Egg donation is a meaningful decision, and a real medical commitment. The compensation is real. The schedule is real. The physical process is real. So is the impact on the family receiving your eggs.
Before you apply, the most useful thing you can do isn’t read about eligibility requirements. It’s ask yourself a few honest questions. Your answers will tell you more about whether you’re ready than any checklist.
At Lucina Egg Bank, we work with donors who are thoughtful about what they’re getting into. That tends to produce better experiences for everyone. Here are the 7 questions worth sitting with before you take the next step.
1. Why Do I Want to Become an Egg Donor?

This is the first question because it’s the most important. Your reasons don’t have to be purely altruistic, but they do need to be honest.
Most donors are motivated by some combination of things.
- Wanting to help someone build a family who can’t conceive on their own.
- Needing money for school, debt, rent, or a specific goal.
- Wanting to do something meaningful with their time and health.
Compensation is a completely valid reason to donate. Egg donor pay at Lucina starts at $8,000 per cycle for Standard donors and goes up to $50,000 per cycle for Iconic donors from top-ranked universities. That’s real money that reflects the real commitment involved.
What you want to avoid: feeling financially cornered into donation. If you’re in a situation where you need cash urgently and don’t feel like you could walk away if something about the process doesn’t feel right, it may be worth waiting until your situation is more stable.
The test isn’t whether money is part of it. The test is whether you feel genuinely free to say no at any point, and whether your reasons hold up after you’ve read through the full process.
2. Am I Comfortable With the Process and Its Risks?

Egg donation involves hormone injections, monitoring appointments, and a brief retrieval procedure under sedation. You don’t need to know every medical term before you apply, but you should feel informed enough to consent clearly.
Here’s what the process actually looks like.
- Screening. Bloodwork, ultrasounds, genetic testing, and a psychological evaluation. This phase confirms you’re medically and emotionally ready before anything else begins.
- Stimulation (10 to 14 days). Daily self-administered hormone injections to grow multiple follicles. Bloating, mild cramping, and PMS-like symptoms are common toward the end of this phase.
- Monitoring (5 to 9 visits). Early-morning blood draws and ultrasounds to track your ovarian response and adjust medication dosages.
- Egg retrieval. A 10 to 20-minute outpatient procedure under light sedation. You’ll rest for the remainder of that day and return to normal activity within 1 to 2 days for most donors.
The main risk is ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome (OHSS). Mild OHSS causes temporary bloating and discomfort and resolves on its own. Severe OHSS is rare and is caught early through the monitoring process.
If any part of the process makes you very anxious, that’s not a disqualifier. It’s information. Talk it through with a nurse or coordinator before you decide. Understanding what actually happens versus what you’re imagining usually closes the gap.
3. Can I Commit to the Time and Reliability This Requires?

This one catches more donors off guard than anything else. The medical part of donation is straightforward. The scheduling part is where things fall apart for people whose lives are unpredictable.
One full donation cycle spans roughly 3 to 4 months from application to recovery. Here’s how that time breaks down.
Over several weeks. Medical, genetic, and psychological evaluation before the cycle begins.
Daily injections at home plus 6 to 9 early-morning monitoring appointments. Medication timing is strict.
Retrieval day plus rest. Most donors return to normal activity within 48 hours.
The most common non-medical reason programs turn donors away is unreliability. Missed calls, late arrivals, and skipped monitoring visits don’t just inconvenience the clinic. They can compromise the cycle entirely.
Ask yourself honestly: Can I set alarms and stick to medication times? Can I protect a two-week window from exams, travel, or big events?
Can I show up to early-morning appointments consistently? If your life is genuinely unstable right now, it may be worth waiting. The process will still be here when the timing is better.
4. Can I Stay Within Travel Distance During the Active Cycle?

During the active cycle, you’ll have 7 to 12 visits for monitoring and retrieval. These appointments are often early morning. The schedule can shift by a day based on how your ovaries respond. You need to be close enough to get there quickly and reliably.
Lucina covers travel and lodging for donors who live outside the area. But even with that support, you’ll need a stretch of time, typically 2 to 3 weeks during the active phase, where you can treat appointments as the priority and stay nearby.
If you live far away, talk to the team early about logistics. The practical question isn’t whether we can get you here. It’s whether you can stay flexible enough once you’re here for the schedule to work.
5. Can I Provide Detailed Medical and Family History?

