mental health diagnoses. It’s a structured assessment of your current functioning, stability, and readiness for the process.
For applicants with anxiety, the evaluator typically looks at the following:
- Severity and stability. Is your anxiety mild, moderate, or severe? Is it currently stable, or are you in an active period of worsening symptoms?
- Treatment and management. Are you in therapy, on medication, or both? A well-managed condition with a clear treatment history is viewed very differently than an untreated one.
- Insight and awareness. Do you understand how the donation process might interact with your anxiety? Can you describe coping strategies you use day-to-day?
- History of crisis episodes. Have you had anxiety-related hospitalizations or periods of severe functional impairment? This history matters, though it doesn’t automatically end your application.
- Medication status. Are you currently on anxiolytics or other psychiatric medications? These are reviewed individually.
The evaluation is a conversation, not an interrogation. Be honest. A psychologist who specializes in third-party reproduction is trained to assess this fairly, and concealing your history creates risk for you if something comes up during the cycle that the team wasn’t prepared for.
Tip
Before your psychological evaluation, it helps to be able to describe your anxiety clearly: when it started, what typically triggers it, how you manage it day-to-day, and what your current functioning looks like. You don’t need clinical language. A clear, honest account of your experience helps the evaluator do their job accurately.
Types of Anxiety and How They Affect Eligibility
Anxiety covers a range of conditions that vary in severity, presentation, and how they interact with stressful medical processes. The American Psychological Association outlines the major anxiety disorder categories and how they differ.
- Generalized anxiety disorder (GAD). Chronic, low-to-moderate worry across multiple areas of life. Well-managed GAD is among the conditions least likely to disqualify a donor.
- Panic disorder. Episodic, intense anxiety attacks. History and current frequency matter. Infrequent, well-controlled panic disorder is treated differently than active, frequent attacks.
- Social anxiety disorder. Generally not a disqualifier unless severe enough to prevent attending appointments or communicating with the medical team.
- Specific phobias. A needle phobia is worth flagging given the injection protocol. It doesn’t automatically disqualify you, but discuss it honestly in your evaluation and with the medical team before starting stimulation.
- PTSD. Evaluated case by case. The stressors involved in egg donation (injections, sedation, medical setting) may intersect with certain trauma histories in ways the evaluator needs to assess.
- Severe or treatment-resistant anxiety. Conditions that are currently destabilizing daily functioning or that have resulted in recent crisis episodes are more likely to result in deferral until stability is established.
A Note on Hormones and Mood
The stimulation medications used in egg donation can affect mood and emotional state in some donors. For most this is mild and temporary. For donors with existing anxiety, discussing this proactively with both your mental health provider and the medical team before the cycle is the right move. That kind of preparation is exactly what the psychological evaluation is looking for.
What Happens Step by Step
Here’s how the process works for a donor with an anxiety history:
Takes about 15 minutes. The application asks about mental health history. Disclose your anxiety diagnosis, current treatment, and any medications honestly. This is the baseline the screening team works from.
The team reviews your disclosed history. If your anxiety history is complex, you may be asked for documentation from a treating provider before moving forward.
A licensed mental health professional conducts a structured interview. For donors with anxiety, this covers severity, treatment, coping strategies, and readiness. It’s a conversation, not a test you can fail by having anxiety.
Physical exam, bloodwork, ovarian reserve assessment (AMH and antral follicle count), STI testing, and genetic screening. Donors must be ages 19-31. Anxiety doesn’t affect the medical side unless medications are involved.
If both evaluations clear you, your profile joins our pool of 3,500+ screened donors. Intended parents search and match using ReflEggction® AI. Outstanding concerns are advised on by the team.
Standard donors earn $8,000-$15,000+ per cycle. Iconic donors from top-ranked universities earn up to $50,000 per cycle. All travel and medical costs are covered. You can donate up to 6 times total.
The full process from application to retrieval typically takes 6-10 weeks. For more on the physical side, our egg retrieval process guide covers every stage. You can also review the risks of egg donation so you know what to expect.
Ready to Apply?
Anxiety is common. It’s reviewed individually in your psychological evaluation, not used as a blanket disqualifier. The application takes about 15 minutes.
Start Your ApplicationAnxiety Medications and Egg Donation
Many anxiety medications are compatible with egg donation. SSRIs like sertraline and escitalopram, commonly prescribed for anxiety disorders, are among the medications most frequently reviewed and often cleared. Research published in Frontiers in Endocrinology has examined SSRI use in the context of ovarian stimulation protocols.
SNRIs, buspirone, and low-dose beta-blockers used for anxiety are also commonly evaluated without automatic disqualification.
