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Dallas IVF - Frisco — Fertlo Editorial Review

Independent editorial overview · Frisco, TX
Photo of Dr. Hrishikesh Pai

Dr. Hrishikesh Pai, MD (Gold Medalist), FRCOG (Hon. UK), MSc, FCPS, FICOG

5 min read
Medically Reviewed
Photo of Prof. Sandro C. Esteves

Prof. Sandro C. Esteves, MD, PhD

Male Infertility & Andrology ANDROFERT Andrology & Human Reproduction Clinic, Campinas, Brazil; Honorary Professor, Aarhus University, Denmark

Last reviewed:

Dallas IVF — Frisco: A Deep-Dive Editorial Review

Address: 2840 Legacy Drive, Suites 100 & 110, Frisco, TX 75034 Rating: 4.3 stars / 327 reviews Phone: (214) 225-2057


Few fertility practices in North Texas carry the clinical depth and sheer volume of Dallas IVF. Founded decades ago and now part of the Ivy Fertility network, the practice operates four DFW campuses — Dallas, McKinney, Tyler, and its flagship suburban location in Frisco. For patients in Collin County and the fast-growing northern suburbs, the Frisco clinic on Legacy Drive represents the most convenient access point to a nationally recognized IVF program.

The Physician Team at Frisco

Dallas IVF's Frisco location is staffed by five board-certified reproductive endocrinologists and infertility (REI) specialists, which is unusually deep for a single suburban site. Each brings fellowship training in reproductive endocrinology and obstetrics and gynecology — four of the five hold dual board certification in both disciplines.

Dr. Brian Barnett is the practice's senior clinician with more than 25 years of experience, over 4,000 egg retrievals, and several thousand families helped across the North Texas region. He is widely regarded as one of the most experienced IVF surgeons in the Southwest.

Dr. Lowell Ku is known among patients for his empathy rooted in personal experience: he and his wife went through five rounds of IVF before welcoming their son, giving him an uncommon perspective on the emotional and physical endurance fertility treatment demands.

Dr. Dara Havemann brings her own PCOS-related infertility journey to her clinical practice. She conceived twins via IVF and her second son via frozen embryo transfer — experiences that inform how she counsels patients through similar protocols.

Dr. Sara Mucowski underwent egg freezing herself and speaks openly about the time, emotional, and financial investment the process requires. Her firsthand knowledge is particularly relevant for patients exploring fertility preservation.

Dr. Shilpi Agrawala was diagnosed with PCOS as an adolescent and has built her career around reproductive health challenges stemming from hormonal disorders. Patients with PCOS — a leading cause of female infertility — often gravitate toward her expertise.

The team is rounded out by Brittany Juelch, MSN, APRN, FNP-C, a nurse practitioner who is also a former infertility patient, adding yet another layer of patient-perspective care to the clinical staff.

This concentration of personal fertility experience within a single practice is notable. It shapes a culture where the emotional weight of treatment cycles is not abstract — the clinicians have lived it.

Service Line

Dallas IVF Frisco offers a comprehensive menu that covers virtually every scenario a fertility patient might encounter:

  • IVF (both Standard and Gentle/mini-stimulation protocols)
  • IUI (intrauterine insemination)
  • Preimplantation Genetic Testing (PGT) — for aneuploidy (PGT-A), monogenic disease (PGT-M), and structural rearrangements (PGT-SR)
  • Egg Freezing (fertility preservation for medical and elective indications)
  • Donor Egg IVF — the practice managed 113 recipient donor-egg cycles in 2023 alone
  • Surrogacy coordination
  • Male Infertility evaluation and treatment
  • Recurrent Pregnancy Loss (RPL) workup and management
  • LGBTQ+ Family Building — including reciprocal IVF, known-donor protocols, and single-parent pathways

The Frisco campus includes an on-site surgery center, which means egg retrievals and other procedures do not require a separate hospital visit — a logistical and comfort advantage for patients managing demanding work schedules.

SART-Reported Success Rates (2023)

Dallas IVF is a SART member clinic and reports outcomes annually. Their 2023 data (1,587 total cycles reported) shows live birth rates that outperform many regional competitors:

Patient AgeLive Birth Rate (All Transfers)Cycle Volume
Under 3554.6%291 starts
35–3733.8%154 starts
38–4016.9%136 starts
41–4212.5%40 starts
Over 423.7%27 starts

The under-35 cumulative live birth rate of 54.6% — meaning across all fresh and frozen transfers stemming from a single retrieval — is meaningfully above the national SART average for that age cohort. The practice's own marketing cites success rates "up to 35% above the national average," a claim that their published SART data supports for younger patients.

