Annandale Fertility, Inc. — An Honest Editorial Review
Northern Virginia's fertility care market is dense with options, from the large multi-location networks clustered along the I-495 corridor to academic programs affiliated with GMU and George Washington University. For patients in Fairfax County and the broader DC metro, sorting through those choices often means weighing access, cost, and the personal feel of the practice. Annandale Fertility, Inc. — a boutique REI practice at 2810 Old Lee Highway in Fairfax — occupies a distinctive position in that market: it operates at independent-clinic scale, led by a fellowship-trained reproductive endocrinologist with Hopkins credentials, while publicly positioning its pricing at roughly half the regional average. The clinic's 4.9-star rating across patient reviews is among the highest of any fertility practice in the Virginia–DC metro. This guide reviews what the clinic actually offers, who leads the clinical team, and what prospective patients should know before booking their consultation.
Physicians and Clinical Team
The practice is structured around two physicians and a supporting clinical team with meaningful combined experience.
Dr. Ziad Hubayter, MD, MPH, MBA, FACOG serves as REI Director and is the clinic's lead reproductive endocrinologist. Dr. Hubayter earned his medical degree from the American University of Beirut, completed his Ob/Gyn residency at George Washington University — where he also earned a Master of Public Health — and then completed his fellowship in Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility at Johns Hopkins University. He subsequently completed an MBA at the Johns Hopkins Carey Business School, an unusual combination that signals both clinical depth and a considered approach to the business of running a patient-centered fertility practice. He is board-certified in both Obstetrics & Gynecology and Reproductive Endocrinology & Infertility, and is a member of the Society for Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility (SREI) and the American Society for Reproductive Medicine (ASRM). His stated clinical expertise includes IVF, fertility preservation, oncofertility, diminished ovarian reserve, and unexplained infertility — a broad range that covers the most common and the most complex presentations a fertility patient might bring.
Dr. Anna Le, MD brings more than 25 years of experience in obstetrics and gynecology, with a sub-specialty focus on minimally invasive gynecologic surgery and fertility. Patient reviewers describe Dr. Le as attentive and proactive, one noting that she "cares to ask questions to make sure she understands the big picture about your health." Another patient cited her as "absolutely skillful and meticulous with accuracy" — language that reflects consistent themes in her reviews across multiple platforms. Her surgical experience in fibroids, endometriosis, and minimally invasive procedures complements Dr. Hubayter's REI focus and ensures that patients who need uterine or structural workup before proceeding to ART can have that care managed within the same practice.
Supporting the physicians is Samantha Stern, MMS, PA-C, a physician assistant with training from Tulane and Wake Forest who previously worked at NYU Langone before joining the Annandale Fertility team. Patient reviews name her repeatedly and enthusiastically — one reviewer called her "amazing" and described her as "kind, concerned, listens, and is very efficient." Another wrote that "PA Samantha Stern and Dr. Le are very caring." In high-volume fertility care, a skilled, communicative PA is often the person patients interact with most frequently; Stern's reviews suggest she handles that role well.
The laboratory team is led by Eva Schenkman, PhD, who serves as Lab Director, supported by Simone Yap as Senior Embryologist. The clinic states that its staff carries more than 60 years of combined experience — a figure that, if accurate, represents unusual depth for a practice of this size.
Services and Treatments
Annandale Fertility offers a full range of assisted reproductive technology services:
- In Vitro Fertilization (IVF) — The primary treatment pathway, conducted in the clinic's on-site embryology laboratory. The practice lists a base IVF price of $7,999, substantially below the $15,000–$20,000 range common at larger metro DC practices.
- Intrauterine Insemination (IUI) — Appropriate for mild male-factor infertility, unexplained infertility, and same-sex couples or single parents using donor sperm.
- Egg Freezing and Sperm Freezing — Both elective preservation and medically indicated fertility preservation. The clinic lists egg freezing at $4,999.
- Preimplantation Genetic Testing (PGT) — Offered in partnership with established genetics laboratories including Myriad Genetics and iGenomix, enabling aneuploidy screening and single-gene disorder testing prior to embryo transfer.
- Frozen Embryo Transfer (FET) — For patients who have banked embryos through IVF cycles.
- Minimally Invasive Gynecologic Surgery — Including hysteroscopy, sonohysterogram, and hysterosalpingogram — diagnostic and surgical procedures for uterine polyps, fibroids, and tubal assessment.
- Semen Analysis — Male-factor fertility workup available on-site.
For a broader overview of the IVF process and what to expect at each stage, see our IVF guide.