Genetic safety is central to egg donation. You’ll be asked for health information across three generations of your family. That includes your own history, your parents’, and your grandparents’.
Specifically, programs typically ask about major illnesses, cancers, heart disease, inherited conditions, serious mental health diagnoses, and ages at diagnosis or death where known.

A few missing details are normal and manageable. Saying “I have no information at all” about multiple family members can make donation impossible, since the geneticist needs enough information to assess hereditary risk.
If you’re not sure what you know, here’s how to prepare before you apply.
- Talk with family members. A single conversation with a parent or grandparent can fill in a lot of gaps.
- Write down what you know and what you don’t know. Partial information documented honestly is more useful than vague recollections.
- If you were adopted, share any records you have. Coordinators can help you work through limited information.
Our team can help you work through this during the application process, but coming prepared makes everything faster.
Lucina’s application takes about 15 minutes. We cover all medical and travel costs, and compensation starts at $8,000 per cycle. Apply and find out where you stand.
Apply as a Donor6. Am I Willing to Adjust My Birth Control if Needed?

Some birth control methods need to be stopped before donation can begin. Long-acting hormonal methods in particular can interfere with hormone testing and stimulation protocols.
- Methods that typically require stopping: Depo-Provera shots and hormonal implants (Nexplanon, Implanon). These may require several months for your natural cycle to return before donation can proceed.
- Methods that are usually easier to work around: Copper IUDs, many hormonal IUDs, and standard birth control pills. Your doctor may still adjust these for the cycle, but they don’t typically require a long washout period.
This question matters most if you’re on a long-acting method and are hoping to donate in the next few months. If stopping it isn’t something you’re comfortable with, or if the waiting period doesn’t fit your timeline, that’s worth knowing before you apply.
If you’re unsure how your specific method affects eligibility, egg donation disqualifiers covers this in detail, or you can ask a coordinator directly before applying.
7. Are My Periods Regular Off Hormonal Birth Control?

Regular cycles are a signal that your ovaries respond in a predictable, consistent way. That predictability matters for stimulation protocols.
Most programs look for periods that come every 21 to 35 days when you’re off hormonal suppression, with no long unexplained gaps and no ongoing irregular bleeding.
Irregular periods don’t automatically disqualify you, but they do flag a need for additional testing. If tests point to an ovulation problem, the program may decline the application for your own safety. Stimulation protocols depend on predictable ovarian function.
If your cycles are very irregular or have been absent for stretches of time, it’s worth seeing a gynecologist before applying. That appointment is worthwhile for your own health regardless of whether you end up donating.
If Your Answers Feel Right, Here’s What Happens Next
Asking yourself these questions before donating your eggs isn’t about finding reasons to say no. It’s about making sure that when you say yes, you mean it fully.
At Lucina, we take your safety and long-term health seriously. We walk you through every step in plain language, respect your time, and support your right to change your mind at any point before retrieval.
If reading through these questions still leaves you feeling ready and curious, the next step is straightforward. Our application takes about 15 minutes. We cover all travel and medical costs.
Standard donors earn $8,000 to $15,000+ per cycle, up to $90,000 over 6 cycles. Donors from top-ranked universities may qualify for the Iconic tier, which pays up to $50,000 per cycle.
For more on what the process involves, the how egg donation works guide covers the full picture. The pros and cons of donating eggs is worth reading too if you’re still weighing it.
We cover all medical appointments, travel, and medication costs. Compensation starts at $8,000 per cycle. Donors from top-ranked universities may qualify for the Iconic tier at up to $50,000 per cycle.
Apply as a DonorFrequently Asked Questions
Table of Contents
- 1. Why Do I Want to Become an Egg Donor?
- 2. Am I Comfortable With the Process and Its Risks?
- 3. Can I Commit to the Time and Reliability This Requires?
- 4. Can I Stay Within Travel Distance During the Active Cycle?
- 5. Can I Provide Detailed Medical and Family History?
- 6. Am I Willing to Adjust My Birth Control if Needed?
- 7. Are My Periods Regular Off Hormonal Birth Control?
- If Your Answers Feel Right, Here's What Happens Next
- Frequently Asked Questions





















































