Omaha Fertility & Gynecology Clinic is a fertility and gynecology practice located at 4611 South 96th Street in Omaha, Nebraska, operating under the website omahafertility.org. The clinic serves patients from across the Omaha metropolitan area, including Bellevue, Papillion, La Vista, Ralston, and communities in western Iowa across the Missouri River — Council Bluffs and the broader Pottawattamie County area. Omaha is the largest city in Nebraska and a regional hub for medical care across the Great Plains, making clinics like Omaha Fertility & Gynecology important resources for patients who might otherwise face multi-hour drives to Kansas City, Minneapolis, or Denver for subspecialty fertility care. Nebraska does not have a state fertility insurance mandate. For other Nebraska fertility clinic options, visit the Nebraska state directory.
Physicians and Clinical Team
Omaha Fertility & Gynecology Clinic is staffed by physicians with training and experience in reproductive medicine and gynecology. The integrated model — combining fertility services with gynecology — reflects a practical approach to patient care that serves the regional market, where patients may benefit from having gynecologic and reproductive concerns addressed within the same practice. Physicians at the clinic can evaluate both fertility-specific diagnoses and broader gynecologic conditions that impact reproductive health, such as fibroids, polyps, ovarian cysts, and endometriosis. The nursing team coordinates fertility cycle monitoring and supports patients through the logistics of treatment, including medication protocols, bloodwork scheduling, and result communication. The combined gynecology-fertility focus means the practice is well-positioned to triage patients across the spectrum of reproductive health concerns.
Services and Treatments
Omaha Fertility & Gynecology Clinic offers fertility and gynecologic services including:
- New patient consultations and fertility evaluation
- Gynecologic evaluation and management
- Ovarian reserve testing (AMH, antral follicle count)
- Ovulation induction with oral medications
- Intrauterine insemination (IUI)
- In vitro fertilization (IVF)
- Intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI)
- Frozen embryo transfer (FET)
- Preimplantation genetic testing (PGT-A)
- Egg freezing for elective fertility preservation
- Embryo cryopreservation
- Donor sperm coordination
- Recurrent pregnancy loss evaluation
- Endometriosis and uterine factor management
- Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) evaluation and management
- Male infertility evaluation
Laboratory and Success Rates
IVF cycles at Omaha Fertility & Gynecology Clinic are supported by an embryology laboratory capable of managing the full spectrum of ART laboratory procedures, including fertilization, embryo culture to blastocyst stage, vitrification, and preparation for genetic testing. Laboratory quality is a central determinant of IVF outcomes; patients evaluating clinics should consider asking about fertilization rates, blastulation rates, and the number of embryos per retrieval that are suitable for transfer or freezing. Patients should review the most current cycle-level data published by the CDC's ART Surveillance program and the SART Clinic Summary Report.
Published success rate data reflects the aggregate of all patient cycles treated at a clinic, not a prediction for any individual patient. Prospective patients should interpret published rates in the context of their own age, diagnosis, and ovarian reserve profile.
Patient Experience
The South 96th Street location is on Omaha's west side, in a professional and commercial corridor that is convenient for residents of the western Omaha suburbs, Papillion, La Vista, and Bellevue. Access from the I-80 and I-680 interchange makes the clinic reachable from across the metro and from Council Bluffs, Iowa. Omaha's relatively compact geography — compared to sprawling Sun Belt metros — means most Omaha-area residents can reach this address in 20–30 minutes.
Nebraska's agricultural and rural character means that a significant portion of the clinic's patient base may include patients who drive from rural Nebraska communities — Columbus, Norfolk, Grand Island, Kearney, or even North Platte — for fertility care not available closer to home. The clinic's combined fertility and gynecology model serves patients who may be at earlier stages of evaluation and benefit from having all their reproductive health needs managed in one place.
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
Nebraska does not have a state fertility insurance mandate. Patients at Omaha Fertility & Gynecology Clinic are responsible for out-of-pocket fertility treatment costs in the absence of voluntary employer fertility benefits. Nebraska's economy includes a mix of agricultural, insurance, financial services, and healthcare employers, with varying approaches to voluntary fertility coverage. Some major Omaha employers — including large insurance and financial companies headquartered in Omaha — may offer supplemental fertility benefits.
Patients should review their specific health plan documentation to understand what diagnostic and treatment services are covered. Some plans cover diagnostic testing (semen analysis, ovarian reserve labs, pelvic ultrasound) even when they exclude fertility treatment. For patients without employer benefits, out-of-pocket IVF costs in Nebraska are typically lower than in major coastal metro areas; the clinic's billing team can provide specific pricing. Medical financing through third-party lenders is an option for qualified patients.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why does Omaha Fertility include gynecology in addition to fertility services? Combining fertility and gynecology services is a practical model that benefits patients in regional markets where subspecialty access is more limited. Many patients seeking fertility evaluation are best served by physicians who can also manage related gynecologic conditions — such as endometriosis, uterine polyps or fibroids, ovarian cysts, and PCOS — that affect fertility. Having these services under one roof reduces the number of referrals patients must navigate.
Does the clinic serve patients from Iowa and other states? Yes. Omaha's location on the Nebraska-Iowa border makes it a natural referral destination for patients from Council Bluffs, Iowa, and the broader southwest Iowa region. Patients from smaller Nebraska cities also travel to Omaha for fertility care. The clinic is experienced in caring for patients who travel for appointments and can advise on how to minimize travel burden during intensive monitoring phases.
What is the role of the AMH test in fertility evaluation? Anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH) is a blood test that reflects the size of a woman's remaining egg supply (ovarian reserve). Higher AMH generally indicates more eggs remaining; lower AMH indicates reduced reserve. AMH results, combined with an antral follicle count (AFC) ultrasound, help predict how a patient will respond to ovarian stimulation medications and inform treatment planning. AMH alone does not determine fertility — egg quality also matters, and age is a major factor in both egg quality and quantity.
Can the clinic treat patients with PCOS who are trying to conceive? Yes. Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is one of the most common causes of ovulatory infertility, and the majority of PCOS patients who receive appropriate treatment — starting with ovulation induction and progressing to IUI or IVF if needed — are able to conceive. The clinical team at Omaha Fertility & Gynecology Clinic can evaluate your specific presentation of PCOS and recommend a stepwise treatment approach.
