The situation in Australia
Australian surrogacy law is state-based, not federal. Three jurisdictions (NSW, Queensland, ACT) have extraterritorial restrictions; the other five do not. Domestic altruistic faces 12–24 month waitlists at AU$80,000–130,000 total.
Surrogacy in Australia is legal — but only on an altruistic basis, and the law is state-based, not federal. Each state and territory has its own rules. Surrogates can only be reimbursed for reasonable expenses (typically AU$15,000–25,000), not compensated commercially. Domestic altruistic surrogacy faces 12–24 month waitlists at established Australian agencies, and total cost ranges AU$80,000–130,000.
The state-by-state question matters greatly when considering surrogacy abroad. Three jurisdictions — NSW, Queensland, and ACT — have extraterritorial restrictions that make it a criminal offence for residents to enter into commercial surrogacy arrangements abroad. Other states (Victoria, South Australia, Tasmania, Western Australia, Northern Territory) do not prohibit it extraterritorially.
Enforcement of the extraterritorial provisions has been historically rare, but the legal risk is real. Many Australian couples from these states still proceed abroad — but it is essential to consult an Australian family lawyer in your state before any decision. We do not advise anyone to break local laws.
What this means for you
If you're a married Australian couple considering surrogacy, the choice depends partly on which state you live in:
- If you live in VIC, SA, TAS, WA, or NT: going abroad is legally straightforward. Most Australian couples in these states choose between domestic altruistic (12–24 month wait, AU$80–130k) or going abroad (12–18 months, AU$65,800+).
- If you live in NSW, QLD, or ACT: commercial surrogacy abroad carries legal risk under your state's extraterritorial provisions. Some couples relocate (or have relocated) to a different state before starting; some accept the risk; some choose domestic altruistic surrogacy or the USA. Consult a state-based lawyer first.
For couples without legal restrictions in their state — Ukraine, Georgia, or Armenia offer faster, more predictable paths than waiting 2 years domestically. We coordinate all three.
Your three destinations
Three countries, three legal paths. Same all-inclusive pricing.
Ukraine
Fastest legal path
Birth certificate in your names from day one. No court proceedings.
Explore Ukraine →Georgia
No active war
Legal since 1997. One of the longest-established frameworks worldwide.
Explore Georgia →Armenia
Emerging destination
Clear law, strong medical infrastructure, immediate birth certificate.
Explore Armenia →Returning home with your baby
Returning to Australia with a baby born via surrogacy abroad is a well-established process. The federal level (citizenship) is straightforward; the state level (parentage orders) varies by state. We coordinate the foreign side; an Australian family lawyer in your state coordinates the home side.
Australian citizenship by descent
If at least one intended parent is an Australian citizen, your baby is eligible for Australian citizenship by descent. After the foreign birth certificate is issued, you apply through the Department of Home Affairs (DHA). DNA testing is typically required to confirm the genetic link to the Australian parent.
You'll need: foreign birth certificate, marriage certificate, proof of Australian citizenship, identification, and DNA test results. We handle the local document preparation; the Australian Embassy or Consulate processes the application. Once citizenship is granted, the baby applies for an Australian passport.
Bring the baby home
Once your baby has an Australian passport, you fly home as a family. Most Australian couples spend 3–5 weeks in the destination country between the birth and travel home, while citizenship documents process and DNA testing is completed at the Australian embassy.
State parentage order (if applicable)
State parentage orders for international surrogacy are complex and vary by state. In jurisdictions with extraterritorial restrictions (NSW, QLD, ACT), state courts may decline to issue parentage orders for commercial international arrangements. In other states, the foreign birth certificate may be recognised for many practical purposes.
An Australian family lawyer in your state will explain what is possible and what is required for school enrolment, Medicare, and other practical matters. We can refer you to lawyers experienced in international surrogacy in your state.
Important Australia-Specific Note
State-level parentage recognition is an area where Australia's law is genuinely complex. The federal citizenship process works smoothly; the state process can be less so. Practical issues (Medicare enrolment, school, inheritance) often work out, but formal parentage orders may not be available in all states for commercial international surrogacy. Engage a state-based family lawyer before starting your programme to plan realistically.
Other countries Australian couples sometimes consider
Honesty matters. Here are alternatives we don't operate in but you may have heard of:
- USA — gold standard for legal predictability and the most popular international choice for Australians. Surrogacy-friendly states (California, Nevada, Connecticut) issue pre-birth orders. But cost is AU$182,000–280,000+ (US$130,000–200,000+) — around three times more than our programmes. If budget allows, the USA is the safest bet legally.
- Australia (domestic altruistic) — 12–24 month waitlists, AU$80,000–130,000 total, state-by-state rules. Reliable for couples with patience and legally simplest for residents of NSW, QLD, ACT.
- Greece — legal for heterosexual couples. Smaller market, similar cost to Ukraine.
- Mexico — emerging destination. Less established legal framework.
- Colombia — emerging destination. Less established legal framework.
If you're set on a country we don't operate in, we'll tell you so honestly and point you elsewhere. We'd rather lose your enquiry than steer you wrong.
Frequently asked questions for Australian couples
Is it legal for me to do surrogacy abroad as an Australian citizen?
It depends on your state. Federal Australian law does not prohibit surrogacy abroad. However, three states (NSW, Queensland, ACT) have extraterritorial provisions making commercial surrogacy abroad a criminal offence for their residents. Victoria, South Australia, Tasmania, Western Australia, and the Northern Territory do not have extraterritorial restrictions. Consult a state-based lawyer first.
Has anyone been prosecuted under the extraterritorial provisions?
Enforcement has been historically rare — to our knowledge, there have been no successful criminal prosecutions of intended parents under these provisions. However, "rare" is not "never," and the legal risk is real. We are coordinators, not lawyers — we don't encourage breaking laws and strongly advise consulting a state-based family lawyer before any decision.
Will my baby be Australian?
If at least one intended parent is an Australian citizen, your baby is eligible for Australian citizenship by descent through the Department of Home Affairs. DNA testing is required to confirm the genetic link. Processing typically takes 2–4 weeks once DNA results are submitted, though the overall timeline (DNA test + application) usually runs 4–8 weeks.
How long will I be away from Australia?
Two trips: a short visit for embryo transfer (3–5 days, optional — many couples skip this) and the birth trip (3–5 weeks while DNA test is conducted at the Australian embassy and citizenship/passport are processed). Plan for 4–5 weeks for the birth trip.
What does it cost — total — for an Australian couple?
Programme: from AU$65,800 (Standard package, all-inclusive). Plus: flights AU$2,500–5,000, accommodation AU$5,000–8,000 for the birth stay, Australian state-based lawyer fees AU$3,000–8,000, DNA testing fees AU$500–1,000, miscellaneous AU$2,000. Total typically AU$80,000–90,000 — comparable to or less than domestic Australian altruistic surrogacy.
What if Ukraine becomes unsafe during our programme?
We have managed programmes through the war since February 2022 with no harm to families or surrogates. Our contingency plan includes relocating to Lviv (3 hours from the EU border) if needed. If you prefer to avoid Ukraine entirely, our Georgia and Armenia programmes are equivalent in cost and legal certainty. We have completed an Australian family's programme — Oliver Cibi from Adelaide.
Can I speak to an Australian family who has done this with you?
Yes. Oliver Cibi, an Australian client who completed his journey with Novaparent, has agreed to speak directly with prospective Australian intended parents about his experience. We can arrange a private introduction during your free consultation.