Surrogate Mother Requirements Checklist: Are You Qualified?
Before you begin the application process, you need a clear picture of what agencies, fertility clinics, and intended parents expect from candidates. Surrogate mother requirements exist to protect everyone involved — the carrier, the intended parents, and the child. Meeting these standards is not optional. If you fall short on even one major criterion, your application will be paused or denied until the issue is resolved.
I am Amanda Chen, a matching specialist at SurrogateMatchers. I have reviewed thousands of applications over the past seven years, and I can tell you that the most common reason for rejection is not medical — it is a lack of preparation. Women who understand the surrogate mother qualifications before they apply save weeks of back-and-forth and position themselves for faster matching with intended parents.
This guide covers every requirement in detail, explains the reasoning behind each one, and tells you exactly what to do if you are on the borderline of meeting a particular standard.
Surrogate Mother Qualifications Checklist
The table below summarizes the core surrogate mother requirements enforced by the majority of agencies and fertility clinics in the United States. Use this as your quick-reference self-assessment before submitting an application.
| Requirement Category | Standard | Flexibility |
|---|---|---|
| Age | 21-42 years old | Some programs accept 43-44 with recent OB records |
| BMI | 19-33 | Some clinics accept up to 35 with strong health markers |
| Prior Pregnancy | At least one live birth; currently raising a child | No exceptions at any major agency |
| Pregnancy Complications | No history of preeclampsia, placenta previa, or gestational diabetes requiring insulin | Case-by-case review with medical records |
| C-Section History | Maximum 3 prior C-sections | Some clinics cap at 2 |
| Smoking/Tobacco | Nicotine-free for 12+ months | No exceptions |
| Drug Use | No recreational drug use; clean drug screen | Marijuana use must cease 12+ months prior |
| Alcohol | Willing to abstain during pregnancy | Standard expectation for all carriers |
| Mental Health | No active untreated conditions; pass MMPI-2 screening | Managed conditions with provider clearance are acceptable |
| Criminal Background | No felony convictions for you or household adults | Minor misdemeanors reviewed case-by-case |
| Government Assistance | Not currently receiving state welfare benefits | Some agencies make exceptions for WIC or Medicaid |
| Stable Housing | Safe, stable living environment | Renting is acceptable; frequent moves are flagged |
| Relationship Status | Single or partnered; partner must consent and participate | No marital status requirement |
| Citizenship/Residency | U.S. citizen or permanent resident | Some agencies accept visa holders with stable residency |
If you check every box in this table, you meet the baseline surrogate mother qualifications. But meeting the minimum is different from being a strong candidate — keep reading for the nuances that separate approved applicants from those who are waitlisted or asked to reapply later.
What Is Required to Be a Surrogate Mother?
Let me walk through each requirement in depth so you understand not just what is required to be a surrogate mother, but why each standard exists and how agencies evaluate candidates against it.
Prior Pregnancy and Delivery
This is the most absolute of all surrogate mother requirements. You must have carried and delivered at least one child, and you must be currently raising that child. No agency or fertility clinic will waive this rule under any circumstances.
The reasoning is straightforward: pregnancy is unpredictable. Agencies need documented evidence that a surrogate mother candidate’s body can carry a pregnancy to term without life-threatening complications. They also need to know that you understand — from firsthand experience — the physical demands, emotional shifts, and recovery process that pregnancy involves.
Currently raising a child is a separate surrogate mother requirement with its own logic. It demonstrates that you have navigated the postpartum period, that you understand the bond between parent and child from a lived perspective, and that you can distinguish between carrying a child for yourself and carrying one for another family. This distinction is critical to the psychological health of the surrogacy arrangement.
Age Range
The 21 to 42 age window for surrogate mother eligibility reflects both medical evidence and legal considerations. Below 21, developmental maturity is a concern — surrogacy contracts involve complex legal and emotional commitments that require adult judgment and life experience. The psychological screening process evaluates this maturity, and younger candidates often lack the life stability that agencies require.
Above 42, pregnancy risks increase measurably: gestational hypertension, gestational diabetes, placental abnormalities, and chromosomal complications all become more likely with advancing maternal age. Fertility clinics set these thresholds based on peer-reviewed obstetric data, not arbitrary cutoffs.
Some programs extend surrogate mother eligibility to 44 for carriers who demonstrate excellent recent health markers: normal blood pressure, healthy BMI, uncomplicated recent pregnancy, and a fertility clinic willing to approve the transfer based on a thorough medical evaluation. But these exceptions are rare and require significantly more documentation.
