Congelamento de óvulos: Portugal vs Brazil — cost, regulation and timelines
Editorial comparison between Portugal and Brazil for Congelamento de óvulos: median private cost, public coverage, regulation and timelines. Source: CFM Resolution 2.320/2022 (Brazil).
Patients comparing Portugal and Brazil for Congelamento de óvulos evaluate three objective dimensions: median private-sector cost (€2,500–€4,500 in Portugal vs €4,500–€9,000 in Brazil), public coverage (Portuguese SNS vs Conselho Federal de Medicina (CFM)) and the regulatory framework (Lei n.º 32/2006 vs Brazil's legislation). This page presents the verifiable data side by side.
Price of Congelamento de óvulos: Portugal vs Brazil
In Portugal, Congelamento de óvulos typically costs €2,500–€4,500 per private cycle (median ~€3,500). In Brazil, the equivalent range is €4,500–€9,000 (median ~€6,750). Portugal is, on average, ~48% cheaper than Brazil for this technique — the gap is explained by cost-of-living, lab costs and private-market competitive structure.
IMPORTANT: the "cycle price" rarely includes medication (~€1,500–€2,500 extra), annual cryopreservation beyond year one, or add-ons such as PGT. Request a detailed written quote before comparing. For an international patient, the total cost in Brazil also includes flights, accommodation (3–10 nights depending on protocol) and remote follow-up consultations — factors that can erase the base-price gap.
Public coverage: SNS vs Brazil's system
The Portuguese SNS covers free PMA cycles for eligible patients: up to age 40, no shared child with the same partner, and documented clinical indication. Waiting lists run 12–24 months at the main public units. Medication is partially reimbursed by SNS prescription.
In Brazil, SUS provides free cycles at limited public centres (Hospital Pérola Byington, MEAC); waiting list 2–4 years. The national regulator, Conselho Federal de Medicina (CFM), sets eligibility rules and maintains a national treatment registry comparable to Portugal's CNPMA.
For patients unwilling to wait for the SNS, the realistic economic comparison weighs: (a) median private cost in Portugal after three competing quotes; (b) total travel + treatment cost in Brazil; (c) audited clinic quality (published outcomes, ESHRE/IFFS membership) — not price alone.
Regulation and legal framework
Portugal regulates ART via Lei n.º 32/2006 (amended 2016, 2021), enforced by CNPMA and the Health Regulator (ERS). Each technique — IUI, IVF/ICSI, PGT, gamete donation — requires explicit licensing. Gamete donation is anonymous by default; offspring may access non-identifying donor data at age 18.
In Brazil: No federal ART law; regulated by CFM Resolution 2.320/2022 and ANVISA RDC 23/2011. The donation model is: Anonymous, altruistic donation (CFM 2.320/2022); gestational surrogacy allowed between relatives up to 4th degree.
For international patients, this comparison matters most in three scenarios: (1) access to techniques unavailable in Portugal (e.g. double anonymous donation with Spain's larger banks); (2) preference for identifiable vs anonymous donors (UK vs Portugal); (3) surrogacy, which is currently very restricted in Portugal — Brazil may or may not offer legal alternatives.
How to decide between Portugal and Brazil
Evaluate in this order: (1) clinical fit — confirm with your clinician that Congelamento de óvulos is indicated and that the technique is authorised in the country of choice; (2) legal compliance — verify your personal situation (age, marital status, sexual orientation) meets both countries' criteria; (3) total cost comparison — base price plus medication, travel, accommodation, follow-up; (4) auditable clinical quality — ask the clinic for published outcomes, ESHRE European IVF Monitoring registration and ISO 9001 or equivalent; (5) continuity of care — who follows you locally during the two-week post-transfer window and early pregnancy?
Our editorial team does not recommend choosing medical treatment on price alone. A €1,000–€3,000 gap between countries rarely justifies the indirect costs and logistical stress, especially in cycles with low probability of success (maternal age >40, low ovarian reserve). See our international patient guide and patient rights in Portugal.
Frequently asked questions
Is Congelamento de óvulos cheaper in Portugal or Brazil?
Private median: €3,500 in Portugal vs €6,750 in Brazil. Portugal is ~48% cheaper — excluding medication and travel.
Can I use Portuguese SNS coverage in Brazil?
No. SNS coverage applies only to treatments performed at CNPMA-authorised Portuguese centres. Cross-border EU reimbursement is limited to very specific cases.
Who regulates ART in Brazil?
Conselho Federal de Medicina (CFM) — official source: https://portal.cfm.org.br.
Is gamete donation anonymous in Brazil?
Anonymous, altruistic donation (CFM 2.320/2022); gestational surrogacy allowed between relatives up to 4th degree.
How long does Congelamento de óvulos take in Brazil?
Typically 2–4 weeks abroad with 2–3 trips (initial consult, partial monitoring via Portuguese clinic, retrieval + transfer at destination). Always ask the clinic for a detailed logistical plan.
Regulatory source: CFM Resolution 2.320/2022 (Brazil). Reviewed by editorial team on 2026-06-01.
Canonical: https://clinicadefertilidade.pt/en/compare-countries/brasil/congelamento-de-ovocitos
Fontes e autoridades
Conteúdo verificado com base em reguladores oficiais, sociedades científicas e legislação portuguesa.
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