Laboratory and Success Rates
The embryology laboratory at Annandale Fertility is the operational core of the practice's ART program. The clinic describes it as "state-of-the-art" and highlights partnerships with LabCorp and the major genetics platforms for PGT. Dr. Eva Schenkman, PhD, holds the Lab Director role — a credentialed position that requires either a doctoral-level scientist or physician with demonstrated laboratory competency under CLIA regulations. The presence of a PhD lab director at an independent practice of this size is notable; many smaller clinics contract out embryology or operate with thinner scientific staffing.
The clinic does not publish cycle-specific success rates on its website. Prospective patients should request SART (Society for Assisted Reproductive Technology) data directly from the clinic, or consult SART's public database at sartcorsonline.com, which publishes reported IVF outcomes by clinic. Because Annandale Fertility is an independent practice with a relatively focused case volume, SART data — when available — can be harder to interpret than data from large-volume programs; sample sizes matter significantly when assessing published success rates. Ask the clinic specifically about outcomes for your age group and diagnosis during the consultation.
Patient Experience
A 4.9-star rating is uncommon at this level of consistency, and the reviews for Annandale Fertility suggest it reflects genuine patient satisfaction rather than statistical noise. Recurring themes across review platforms include:
Personalized attention. Patients describe feeling known by the staff rather than processed. Reviewers specifically mention that physicians and clinical staff take time to explain protocols, respond to questions, and communicate proactively — all areas where larger, higher-volume practices frequently receive criticism.
Affordability reducing stress. Several patients flag the pricing structure as meaningfully different from other DC-area clinics they consulted. For patients self-paying through multiple cycles, a lower per-cycle cost reduces the compounded financial pressure that can make the fertility journey additionally difficult.
The waiting room experience. One reviewer noted the waiting room was "absolutely adorable" — a small detail that points to a clinic that has invested in its physical environment, which correlates with a broader attention to patient-facing care.
Veteran-friendly discounts. The clinic explicitly lists discounted rates for veterans and active military — a specific accommodation not offered at most fertility practices in the region.
LGBTQ+ inclusive care. The practice is recognized as LGBTQ+-friendly and offers donor-sperm IUI and IVF pathways appropriate for same-sex female couples and single parents by choice.
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
Virginia does not mandate insurance coverage for IVF as of 2026, which means the majority of patients at Annandale Fertility — and across fertility clinics in Virginia generally — will be paying out of pocket or relying on employer-sponsored benefits that include fertility coverage. Some large federal government employers and defense contractors in the Northern Virginia area do offer fertility benefits through plans like FEHB (Federal Employees Health Benefits), which can offset diagnostic costs even when it does not cover IVF cycles.
The clinic's published pricing is among the most transparent in the region: the initial consultation is $100 (compared to $250–$400 at many practices), egg freezing is listed at $4,999, and IVF at $7,999. The clinic states its pricing is "approximately half the industry average" and advertises flexible financial options. Patients should confirm what is and is not included in the base cycle cost — particularly whether anesthesia, monitoring, and medication are bundled — before comparing across clinics. At Annandale Fertility, anesthesia is reportedly included in treatment costs.
For patients whose employer plans do carry fertility benefits, the clinic accepts insurance and works with major carriers. Asking the billing team specifically about your plan's coverage for diagnostic services (semen analysis, HSG, bloodwork) is worthwhile even if IVF itself is not covered — those diagnostics can add up.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Annandale Fertility the same as the Washington Fertility Center in Annandale? No. Annandale Fertility, Inc. and Washington Fertility Center are separate practices. Annandale Fertility is located at 2810 Old Lee Highway in Fairfax and is led by Dr. Ziad Hubayter and Dr. Anna Le. The Washington Fertility Center operates at a different location in Annandale. Both serve the Northern Virginia market but are independently owned and operated.
How do I start as a new patient? The clinic offers an initial consultation for $100 and also provides free consultations in some circumstances. You can reach the office at (703) 462-8665 or by email at annandalefertility@gmail.com. New patients should come prepared with prior fertility workup results if available — cycle day 3 labs, semen analysis, and any prior imaging — to make the first appointment as productive as possible.
Does the clinic handle complex or high-difficulty cases? Dr. Hubayter's specific clinical training at Johns Hopkins and his stated expertise in diminished ovarian reserve, oncofertility, and unexplained infertility suggest the practice is equipped for more than straightforward IVF cycles. Patients with complex histories should discuss their specific circumstances directly with the clinical team to assess fit.
What should I know about IVF success rates at smaller clinics? Smaller clinics may have excellent outcomes, but SART statistics at lower case volumes carry wider confidence intervals — meaning year-to-year variation is more pronounced and less statistically meaningful than at high-volume programs. This is not a reason to avoid smaller practices (many patients prefer them precisely because of the individualized attention), but it is a reason to ask specific questions: how many IVF cycles did the clinic perform last year, what were the clinical pregnancy rates by age group, and how does the embryologist handle edge cases like poor fertilization or arrested development?

