The Georgia Center for Reproductive Medicine, located at 5354 Reynolds Street in Savannah, Georgia, provides fertility subspecialty care to patients throughout Coastal Georgia, the Low Country of South Carolina, and surrounding communities. Savannah — Georgia's oldest city and a significant regional healthcare hub — is well-positioned to serve a catchment that includes Hinesville, Brunswick, Statesboro, Beaufort, SC, and Hilton Head Island, SC. Patients exploring additional options in Georgia can browse the Georgia fertility clinics directory.
Savannah's relatively limited availability of reproductive endocrinology subspecialty care makes The Georgia Center for Reproductive Medicine a critical regional resource. Patients throughout coastal Southeast Georgia and the South Carolina Low Country who do not want to travel to Atlanta, Charleston, or Jacksonville for fertility care find this practice geographically essential.
Physicians and Clinical Team
The Georgia Center for Reproductive Medicine is staffed by reproductive endocrinologists specializing in infertility diagnosis and treatment. REI is a subspecialty requiring fellowship training beyond OB-GYN residency, and physicians practicing at a dedicated fertility center are specifically trained in the full spectrum of assisted reproductive technology.
Savannah's size as a mid-size city means the practice serves patients across a wide geographic range — including both local Savannah-area residents and those making extended drives from the Georgia coast and the South Carolina Low Country. The physician team is accustomed to managing care for patients who may have limited local access to monitoring resources and who may coordinate some monitoring elements through local OB-GYN or internal medicine practices when travel is difficult.
The clinical support team includes fertility nurses, embryologists, ultrasound technicians, and patient coordinators who manage the logistics of care for patients traveling from outside Savannah.
Services and Treatments
The Georgia Center for Reproductive Medicine provides a core set of fertility services for the Coastal Georgia region:
- Initial fertility consultation and evaluation
- Ovarian reserve assessment (AMH, FSH, antral follicle count)
- Semen analysis and male fertility evaluation
- Ovulation induction (oral agents and injectable gonadotropins)
- Intrauterine insemination (IUI)
- In vitro fertilization (IVF)
- Intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI)
- Embryo cryopreservation and frozen embryo transfer
- Fertility preservation for oncology and elective indications
- Recurrent pregnancy loss evaluation and management
- Uterine evaluation (hysteroscopy, saline infusion sonography)
- Preimplantation genetic testing (where available)
For patients whose cases require services not available locally — such as advanced donor egg programs, gestational carrier coordination, or specialized reproductive surgery — the clinic can provide referrals to Atlanta-based or Jacksonville-based fertility centers.
Laboratory and Success Rates
The IVF laboratory at The Georgia Center for Reproductive Medicine supports the embryology steps required for IVF — including fertilization, embryo culture, and cryopreservation. In regional clinics with lower cycle volumes than major metropolitan centers, the embryology team's depth and the quality of the culture environment remain important factors for patients to ask about directly.
Patients should review the most current cycle-level data published by the CDC's ART Surveillance program and the SART Clinic Summary Report.
Regional clinics may have lower cycle volumes than Atlanta or Jacksonville-based fertility centers, which affects the statistical confidence of published outcome data. Asking the clinic about annual IVF cycle volume and their blastocyst development rates gives additional context beyond aggregate success figures.
Patient Experience
The Reynolds Street address is in Savannah's established medical district, accessible from I-16 and close to Savannah's primary hospital infrastructure. The clinic serves an important regional function: for patients in Beaufort County, SC, Glynn County, GA, Liberty County, GA, and surrounding communities, this Savannah location represents the closest dedicated fertility subspecialty option.
The practice's regional position means the team is experienced working with patients who may be traveling significant distances for appointments. This includes experience with modified monitoring protocols, coordination with local OB-GYN practices for some monitoring steps, and clear communication about what procedures must be performed in-person at the Savannah clinic versus what can be managed closer to home.
Savannah's growing population and tourism profile have increased awareness of its healthcare infrastructure — prospective patients from beyond the immediate metro area will find the medical district accessible from I-95 and major Georgia coastal routes.
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 does not have a state infertility insurance mandate for private employers. Coverage for fertility treatment in Savannah depends entirely on the patient's employer plan. Some large Savannah-area employers — including healthcare systems, the Port of Savannah-related logistics employers, and military-connected employers (given Fort Stewart/Hunter Army Airfield's proximity) — may offer fertility benefits. Active duty military and dependents may have Tricare benefits that cover some fertility evaluation, though IVF coverage is limited under standard Tricare plans.
For South Carolina Low Country patients traveling to Savannah, South Carolina similarly does not mandate IVF coverage. Coverage considerations are the same for SC-based patients.
For self-pay patients, the clinic's financial counseling team can discuss package pricing and available financing options. Specialty pharmacy relationships for fertility medications may also be available.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is The Georgia Center for Reproductive Medicine the only fertility clinic in Savannah? Savannah has limited fertility subspecialty options compared to Atlanta. The Georgia Center for Reproductive Medicine is among the few dedicated reproductive endocrinology practices in the region, making it a primary local option for patients who do not want to travel to Atlanta (approximately 4 hours) or Jacksonville, FL (approximately 2 hours) for IVF-level fertility care.
Can patients from South Carolina's Low Country be seen at this Savannah clinic? Yes. The clinic routinely sees patients from Beaufort, Hilton Head, Bluffton, and other South Carolina Low Country communities. Patients should confirm insurance network participation for their South Carolina employer plan when scheduling, and plan for travel to Savannah for in-person monitoring appointments during an active cycle.
What fertility services are available without IVF at this clinic? Patients who are appropriate candidates for IUI can receive evaluation, ovulation induction, and insemination at the clinic without proceeding to IVF. Oral ovulation-inducing medications (clomiphene, letrozole) and monitored injectable cycles are also available. These lower-intensity treatments are appropriate first steps for many patients with ovulatory dysfunction, unexplained infertility, or mild male-factor.
When would I need to be referred to Atlanta or Jacksonville for treatment? Referral to a larger center may be appropriate if you need: advanced donor egg programs with extensive fresh donor databases, gestational carrier coordination, highly complex IVF cases (severe poor ovarian response, repeated implantation failure), or specialized reproductive surgery beyond the scope of the local program. Your physician can advise on when regional care is sufficient versus when a referral adds clinical value.
