Coastal Fertility Center is located at 9100 White Bluff Road, Suite 201, in Savannah, Georgia — on the south side of the city, in a medical corridor near the Savannah hospital district. White Bluff Road is one of Savannah's established south-side arterials, connecting the city's midtown and southside communities to the hospital and medical office infrastructure that has developed along this corridor for decades. For patients in the Savannah metropolitan area, Coastal Fertility Center represents the primary locally accessible fertility specialist practice — southeast Georgia, coastal South Carolina, and the surrounding region are not served by a dense fertility clinic network, making the White Bluff Rd location a meaningful regional resource. For a broader view of fertility clinics in Georgia, explore the state directory.
Physicians and Clinical Team
Coastal Fertility Center is led by board-certified reproductive endocrinologists with subspecialty fellowship training. The practice name reflects its geographic identity: the Georgia and South Carolina coastline is the referral territory — Savannah, Brunswick, Statesboro, Hilton Head, Bluffton, and Beaufort, SC are all within the practice's catchment area.
Reproductive endocrinologists in regional coastal markets like Savannah serve a diverse patient population: military families from Fort Stewart and Hunter Army Airfield, coastal community residents, retirees who have relocated to the Lowcountry, and working families from the port, manufacturing, and healthcare sectors that employ much of Savannah's workforce. The physicians at Coastal Fertility Center manage the full spectrum of fertility diagnoses against this varied social backdrop.
The nursing team, embryologists, and coordinators provide the consistent, attentive support that characterizes well-run regional fertility practices. In smaller markets where word-of-mouth reputation carries significant weight, the staff's warmth and responsiveness directly affect the practice's standing in the community.
Services and Treatments
Coastal Fertility Center at White Bluff Rd provides:
- In Vitro Fertilization (IVF) — fresh and frozen embryo transfer cycles with individualized stimulation protocols
- Intracytoplasmic Sperm Injection (ICSI) — for male-factor infertility and fertilization challenges
- Preimplantation Genetic Testing (PGT-A / PGT-M) — chromosomal and hereditary disease screening before embryo transfer
- Frozen Embryo Transfer (FET) — in medicated or natural cycles
- Intrauterine Insemination (IUI) — with partner or donor sperm
- Ovulation Induction — monitored cycles with oral or injectable medications
- Egg Freezing (Oocyte Cryopreservation) — elective and medically indicated fertility preservation
- Donor Egg Cycles — for patients with diminished ovarian reserve or premature ovarian insufficiency
- Male Infertility Evaluation — semen analysis and hormonal assessment
- Reproductive Surgery — laparoscopic and hysteroscopic procedures for structural causes of infertility
- Recurrent Pregnancy Loss Evaluation — comprehensive immunological and genetic workup
- Fertility Preservation for Cancer Patients — rapid-response protocols
Laboratory and Success Rates
Coastal Fertility Center's IVF embryology laboratory manages the core technical processes: ICSI fertilization, blastocyst culture, embryo grading, PGT biopsy coordination, and vitrification. Regional fertility practices compete for patients in part on the quality of their laboratory outcomes — in a city where patients can compare this clinic's SART data against programs in Charleston, Atlanta, and Jacksonville, laboratory quality is a meaningful differentiator.
Patients should review the most current cycle-level data published by the CDC's ART Surveillance program and the SART Clinic Summary Report.
Patient Experience
White Bluff Road in south Savannah is part of the city's most medically active corridor. Candler Hospital and Memorial Health University Medical Center — the two major hospital systems serving the Savannah area — both have significant medical office presence on and near White Bluff Road. The Suite 201 location at 9100 White Bluff Rd is within this established medical environment, convenient to patients from Southside Savannah, Pooler, Richmond Hill, Rincon, and the surrounding Bryan and Effingham County communities.
For patients coming from coastal South Carolina — Hilton Head Island, Bluffton, Beaufort — the drive across the bridge and up I-95 or US-278 to Savannah's south side is approximately 45 to 75 minutes depending on origin. For these patients, Coastal Fertility Center is often the closest fertility specialist option that does not require traveling to Charleston or Jacksonville.
Savannah's military community — Fort Stewart is approximately 40 miles west, Hunter Army Airfield is within the city — creates a patient population with its own specific dynamics: TRICARE coverage, frequent relocations, and the particular emotional context of military life. The practice's staff has experience serving military families.
Considering At-Home Insemination?
Not every fertility journey begins in a clinic. At-home intracervical insemination (ICI) is a lower-cost, private option that suits patients with no known fertility diagnosis — including single parents by choice, same-sex couples, and people who want to try a few cycles before committing to clinical treatment.
At-home insemination kits like those from MakeAMom come with step-by-step instructions designed for donor or partner sperm. Kits are a one-time purchase that can be reused until conception succeeds, require no clinic visit, and arrive in plain, discreet packaging. Many patients use them as a first step while working toward a fertility consultation — or alongside ovulation tracking while they wait for an appointment slot.
If you have a known fertility diagnosis, have been trying for 12 months without success (six months if you're over 35), or your physician has already recommended IUI or IVF, a board-certified reproductive endocrinologist is the right next step.
Insurance and Financing
Georgia has no state mandate requiring health insurers to cover IVF or fertility treatment. Patients in Savannah pay out of pocket for advanced fertility services unless their employer plan includes specific fertility benefits. Some large Savannah-area employers — including Gulfstream Aerospace, Savannah-Chatham County Public Schools, and major healthcare employers — may offer fertility benefits through self-insured plans.
Military patients with TRICARE coverage should verify the current TRICARE fertility benefits, which have historically covered diagnostic workups and some fertility treatments for active duty members and their covered dependents, with certain limitations on IVF.
The practice's financial team can assist with benefit verification, cost estimates, and financing options for patients without coverage.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Coastal Fertility Center the only fertility specialist in the Savannah area? Coastal Fertility Center at 9100 White Bluff Rd is the primary dedicated fertility specialist practice in the Savannah metropolitan area. Patients seeking IVF who are not in Savannah typically travel either here or to practices in Charleston, SC, Jacksonville, FL, or Atlanta — all of which are two to three hours away.
Does Georgia require insurance to cover IVF? No. Georgia has no state IVF mandate. Most patients pay out of pocket unless their employer plan includes fertility benefits.
Can military families with TRICARE receive care at Coastal Fertility Center? TRICARE policies on fertility coverage vary by plan tier and have changed over time. Active duty service members and their dependents should verify current TRICARE fertility benefits with their TRICARE regional contractor. The practice's billing team has experience working with military insurance.
How do I schedule a first consultation? Patients can contact Coastal Fertility Center through coastalfertilityspecialists.com. New patient consultations typically include a medical history review, early-cycle bloodwork (AMH, FSH, estradiol), a pelvic ultrasound for ovarian reserve assessment, and a discussion of diagnostic findings and treatment options.

