The situation in Germany
Germany prohibits surrogacy domestically under the Embryonenschutzgesetz (1990), but does not criminalize intended parents who go abroad. Thousands of German couples have completed surrogacy abroad and brought their children home through citizenship by descent + Stiefkindadoption.
Surrogacy is completely prohibited in Germany under the Embryonenschutzgesetz (ESchG, Embryo Protection Act 1990). Both commercial and altruistic arrangements are illegal. It is a criminal offence for German fertility doctors and clinics to assist with surrogacy in any form.
However — and this is important — the German law penalizes doctors and intermediaries, not the intended parents themselves. Going abroad for surrogacy is not a criminal offence for German citizens under current law. There has been ongoing political debate about reform (a 2022 expert commission recommended legalizing altruistic surrogacy), but no change has been enacted.
The practical reality: thousands of German couples have completed surrogacy abroad and brought their children home. The legal route involves recognizing the genetic German father by application and the intending mother through Stiefkindadoption (step-child adoption). Federal courts have generally accepted this path. We coordinate the foreign side; a German family lawyer coordinates the German side.
What this means for you
If you're a married German couple considering surrogacy, your only practical path is going abroad. The choice is which country.
- Most predictable but expensive (USA): €114,400+ for the programme alone. Pre-birth orders in surrogacy-friendly states. Smoothest legal recognition by Germany.
- Most affordable & legally clear (Ukraine, Georgia, Armenia): from €41,400 all-inclusive. Married heterosexual couples named on birth certificates. Programme begins within weeks.
- EU-based (Greece): legal for heterosexual couples. Similar cost to Ukraine.
For German couples who want a clear legal framework abroad, predictable pricing, and want to begin soon — Ukraine, Georgia, and Armenia are usually the right choice. 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 Germany with a baby born via surrogacy abroad is a well-established process — thousands of German couples have done it. The legal route is more involved than for UK or Australian couples because of Germany's strict approach to motherhood, but it is well-mapped. We coordinate the foreign side; a German family lawyer (Familienanwalt) coordinates the German side.
German citizenship by descent
If the genetic father is a German citizen and married to the intending mother, your baby is eligible for German citizenship by descent. You apply at the German Embassy or Consulate in the destination country. DNA testing is required to confirm the genetic link to the German father.
You'll need: foreign birth certificate, marriage certificate, proof of German citizenship of the genetic father, identification, and DNA test results. The German embassy will issue a German passport for the baby once citizenship is confirmed. Processing typically takes 4–8 weeks.
Bring the baby home
Once your baby has a German passport, you fly home as a family. Most German couples spend 3–5 weeks in the destination country between the birth and travel home, while DNA testing is conducted at the German embassy and the passport is issued.
Stiefkindadoption (step-child adoption)
This is the unique-to-Germany step. Under German law, the surrogate is initially considered the legal mother — even if she is not genetically related. The German genetic father is recognized as legal father, but the intending mother must apply for Stiefkindadoption (step-child adoption) to become a legal parent.
The process involves Jugendamt (youth welfare office) home visits, a family court application, and typically takes 12–24 months after returning home. A German family lawyer (Familienanwalt) experienced in international surrogacy is essential. We can refer you.
Important Germany-Specific Note
Engage a German family lawyer (Familienanwalt) before starting your surrogacy programme, not after. Decisions about which parent is genetic, choice of country, and how documents are structured significantly affect the Stiefkindadoption process. The 2022 Reform Commission recommended legalizing altruistic surrogacy in Germany; if enacted, this may simplify recognition. Until then, careful planning is essential. Federal courts have generally accepted Stiefkindadoption following international surrogacy, but each case depends on details.
Other countries German 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 very popular among German couples. Surrogacy-friendly states (California, Nevada, Connecticut) issue pre-birth orders, which can simplify German recognition. But cost is €114,400–176,000+ (US$130,000–200,000+) — around three times more than our programmes. If budget allows, the USA is the safest bet legally.
- Greece — legal for heterosexual couples. EU-based. Similar cost to Ukraine. Some German couples prefer this for legal recognition reasons within the EU.
- 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 German couples
Is it legal for me to do surrogacy abroad as a German citizen?
Yes. The Embryonenschutzgesetz (ESchG) penalizes German fertility doctors, clinics, and intermediaries who facilitate surrogacy in Germany. It does not criminalize intended parents who go abroad. Returning home, you go through the standard process: German citizenship by descent for the genetic father, and Stiefkindadoption for the intending mother.
Will my baby be German?
If the genetic father is a German citizen and is married to the intending mother, the baby is eligible for German citizenship by descent. DNA testing is required at the German embassy. The genetic father becomes legal father by application. Total process: 4–8 weeks.
What if neither of us is genetically related to the baby?
This is much more complex. German citizenship by descent requires a genetic link. Couples using both donor egg and donor sperm cannot pass German citizenship to the baby. In such cases, the family typically needs to remain in the destination country longer or pursue more complex legal arrangements. Consult a German family lawyer first if this applies to you.
How long does Stiefkindadoption take?
Typically 12–24 months after returning to Germany. The process involves Jugendamt (youth welfare office) home visits, document preparation, and a family court application. The mother is not the legal mother during this period — but she is recognized in practical matters (school, healthcare, daily life). A German family lawyer guides the process.
How long will I be away from Germany?
Two trips: embryo transfer (3–5 days, optional) and the birth trip (3–5 weeks while DNA testing and citizenship documents process at the German embassy). Plan for the longer end — DNA testing is required and adds time compared to UK or Irish processes.
What does it cost — total — for a German couple?
Programme: from €41,400 (Standard package, all-inclusive). Plus: flights €1,000–2,500, accommodation €3,000–6,000 for the birth stay, German Familienanwalt fees €5,000–12,000 (Stiefkindadoption is a longer process), DNA testing €500, miscellaneous €1,500. Total typically €52,000–65,000.
Will the 2022 Reform Commission recommendations change anything?
The 2022 expert commission recommended legalizing altruistic surrogacy in Germany under specific conditions. As of April 2026, no legislation has been passed. If reform happens, it may simplify recognition for couples returning from abroad. Until then, the current Stiefkindadoption process applies.
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.
Can I speak to a German family who has done this with you?
Yes — with their permission. During your free consultation, we can arrange a private introduction. We are still building our roster of completed German-couple cases, so introductions may include other European families with similar experiences.