Houston Fertility Specialists, located at 7900 Fannin St, Suite 4000 in Houston, Texas, provides subspecialty reproductive medicine to patients in the greater Houston metropolitan area and beyond. The Fannin St address places the clinic in the immediate vicinity of the Texas Medical Center — the largest medical complex in the world by number of healthcare institutions — giving this practice proximity to major hospital systems, research institutions, and a dense medical professional community. Texas has no state fertility insurance mandate. Texas patients can also explore the Texas fertility clinic directory.
Physicians and Clinical Team
Houston Fertility Specialists is led by board-certified reproductive endocrinologists who have completed fellowship training from ACGME-accredited programs. Practicing in the Texas Medical Center corridor means competing and collaborating with some of the country's most sophisticated medical institutions, and the clinical standards at practices in this area reflect that environment. ABOG board certification in the REI subspecialty requires completion of an OB/GYN residency, a three-year fellowship, and passage of both written and oral qualifying examinations — credentials that distinguish fellowship-trained REIs from general OB/GYNs offering fertility services.
The clinical team supporting patient care includes reproductive nurses who coordinate stimulation protocols and serve as primary contacts during monitoring cycles, ultrasonographers experienced in reproductive assessment, embryologists who manage the in vitro phase of IVF, and patient care coordinators who assist with scheduling, financial navigation, and insurance verification. Houston's extraordinary diversity — the city is among the most ethnically diverse in the United States — means that culturally responsive care and multilingual resources are clinically important for practices in this market.
Services and Treatments
Houston Fertility Specialists offers a full range of reproductive medicine services, including:
- Comprehensive fertility consultation and diagnostic evaluation
- Ovarian reserve assessment (AMH, AFC, FSH panel)
- Semen analysis and male-factor evaluation
- Ovulation induction with oral and injectable protocols
- Cycle monitoring with ultrasound and bloodwork
- Intrauterine insemination (IUI)
- In vitro fertilization (IVF) — learn more at our IVF guide
- Intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI)
- Preimplantation genetic testing (PGT-A, PGT-M, PGT-SR)
- Frozen embryo transfer (FET)
- Egg freezing and embryo banking
- Donor egg and donor sperm programs
- Gestational carrier coordination
- Recurrent pregnancy loss evaluation
- Endometriosis evaluation and management
Laboratory and Success Rates
The IVF laboratory at Houston Fertility Specialists operates under Texas Department of State Health Services oversight and federal CLIA requirements. Houston's proximity to the Texas Medical Center means that laboratory staff have access to continuing education, professional networking, and institutional resources that benefit practice quality. The embryology lab handles the full in vitro cycle — egg maturity assessment, fertilization (conventional and ICSI), culture through blastocyst, grading, biopsy for PGT, and vitrification. Vitrification has replaced slow freezing as the standard cryopreservation method and is associated with high post-thaw survival rates and strong frozen transfer outcomes.
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
The 7900 Fannin St, Suite 4000 address is in the southern part of the Texas Medical Center corridor — walkable from major TMC institutions and accessible via the METRO Light Rail (Red Line) at the Dryden/TMC and Smith Lands stations. For patients driving from across the Houston metro, the Fannin St location sits near the 610 Loop and I-288, providing access from the Heights, Midtown, West University, Bellaire, Sugar Land, Pearland, and Friendswood. Parking is available in the TMC area, though patients commuting during peak hours may prefer the light rail option.
Houston is a city of extraordinary size and diversity. With a population of over 2.3 million in the city proper and over 7 million in the greater metro, Houston represents one of the largest fertility patient markets in the United States. The city's significant Latino, African American, Vietnamese, Chinese, Indian, and South Asian populations all have distinct cultural contexts for infertility care, and practices in the TMC corridor serve a genuinely global patient community. The presence of the TMC also means that out-of-state patients traveling to Houston for specialized medical care is relatively common.
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
Texas does not have a state-mandated infertility insurance benefit, which means the financial responsibility for fertility treatment falls primarily on the patient unless their employer-sponsored plan includes voluntary coverage. Houston's large energy, healthcare, and technology sectors include major employers — ExxonMobil, Shell, Memorial Hermann Health System, Houston Methodist — some of which offer fertility benefits as part of competitive compensation packages. However, coverage is not universal, and many Houstonians will face largely out-of-pocket costs.
Out-of-pocket IVF costs in Houston typically range from $12,000–$17,000 per fresh retrieval cycle, with medications of $3,000–$6,000. The competitive fertility market in Houston creates some pricing pressure, and patients should obtain detailed cost estimates from the clinic before beginning treatment. Multi-cycle packages and shared-risk programs may be available. Third-party healthcare financing through lenders such as CapexMD or Prosper Healthcare Lending is widely used by Texas fertility patients, and pharmaceutical manufacturer assistance programs can reduce medication costs for qualifying patients.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the Texas Medical Center location convenient for patients living in the Houston suburbs? The Fannin St location is centrally located within the Houston metro and accessible from multiple major highways including I-610, I-288, US-59, and US-90. Patients from Sugar Land, Pearland, Friendswood, Bellaire, and West University Place are typically 15–30 minutes away in non-peak traffic. The METRO Red Line light rail provides an alternative for patients near TMC rail stations or willing to park at a remote station.
What is the significance of the Texas Medical Center for fertility care? The TMC's concentration of world-class medical institutions means that fertility specialists in this corridor practice alongside researchers at Baylor College of Medicine, MD Anderson, Houston Methodist Research Institute, UTHealth, and other major institutions. This proximity supports continuing education, research collaboration, and access to cutting-edge protocols and clinical trials that may not be available in smaller markets.
Does the clinic provide care for patients experiencing recurrent miscarriage? Yes. Recurrent pregnancy loss — defined as two or more clinical pregnancy losses — requires a distinct diagnostic workup that differs from standard infertility evaluation. The workup includes chromosomal testing of both partners, uterine evaluation (saline sonogram or hysteroscopy), thyroid function, immunological testing (antiphospholipid antibodies, natural killer cells), and thrombophilia panels. Identifying and treating an underlying cause can significantly improve outcomes for patients with RPL.
How does Houston's diversity affect fertility care at this clinic? Houston's extraordinary diversity means that the clinic's patient population speaks dozens of languages and comes from a wide range of cultural backgrounds with varied expectations, communication styles, and perspectives on medical decision-making. Practices that invest in multilingual staff, culturally sensitive protocols, and equitable care delivery are better positioned to serve this community effectively. Patients should feel free to ask about language access resources and to choose a clinic where they feel understood and respected.