BMI Standards
A BMI between 19 and 33 is the standard window for surrogate mother eligibility. This range is set by fertility clinics based on embryo transfer success rates. Peer-reviewed research shows that BMI above 35 correlates with lower implantation rates, higher miscarriage risk, and increased pregnancy complications including gestational diabetes and hypertensive disorders.
Some clinics accept surrogate mother candidates up to BMI 35 if other health indicators are strong — normal blood sugar, normal blood pressure, no insulin resistance, and a history of uncomplicated pregnancies at a higher BMI. If your BMI is 34-35, ask your agency whether they work with clinics that have expanded ranges for candidates with otherwise excellent health profiles.
If your BMI is above 35, most programs will ask you to lose weight before accepting your surrogate mother application. This is not a judgment on your body or your worth as a person — it is a clinical decision based on transfer success data and pregnancy safety outcomes. Many women have successfully qualified after modest weight loss of 15-25 pounds.
Mental Health
Surrogate mother qualifications include a clean psychological screening. The standard tool is the MMPI-2 (Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory), a 567-question assessment administered by a licensed psychologist. This test evaluates emotional stability, personality structure, and potential risk factors for psychological distress during the surrogacy journey.
Having a diagnosed mental health condition does not automatically disqualify a surrogate mother candidate. Managed depression or anxiety — treated with therapy, medication, or both — is acceptable as long as:
- Your treating provider confirms stability for the past 12+ months with written documentation
- Your medication is pregnancy-safe or you and your doctor have a plan for transitioning to pregnancy-safe alternatives before the embryo transfer
- The MMPI-2 results fall within normal ranges without clinically significant elevations
Conditions that typically disqualify surrogate mother candidates include active bipolar disorder with recent episodes, uncontrolled PTSD, personality disorders, active eating disorders, and any condition requiring psychiatric hospitalization within the past two years.
Substance Use
Requirements to be a surrogate mother include strict substance standards. Nicotine, marijuana, and recreational drugs must be out of your system, and you must demonstrate a sustained period of abstinence verified by testing.
- Nicotine: 12 months nicotine-free. This includes cigarettes, vaping, smokeless tobacco, and nicotine patches or gum. Agencies verify abstinence with a cotinine test, which detects nicotine metabolites in your system.
- Marijuana: Even in states where cannabis is legal, surrogacy requires 12 months of abstinence. THC is stored in fat tissue longer than most substances, and fertility clinics test for it as part of their screening panel.
- Other recreational drugs: Any history of hard drug use — cocaine, methamphetamine, heroin, non-prescribed opioids — within the past five years is typically disqualifying.
- Prescription medications: Most prescription drugs are acceptable for surrogate mother candidates. The fertility clinic will review your complete medication list for pregnancy compatibility and may request adjustments from your prescribing physician.
Criminal Background
Background checks cover every surrogate mother applicant and every adult living in the household. Felony convictions for any household member are disqualifying at nearly all agencies. Misdemeanors are reviewed case-by-case: a DUI from 10 years ago with no recurrence is viewed very differently than a recent domestic violence charge or multiple drug-related offenses.
Be upfront about your history from the beginning of the surrogate mother application. Agencies will discover it during the background check regardless, and finding that a surrogate mother applicant withheld information damages trust irreparably — often more than the underlying issue itself would have.
Disqualifications for Surrogate Mothers
Beyond failing to meet a specific standard, certain conditions result in immediate disqualification. Understanding disqualifications for surrogate mothers saves you the time and emotional investment of applying when approval is not possible.
Absolute disqualifications (no exceptions at any reputable agency):
- Never having been pregnant or delivered a child
- Active substance abuse or failed drug screen during the application process
- HIV-positive status or active hepatitis B/C
- Current pregnancy at the time of application
- History of postpartum psychosis in any prior pregnancy
- More than three prior C-sections (some clinics set the limit at two)
- Untreated or unstable serious mental illness with recent episodes
- Active cancer treatment or unresolved cancer diagnosis
Conditional disqualifications (may be waived with medical documentation and agency review):
- Gestational diabetes managed with diet alone (not insulin) in a prior pregnancy
- Single prior episode of mild preeclampsia that resolved without serious complications
- BMI between 33 and 35 with strong overall health markers and uncomplicated pregnancy history
- History of a single early miscarriage without recurrence in subsequent pregnancies
- Antidepressant use with provider clearance and pregnancy-safe medication confirmed
- Living in a state with ambiguous surrogacy laws (may require out-of-state delivery planning)
- History of preterm delivery between 34-36 weeks with no NICU admission
If you fall into a conditional category, do not self-disqualify before applying. Submit your application and let the agency evaluate your specific situation with their medical advisory team. Many women who assume they are disqualified are actually approved after thorough medical review.
