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Border Fertility IVF — Fertlo Editorial Review

Independent editorial overview · El Paso, TX
Photo of Dr. Hannah Ní Bhriain Russell

Dr. Hannah Ní Bhriain Russell, MB BCh BAO, Specialist in Gynaecology & Obstetrics

6 min read
Medically Reviewed
Photo of Dr. Cristian Jesam

Dr. Cristian Jesam, MD

Reproductive Medicine & IVF Instituto Chileno de Medicina Reproductiva (ICMER), Santiago; Universidad de Chile; SGFertility Chile

Last reviewed:

El Paso sits on a geographic and cultural crossroads — a city of nearly 700,000 that shares a daily rhythm with Ciudad Juárez just across the Rio Grande. That proximity shapes how families here access fertility care. Border Fertility IVF has built its entire model around that reality, operating a consultation and intake office in El Paso while performing medical procedures at Hospital Ángeles in Ciudad Juárez — one of Mexico's largest private hospital networks. The clinic draws patients not only from West Texas and southern New Mexico but from across the United States and internationally. For anyone exploring IVF treatment or surveying Texas fertility clinics, this binational practice represents a genuinely distinctive option.

Physicians and Clinical Team

Dr. Evaristo Martinez is the founding fertility specialist at Border Fertility. He oversees the IVF program at Hospital Ángeles in Juárez, where egg retrievals, fertilization, and embryo transfers take place. The clinic highlights his emphasis on individualized treatment protocols tailored to each patient's diagnosis and history rather than a standardized approach.

Dr. Mario Nutis, MD, FACOG brings substantial academic and surgical credentials to the team. He earned his medical degree from Universidad Autónoma de Ciudad Juárez, completed residencies in Family Medicine and then Obstetrics and Gynecology at Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center El Paso, and finished a Fellowship in Minimally Invasive Gynecologic Surgery at Stanford Health Care (2006–2007). He holds dual board certifications from the American Board of Obstetrics and Gynecology in OB-GYN and Female Pelvic Medicine and Reconstructive Surgery, is a Fellow of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, and received the Outstanding Laparoendoscopic Resident Award from the Society of Laparoendoscopic Surgeons in 2006. Fluent in Spanish, his background bridges both sides of the border community the clinic serves. Hospital affiliations include Las Palmas Medical Center and University Medical Center of El Paso.

Services and Treatments

Border Fertility specializes exclusively in IVF, concentrating its laboratory resources and clinical expertise on a single discipline. The four-stage protocol covers ovarian stimulation, ultrasound-guided egg retrieval under sedation (under 15 minutes at Hospital Ángeles), fertilization via conventional insemination or ICSI for male factor cases, and embryo transfer.

Additional services include egg donation cycles, donor sperm, surgical sperm aspiration, and frozen embryo transfer for patients with banked embryos. The clinic explicitly welcomes LGBTQ+ patients and single women. Treatment spans approximately 21 days on-site; afterward patients return home and the clinic provides telephone monitoring — a logistically important feature for the many out-of-state and international patients this program attracts.

Laboratory and Success Rates

The IVF laboratory is housed within Hospital Ángeles in Juárez. The clinic states its protocols align with standards used in leading American fertility programs and displays accreditation from InVitro alongside SART affiliation. Because the laboratory is located in Mexico, clinic-specific outcome data does not appear in the CDC's publicly searchable ART Success Rates tool, which covers U.S.-based locations only.

The clinic's internally reported live birth rates (data updated May 2020) are:

  • 65.1% on the first IVF attempt
  • 74.3% cumulative by the second attempt
  • 86.2% by the third attempt
  • 97.1% by the fourth attempt

The clinical results page provides age-stratified charts across own eggs, frozen eggs, and donor eggs, and correctly distinguishes between a positive blood test, a clinical pregnancy confirmed by ultrasound, and a live birth — the most meaningful metric for prospective patients. The page also acknowledges that maternal age is the primary prognostic factor when using a patient's own eggs, while donor egg outcomes depend primarily on the donor's age.

These figures are self-reported and have not been independently audited through the CDC/SART system. Prospective patients should request the clinic's current annual outcomes report, ask how the statistics were calculated, and clarify whether reported rates reflect all initiated cycles or only transfers. That context matters when making direct comparisons to U.S. SART-reporting clinics.

Patient Experience

The El Paso consultation office at 10201 Gateway West Blvd, Suite 330 is open Monday–Friday, 8:30 AM–7:30 PM CST, by appointment only. The hospital campus in Juárez is approximately 15 minutes away. Published testimonials reflect an international patient base — Boston, Denver, Chicago, Portland, Colombia, Venezuela, and the United Kingdom among them — with recurring themes of professional care, emotional support, and success after prior failures elsewhere. The Juárez location is surrounded by four- and five-star hotels and well-developed commercial infrastructure, easing the logistics for traveling patients. Spanish-speaking patients, common in the El Paso–Juárez metro, may find the bilingual clinical environment a meaningful advantage.

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

Border Fertility does not accept insurance and does not offer payment plans. All fees are due in full before treatment begins. The standard IVF cycle is priced at $9,800 all-inclusive — covering consultations, medications, sonograms, anesthesia, egg retrieval, fertilization, and embryo transfer. This compares favorably to U.S. clinic cycles that typically run $15,000–$20,000+ once medications are added. A repeat cycle using banked embryos is $4,432. Add-on pricing: ICSI $750, egg donation $3,800, donor sperm $1,420, surgical sperm aspiration $3,950. Frozen embryo storage is free for the first year, then $750 annually.

Texas has no fertility insurance mandate, so most patients in the state pay out of pocket regardless of where they seek care. In that context, Border Fertility's all-inclusive $9,800 cycle is among the more accessible price points available to Texans pursuing clinical IVF — particularly when compared to comparable programs in San Antonio or Houston where medications alone often add thousands of dollars to a quoted base price. Patients who want to understand the full cost landscape before committing can review current market data through Fertlo's IVF cost guide.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where does the actual treatment take place — in El Paso or in Mexico?

Consultations and administrative coordination happen at the El Paso office. All medical procedures — monitoring, egg retrieval, fertilization, and embryo transfer — are performed at Hospital Ángeles in Ciudad Juárez, about 15 minutes away. After the transfer, patients return home and receive telephone monitoring.

Does the $9,800 fee really include medications?

Yes. The published price covers medications, sonograms, anesthesia, egg retrieval, fertilization, and embryo transfer. This is a notable distinction from many U.S. clinics that quote a base cycle fee and bill medications separately, often adding $3,000–$6,000. Patients should confirm the all-inclusive scope in writing and ask how a cancelled cycle is handled financially.

How long must a patient stay on-site?

The active treatment cycle takes approximately 21 days. Patients can return home after the embryo transfer and the clinic provides telephone follow-up through the two-week wait and early pregnancy confirmation. Out-of-state and international patients should plan for a roughly three-week stay in the El Paso–Juárez area.

Is this clinic a good fit for patients who have already failed IVF elsewhere?

The testimonials and clinical approach suggest this is a common profile in the patient population. The clinic emphasizes individualized protocol design and adapts stimulation plans based on prior cycle data. Patients with failed cycles should bring complete records — prior protocols, fertilization reports, and embryo quality data — to the initial consultation so the physicians can evaluate whether a modified approach is warranted.

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