For donor-egg recipients, live birth rates ranged between 48.5% and 57.1% across 113 cycles — consistent with the higher success floors expected when embryo genetics are controlled by younger donors.

To understand how age affects your personal outlook, Fertlo's IVF success rates by age guide provides a national benchmark for comparison.

What 4.3 Stars Means at This Volume

A 4.3-star average across 327 reviews is, in context, a strong signal for a high-volume IVF center. Fertility clinics generating 1,500+ annual cycles serve a much larger and more demographically diverse patient base than boutique practices — and they serve patients navigating one of the most stressful experiences of their lives. Failed cycles, cycle cancellations, and emotionally difficult diagnoses are inevitable at this scale. A 4.3 rating in that environment reflects genuine clinical quality and consistent patient communication, not just a lucky run of five-star responses.

The most common themes in positive reviews center on Dr. Ku and Dr. Barnett's bedside manner, responsive nursing staff, and clear communication during monitoring cycles. Critical reviews — proportionally small — tend to cite wait times during peak morning monitoring hours, which is a structural reality of any high-volume fertility practice rather than a service quality failure.

For guidance on interpreting reviews in your clinic search, see Fertlo's how to choose a fertility clinic resource.

Out-of-Pocket Costs in the DFW Market

Texas has no fertility insurance mandate. Unlike states such as New York, Illinois, or Massachusetts — which require employers to cover IVF — Texas leaves coverage entirely to individual employer plan design. The practical consequence: most Dallas-area patients pay out of pocket or rely on employer-sponsored fertility benefits through companies that voluntarily include them.

At Dallas IVF, a single IVF cycle in the DFW market typically runs $12,000–$16,000 for the base procedure, with additional costs for:

  • Medications: $3,000–$6,000 per retrieval cycle
  • PGT-A genetic testing: $2,500–$4,500 depending on the number of embryos biopsied
  • Frozen embryo transfer (FET): $3,000–$5,000
  • Donor egg cycles: $25,000–$40,000+ depending on fresh vs. frozen donor and agency fees

Dallas IVF participates in Ivy Fertility's financing and multi-cycle package programs, which can reduce the per-cycle cost for patients committing to multiple attempts. As part of a larger network, they also offer more structured financial counseling than many independent practices.

Texas's lack of a mandate makes the state-by-state insurance landscape one of the most consequential variables in fertility treatment planning. Fertlo's fertility insurance by state guide breaks down what coverage looks like in all 50 states, and the IVF cost by state resource provides regional pricing benchmarks. For broader context on finding clinics in Texas, see the Texas fertility clinics directory.


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.

Frequently Asked Questions

How does Dallas IVF's Frisco location differ from its other campuses?

The Frisco location at 2840 Legacy Drive is one of the practice's largest sites, staffed by all five of Dallas IVF's REIs rather than a rotating subset. It includes an on-site surgical suite, which means egg retrievals are performed on-site without a separate hospital visit. The Frisco clinic is the primary access point for patients in Collin County, Plano, Allen, McKinney, and surrounding northern suburbs.

Does Dallas IVF Frisco accept patients without fertility insurance coverage?

Yes. Because Texas has no fertility insurance mandate, Dallas IVF is well accustomed to working with self-pay patients. The practice offers financing options through Ivy Fertility's partner programs and multi-cycle packages designed to reduce per-cycle cost for patients who may need more than one retrieval. A financial counselor consult is typically part of the initial intake process.

What PGT-A testing options does Dallas IVF offer, and who should consider it?

Dallas IVF offers preimplantation genetic testing for aneuploidy (PGT-A), which screens embryos for chromosomal abnormalities before transfer. PGT-A is most commonly recommended for patients over 37, those with recurrent implantation failure, recurrent pregnancy loss, or a prior pregnancy with a chromosomal condition. It can increase the per-cycle cost by $2,500–$4,500 but meaningfully improves the probability that a transferred embryo will lead to a live birth, particularly in older age groups.

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