Age and BMI Requirements
These two factors deserve deeper analysis because they are the most common reasons borderline candidates are paused rather than denied outright.
Age: The Edges of the Window
At the young end, 21-year-old surrogate mother candidates face scrutiny about life stability and emotional readiness. Agencies want to see that you have completed enough of your own family-building to feel settled in your identity as a parent. A 21-year-old with one child, stable employment, and a supportive partner is a viable candidate. A 21-year-old who delivered six months ago and is still navigating postpartum adjustment and new parenthood is not yet ready for the additional demands of a surrogacy journey.
At the older end, surrogate mother candidates over 40 must provide substantially more recent medical documentation than younger applicants. Agencies typically require:
- Obstetric records from your most recent pregnancy (within the past 5 years is strongly preferred, though this is evaluated in context)
- Current lab work including hormone levels (FSH, AMH, estradiol) to assess reproductive health
- Cardiology clearance if you have any cardiovascular risk factors, family history of heart disease, or elevated blood pressure
- A letter from your OB/GYN explicitly confirming that another pregnancy is medically appropriate given your age and health profile
If you are 40-42 and meet these documentation standards, you remain a viable surrogate mother candidate. The pool of intended parents willing to match with a surrogate mother over 40 is smaller but it absolutely exists — particularly among parents who prioritize experience and emotional maturity over age alone.
BMI: Working Within the Range
If your BMI is slightly above 33, here are practical strategies for meeting surrogate mother requirements:
- Get pre-qualified with a specific clinic: Some fertility clinics have higher BMI thresholds than others. Ask your agency which partner clinics they work with and what each clinic’s specific cutoffs are.
- Lose weight before applying: Even a modest weight loss of 10-15 pounds can bring you within the standard surrogate mother range. Agencies appreciate candidates who take proactive steps to meet the criteria.
- Provide additional health documentation: Normal A1C (below 5.7%), normal blood pressure (below 130/80), and normal lipid panel results can support an exception request at clinics with flexible BMI standards.
- Focus on body composition: If you are muscular and your BMI overstates your body fat percentage, a body composition analysis via DEXA scan may support your case by showing that your lean mass accounts for the elevated number.
Can You Be a Surrogate Mother Without Having Kids?
This is one of the most frequently asked questions I receive: can you be a surrogate mother without having kids? The answer is no. Every major agency and fertility clinic in the United States requires that you have carried and delivered at least one child and are currently raising that child in your household or care.
The reasoning spans medical, psychological, and legal dimensions:
Medical: A first pregnancy is inherently unpredictable. Conditions like preeclampsia, placental abruption, and gestational diabetes often present without warning during a first pregnancy. Agencies need evidence that a surrogate mother has handled a pregnancy successfully before entrusting her with the responsibility of carrying someone else’s embryo.
Psychological: Women who have not experienced pregnancy and parenthood cannot fully appreciate the emotional complexity of carrying a child for another family. The ability to distinguish between your role as a carrier and the intended parents’ role as the child’s family requires firsthand experience with both the physical reality of pregnancy and the emotional reality of child-rearing. This is why can you be a surrogate without having kids is always answered with a firm no — it is not about gatekeeping, but about protecting all parties.
Legal: Courts reviewing surrogacy agreements examine the surrogate mother’s qualifications as part of their assessment. A surrogate mother candidate without prior pregnancy experience presents a legal vulnerability — opposing counsel could argue that the carrier could not give fully informed consent to the arrangement without understanding from personal experience what pregnancy entails. This weakens the enforceability of the contract.
If you have been pregnant but experienced a loss (stillbirth, neonatal death) and are not currently raising a child, most agencies will unfortunately decline your surrogate mother application. The requirement is specifically a living child in your custody or care.
What If I Am Pregnant with My First Child Now?
You cannot apply to be a surrogate mother while pregnant. If this is your first pregnancy, you will need to deliver, recover for at least 12 months, and then apply. The 12-month recovery period ensures your body has returned to its pre-pregnancy baseline and that you have had time to process the experience of becoming a parent before pursuing the additional commitment of a surrogacy journey.