Benzodiazepines (Xanax, Valium, Klonopin) are a different category. These controlled substances have sedative effects that may interact with retrieval anesthesia. Regular benzodiazepine use is more likely to result in deferral, particularly at higher doses. Occasional prescribed use is reviewed case by case.
Our dedicated article on donating eggs on antidepressants covers the medication side in more depth. Many of the same principles apply to anxiolytics.
Do not stop your medication before applying without speaking to your prescribing doctor first. Stopping psychiatric medication abruptly is unsafe and will not help your application. The medical team reviews your full history, not just your status at the moment of application.
Anxiety vs. Depression: How Screening Treats Each
Anxiety and depression often co-occur, and many donors have a history of both. They’re assessed separately but with similar frameworks.
Depression carries slightly different considerations because it involves mood regulation and risk of low mood or self-harm. Anxiety’s primary concern is whether the stress and physical demands of the cycle are manageable without putting the donor at disproportionate risk.
If you have both, both will be assessed in the psychological evaluation. Our article on donating eggs with depression covers what that evaluation looks for on the depression side.
What Tends to Disqualify vs. What Doesn’t
Based on published ASRM donor guidelines and standard egg bank practice, here’s a general picture:
- Generally not disqualifying: mild to moderate GAD or social anxiety, well-managed and stable; anxiety managed with therapy alone; SSRIs or SNRIs at stable doses; anxiety in sustained remission.
- Requires more review: panic disorder with recent or frequent episodes; PTSD with active symptoms; anxiety requiring multiple medications; history of anxiety-related hospitalizations.
- More likely to result in deferral: severe anxiety currently destabilizing daily functioning; active crisis; regular benzodiazepine use at higher doses; untreated anxiety with no current care plan.
These aren’t hard rules. They’re the general framework experienced evaluators apply. Individual circumstances always matter, and the egg donor screening guide explains how the full evaluation works in practice.
Related Questions in This Cluster
Donors with anxiety often ask about related conditions alongside this question:
- Have depression too? See depression and egg donation.
- On antidepressants or anxiolytics? See antidepressants and egg donation.
- Have ADHD? See ADHD and egg donation.
- Concerned about family mental health history? See family mental health history.
- Have an autoimmune condition? See autoimmune disease and egg donation.
The Bottom Line on Anxiety and Egg Donation
Anxiety doesn’t close the door on egg donation. For most donors with mild to moderate, well-managed anxiety, the psychological evaluation is a conversation rather than a barrier.
If your anxiety is currently severe or poorly managed, the timing may not be right. A deferral isn’t a permanent rejection. Coming back when your condition is more stable is a real path forward, and your history of managing it well will count in your favor.
Compensation starts at $8,000-$15,000+ per cycle for Standard donors. Iconic donors from top-ranked universities earn up to $50,000 per cycle. All travel and medical costs are covered. The application takes about 15 minutes. You can also read why donors choose Lucina before you apply.
Apply to Donate Eggs With Lucina
Anxiety is common and reviewed fairly in our psychological evaluation. If your condition is stable and managed, it’s worth applying to find out where you stand.
$8,000-$15,000+ per cycle (Standard) · Up to $50,000 per cycle (Iconic) · 6-10 week process
All medical and travel costs covered. Compensation paid after retrieval. Up to 6 donation cycles allowed per ASRM lifetime guidelines.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does having an anxiety diagnosis automatically disqualify me?
No. An anxiety diagnosis is not an automatic disqualifier. The psychological evaluation looks at your current stability, how your anxiety is managed, and whether the donation process poses a disproportionate risk to you given your specific history and circumstances.
Can I donate eggs if I take medication for anxiety?
Many anxiety medications are compatible with egg donation. SSRIs and SNRIs at stable doses are frequently reviewed and cleared. Benzodiazepines are evaluated more carefully due to potential interactions with retrieval anesthesia. Each medication is assessed individually.
Will the hormone injections make my anxiety worse?
Stimulation hormones can affect mood in some donors, including temporary increases in anxiety or emotional reactivity. For most donors this is mild and passes quickly. If you have existing anxiety, discuss this proactively with your mental health provider and the medical team before starting the cycle.
What if my anxiety is currently bad but has been managed before?
If your anxiety is currently severe or destabilizing, the evaluator may defer your application until your condition is more stable. A deferral is not a permanent rejection. Returning when your mental health is in a better place is a realistic option, and your prior history of managing it well counts in your favor.
Should I stop my anxiety medication before applying?
No. Do not stop psychiatric medication before applying without speaking to your prescribing doctor. Stopping abruptly is unsafe and won’t help your application. The screening team reviews your full history, not just your current status at the moment of application.























































