Medically reviewed by Dr. Shweta Agarwal, MBBS, DGO. Last updated: June 2026.
Information on this page is educational and does not replace a medical consultation. Outcomes depend on individual clinical factors.
The thaw and transfer are carried out in our in-house embryology lab by Senior Clinical Embryologist Aayush Agarwal, Ph.D., with the cycle planned by Dr. Shweta Agarwal (MBBS, DGO). In Marathi and Hindi, FET is referred to as फ्रोझन एम्ब्रियो ट्रान्सफर, a step within "test tube baby" (टेस्ट ट्यूब बेबी) treatment.
Why is FET increasingly preferred?
Frozen embryo transfer has become a routine and often preferred approach because separating the transfer from the stimulation cycle can be safer and gives more flexibility. The main reasons are:
- Avoiding OHSS (the "freeze-all" strategy): After ovarian stimulation, hormone levels are high and the uterine environment is not always ideal. For women at risk of ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome (OHSS) — including those with high AMH or PCOS — all embryos can be frozen and transferred in a later cycle, which removes the OHSS risk associated with a fresh transfer.
- Letting the body recover: A separate cycle allows hormone levels to return to baseline and the uterine lining to be prepared on its own, rather than during the artificial hormonal surge of stimulation.
- Allowing genetic testing (PGT): When preimplantation genetic testing is planned, embryos are frozen while results are awaited, then a tested embryo is transferred in a later FET.
- Timing and flexibility: FET can be scheduled around the optimal endometrial window, around medical needs, or around family planning — and surplus embryos from one stimulation can be used across several future attempts.
How is the uterus prepared — natural vs medicated cycle?
Before a frozen embryo is transferred, the uterine lining (endometrium) is prepared so it is receptive to implantation. There are two main approaches, chosen to suit your cycle:
- Natural-cycle FET: Used for women with regular, predictable ovulation. The cycle is monitored by ultrasound and hormone tests, and the transfer is timed to your natural ovulation, with minimal or no medication.
- Medicated (hormone-prepared) FET: Oestrogen and then progesterone are given to build and prepare the lining on a controlled schedule. This suits women with irregular cycles or where precise timing is needed, and gives flexibility over the transfer date.
Your doctor recommends the approach that fits your cycle, with monitoring to confirm the lining has reached an appropriate thickness before the transfer is scheduled.
What does the FET cycle involve, step by step?
An FET cycle is simpler than the original IVF cycle — there is no ovarian stimulation or egg retrieval:
- Endometrial preparation: The uterine lining is prepared by a natural or medicated cycle, monitored by ultrasound (and hormone tests) until it is suitably thick and receptive.
- Embryo thaw: On the day of transfer, the selected embryo is warmed (thawed) in the laboratory and assessed for survival. Vitrified blastocysts generally survive thawing well.
- Embryo transfer: The thawed embryo is loaded into a fine, soft catheter and gently placed into the uterus under ultrasound guidance — a quick, usually painless outpatient procedure needing no sedation, comparable to a routine speculum examination.
- Luteal phase support: Progesterone (and sometimes oestrogen) supports the lining to help implantation.
- Pregnancy test: A blood beta-hCG test about 10–14 days after the transfer confirms the result.
You can usually return to normal activity the same day as the transfer.
Fresh vs frozen transfer — what's the honest picture?
Both fresh and frozen transfers are established, effective approaches, and neither is universally "better" — the right choice depends on your situation. A fresh transfer places an embryo in the same cycle as egg retrieval. A frozen transfer places it in a later, separately prepared cycle.
A frozen transfer is generally preferred when:
- There is a risk of OHSS (a freeze-all is the safest course).
- Genetic testing (PGT) is being done.
- The uterine lining or hormone levels in the stimulation cycle are not ideal.
- Flexibility in timing is needed.
A fresh transfer may be appropriate when none of these apply and the cycle conditions are favourable. The decision is individualised by Dr. Shweta Agarwal based on your hormone levels, lining, OHSS risk and embryo status — not on a single headline figure. Reaching transfer, fresh or frozen, does not guarantee pregnancy, which still depends on age, embryo quality and uterine factors.
What does a frozen embryo transfer cost?
An FET cycle generally costs less than a full IVF cycle, because it does not involve ovarian stimulation medication, egg retrieval, or fertilisation. The cost covers endometrial preparation and monitoring, embryo thaw, and the transfer; ongoing embryo storage may be billed separately. You receive a transparent written estimate before the cycle begins.
See /costs-emi for current pricing information. Final cost depends on individual clinical evaluation.
- 0% EMI options are available (3–24 months).
- See the IVF cost & 0% EMI page for the full breakdown, including embryo freezing and storage.