How to Strengthen Your Application
Meeting the minimum surrogate mother requirements gets your application in the door. Strengthening your surrogate mother application moves you to the front of the matching queue and attracts more interest from intended parents. Here is what separates good surrogate mother candidates from great ones.
Medical Preparation
- Schedule a preconception checkup with your OB/GYN before applying. Request a full panel: CBC, metabolic panel, thyroid function, STI screening, pap smear, and urinalysis. Having these results on file when you apply demonstrates proactive health management.
- Get your dental work done. Dental infections during pregnancy can cause systemic complications, and untreated dental issues are a surprisingly common reason for delayed medical clearance. Agencies view recent dental clearance as a positive indicator.
- Update your vaccinations. Confirm that your MMR, Tdap, and varicella titers are current. The fertility clinic will check these during screening, so having them up to date in advance prevents delays and additional appointments.
- Request your complete obstetric records from every hospital and provider who managed your pregnancies. This is the single biggest bottleneck in the surrogate mother application process — records requests take two to four weeks to process, and starting early can accelerate your entire timeline by a month or more.
Psychological Readiness
- Process your motivations honestly. Why do you want to do this? Financial benefit is a valid reason, but the best candidates also express genuine desire to help a family that cannot carry their own pregnancy. Your psychological screening will explore this in depth, and authenticity matters more than having a “perfect” answer.
- Prepare your support system. Talk to your partner, your parents, your close friends. Make sure the people in your inner circle understand the commitment and are genuinely on board — not just tolerating your decision, but actively willing to help during the pregnancy.
- Research the emotional arc of surrogacy. Read accounts from women who have completed journeys. Understand the common emotional challenges: attachment dynamics, hormone-driven mood shifts from medications, post-delivery adjustment, and navigating the evolving relationship with intended parents over 12+ months.
Profile Optimization
Once you are approved, your surrogate mother profile enters the matching database that intended parents search. Strengthening your profile accelerates how quickly you match:
- Write a genuine personal statement. Avoid generic phrases like “I love being pregnant” or “I want to give the gift of life.” Instead, share a specific moment or story that illustrates why surrogacy appeals to you. Parents respond to authenticity and specificity.
- Use a warm, natural photo. Professional headshots feel corporate and impersonal. A candid photo of you with your family, outdoors, or doing something you enjoy performs significantly better in matching because it lets parents see you as a real person.
- Be specific about preferences. Instead of “flexible on everything,” state your actual preferences about communication, delivery, postpartum contact, and selective reduction. Parents respect candidates who know what they want because it signals emotional clarity and honest self-awareness.
How to Qualify to Be a Surrogate Mother: State-by-State Considerations
Surrogate mother requirements vary by state due to differences in surrogacy law. If you want to know how to qualify to be a surrogate mother in your specific state, here are the key variables that affect your eligibility and your experience.
Surrogacy-friendly states (California, Nevada, Connecticut, Maine, New Hampshire, Delaware, Washington D.C.): These jurisdictions have clear statutes or established case law supporting gestational surrogacy. Pre-birth parentage orders are routinely granted, meaning the intended parents are named on the birth certificate from day one. Surrogate mothers in these states are in the highest demand and often receive top-tier compensation.
Moderately supportive states (Texas, Florida, Illinois, Oregon, Pennsylvania, New Jersey): Surrogacy is practiced and generally upheld by courts, but the legal framework may be less codified. Some of these states require post-birth adoption proceedings rather than pre-birth parentage orders, which adds legal complexity and cost for the intended parents.
Restrictive states (Michigan, Louisiana, Nebraska, Indiana): These states have statutes that prohibit or severely restrict paid surrogacy. If you live in a restrictive state, you may still qualify by working with an agency that arranges for delivery in a more favorable jurisdiction — but this adds logistical complexity, travel requirements, and additional expense.
Ambiguous states (most remaining states): No explicit statute for or against surrogacy. Arrangements proceed on a case-by-case basis, relying on favorable court precedent or attorney-drafted contracts. Candidates in ambiguous states should work with reproductive attorneys who have successfully completed surrogacy arrangements in their specific jurisdiction and can speak to relevant case law.
Understanding your state’s position is part of what is required to be a surrogate mother in practical terms. Your agency will assess your state’s legal climate during the application process and advise you on any additional steps needed.
Do I Qualify to Be a Surrogate Mother? Self-Assessment
If you are still asking “do I qualify to be a surrogate mother,” run through this rapid self-assessment:
- Are you between 21 and 42 years old? Yes / No
- Is your BMI between 19 and 33? Yes / No
- Have you delivered at least one child and are you currently raising a child? Yes / No
- Were your pregnancies free of serious complications (no preeclampsia requiring magnesium, no placental abruption, no premature delivery before 36 weeks)? Yes / No
- Have you had three or fewer C-sections? Yes / No
- Are you nicotine-free for at least 12 months? Yes / No
- Are you free of recreational drug use? Yes / No
- Do you have a stable living situation? Yes / No
- Are you willing to undergo psychological screening? Yes / No
- Are you a U.S. citizen or permanent resident? Yes / No
If you answered “Yes” to all ten questions, you likely meet the surrogate mother requirements. The next step is to apply through a reputable agency or matching platform. Our team at SurrogateMatchers can walk you through the application in detail and provide personalized feedback within two weeks of submission.
If you answered “No” to one or two questions, do not give up. Contact an agency to discuss your specific situation — conditional disqualifications are reviewed individually, and you may still be eligible after further evaluation or after addressing the specific concern.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the most important surrogate mother requirements?
The three most critical requirements are: (1) at least one prior successful pregnancy and delivery with a living child you are currently raising, (2) age between 21 and 42, and (3) BMI between 19 and 33. These are non-negotiable at virtually every program. Beyond these, mental health stability, substance-free status, and clean criminal background round out the core qualifications.
Can you be a surrogate mother without having kids of your own?
No. You must have delivered at least one child and be currently raising that child. This ensures you understand pregnancy from personal experience and can distinguish between your role as a carrier and the intended parents’ bond with their child. No reputable agency waives this requirement under any circumstances.
Who can be a surrogate mother?
Women between 21 and 42 who have delivered at least one healthy child, maintain a BMI of 19-33, are nicotine- and drug-free, pass psychological screening, and have a stable living environment can pursue this path. U.S. citizenship or permanent residency is also required by most programs.
Do surrogate mother requirements differ between agencies?
The core medical and psychological standards are consistent across reputable agencies. Minor variations exist — some agencies cap BMI at 32 instead of 33, some extend the age range to 44, and some are more flexible on prior C-section count. These differences are small, and shopping for the most lenient agency is not recommended. Apply where you feel supported and well-matched with the organization’s values and communication style.
What disqualifies you from being a surrogate mother?
Absolute disqualifiers include: never having been pregnant, active substance use, more than three C-sections, HIV or active hepatitis, current pregnancy, history of postpartum psychosis, and felony criminal convictions for household members. See the full list of disqualifications for surrogate mothers in the section above for both absolute and conditional categories.
How to qualify to be a surrogate mother if my BMI is slightly high?
If your BMI is between 33 and 35, you may still qualify with additional health documentation: normal blood sugar (A1C below 5.7%), normal blood pressure (below 130/80), normal lipid panel, and uncomplicated pregnancy history at your current weight. Some fertility clinics have expanded BMI thresholds. Your agency can identify which partner clinics are most flexible. Losing even 10-15 pounds before applying can bring you within the standard range.
Can I be a surrogate mother if I take antidepressants?
Yes, in most cases. Managed depression treated with pregnancy-safe SSRIs — such as sertraline (Zoloft) or fluoxetine (Prozac) — does not disqualify you. Your prescribing provider must confirm at least 12 months of stability, and the fertility clinic will review your specific medication for pregnancy compatibility. Your psychological screening will also evaluate your overall emotional readiness for the demands of a surrogacy journey.
What if I had gestational diabetes in a prior pregnancy?
Gestational diabetes managed through diet and exercise alone is usually not disqualifying. Gestational diabetes requiring insulin is more concerning and is reviewed case-by-case with your complete medical records. If your blood sugar returned to normal after delivery and your current A1C is within the healthy range, many programs will approve your application after medical review by their advisory team.
Your Next Step
Understanding surrogate mother requirements is the first step. Taking action is the second. If you meet the qualifications outlined in this guide, the path forward is to apply to become a surrogate mother through our matching platform. Our team reviews every application individually and provides personalized feedback within two weeks of submission.
For information on what you can expect to earn, visit our breakdown of how much surrogate mothers get paid. If you are an intended parent exploring the other side of this process, our guide to getting a surrogate mother walks you through matching from the parent perspective.
The families waiting for a carrier like you are real people with real dreams. If you meet the requirements, your decision to step forward can change their lives — and yours.