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Boston IVF - The Quincy MA Fertility Center — Fertlo Editorial Review

Independent editorial overview · Quincy, MA
Photo of Prof. Jane Harries

Prof. Jane Harries, PhD, MPH, MPhil

7 min read
Medically Reviewed
Photo of Dr. Luis Arturo Ruvalcaba Castellón

Dr. Luis Arturo Ruvalcaba Castellón, MD

IVF & Advanced Reproductive Technologies Instituto Mexicano de Infertilidad (IMI), Guadalajara; LIV Fertility Center; University of Guadalajara

Last reviewed:

Boston IVF – Quincy, MA Fertility Center — An Honest Patient Guide

Boston IVF's Quincy fertility center is located at 2300 Crown Colony Drive, Suite 104, in Quincy, Massachusetts — in the Crown Colony business park off the I-93 and Quincy Adams interchange. Crown Colony Drive is in the commercially active northern section of Quincy, approximately 10 miles south of downtown Boston and easily accessible from the Red Line (Quincy Adams station is steps from the business park), the Southeast Expressway (I-93), and Routes 3 and 18. For patients in South Shore communities — Quincy, Braintree, Weymouth, Hingham, Marshfield, Plymouth, and the Cape Cod gateway — the Quincy clinic is significantly more convenient than traveling to Boston proper or the Metro West suburbs for fertility care.

Boston IVF is the largest fertility program in New England and one of the most recognized fertility programs in the United States, with multiple clinic locations across Massachusetts and beyond. The Quincy location is one of Boston IVF's most accessible South Shore satellite clinics, designed to bring the full scope of Boston IVF's clinical capabilities to patients who live and work south of the city. Boston IVF is part of IVIRMA Global, one of the largest reproductive medicine groups in the world, which connects Boston IVF patients to an international network of research and clinical expertise. For additional Massachusetts clinic information, see our Massachusetts fertility clinic directory.

Physicians and Clinical Team

Boston IVF's clinical team is one of the largest collections of fellowship-trained, ABOG board-certified reproductive endocrinologists in New England. Physicians from the central Boston IVF program see patients at the Quincy location on a rotating schedule.

  • Alan Penzias, M.D. — Dr. Penzias is one of Boston IVF's senior physicians and a nationally recognized reproductive endocrinologist. He is a past president of SART (Society for Assisted Reproductive Technology) and has served on numerous national advisory committees. His clinical focus includes IVF, recurrent pregnancy loss, and reproductive immunology. He has been a prominent voice in public policy discussions about fertility treatment access and insurance coverage.

  • Samuel Pang, M.D. — Dr. Pang is a senior physician at Boston IVF with expertise in IVF, fertility preservation, and complex ovarian reserve cases. He has been practicing at Boston IVF for many years and is recognized by Castle Connolly and other distinction programs.

  • Additional Boston IVF Physicians — Boston IVF's large physician team rotates coverage across its many locations, including the Quincy clinic. Patients should confirm the attending physician assignment for their primary consultations and monitoring at this location.

  • Nursing and Patient Navigation Staff — Boston IVF maintains a substantial nursing and care coordination team. The Quincy location is staffed for monitoring appointments, medication management, and patient communication with the same infrastructure that supports the broader Boston IVF network.

Services and Treatments

The Quincy location offers access to Boston IVF's full suite of reproductive medicine services:

  • IVF (In Vitro Fertilization) — Complete cycles from stimulation through embryo transfer.
  • ICSI (Intracytoplasmic Sperm Injection) — For male-factor infertility.
  • IUI (Intrauterine Insemination) — Natural and stimulated cycles.
  • Egg Freezing (Oocyte Cryopreservation) — Elective and oncofertility preservation.
  • Frozen Embryo Transfer (FET) — Transfer of vitrified embryos.
  • Preimplantation Genetic Testing (PGT-A / PGT-M) — Chromosomal and monogenic disorder screening.
  • Donor Egg IVF — Coordination through Boston IVF's donor egg program.
  • Donor Sperm Services — For patients using donor sperm.
  • Gestational Carrier / Surrogacy — Medical management for intended parents.
  • LGBTQ+ Family Building — Reciprocal IVF, donor pathways, and surrogacy for all configurations.
  • Male Fertility Evaluation — Semen analysis, male-factor workup.
  • Fertility Assessment — AMH, antral follicle count, HSG, and hormonal evaluation.
  • Recurrent Pregnancy Loss and Implantation Failure — Comprehensive evaluation and Boston IVF's extensive protocol for complex cases.
  • Oncofertility — Urgent fertility preservation for patients facing cancer treatment.
  • Clinical Research — Boston IVF is affiliated with Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and participates in clinical trials and research studies.

Laboratory and Success Rates

Boston IVF is one of the highest-volume fertility programs in the northeastern United States and has a decades-long SART reporting history. The program's outcomes are among the most extensively reviewed in New England. Egg retrievals and embryo culture for Quincy patients may be performed at one of Boston IVF's primary laboratory sites; patients should confirm the laboratory location for their specific cycle.

Patients should review the most current cycle-level data published by the CDC's ART Surveillance program and the SART Clinic Summary Report.

Boston IVF's affiliation with Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC) and IVIRMA Global supports a research culture that has contributed substantially to the IVF literature. The program's volume and academic connections place it among the most outcomes-transparent practices in the country.

Patient Experience

The Quincy location at Crown Colony Dr sits in a professional business park with free surface parking and excellent access from the Red Line's Quincy Adams station — one of the few MBTA-accessible fertility clinic locations in the South Shore. For patients commuting from Boston on the Red Line, the Quincy Adams station is a 20-minute ride from Downtown Crossing and is steps from Crown Colony Dr.

Patient reviews of Boston IVF's satellite locations consistently note the convenience of monitoring closer to home relative to driving into Boston for every appointment. The Quincy clinic serves monitoring and many procedures, with retrievals and transfers sometimes performed at a primary Boston IVF location depending on the cycle type.

Boston IVF's scale is both a strength and a consideration. The program's volume and physician depth mean that patients have access to subspecialty expertise and the reassurance of evidence-backed protocols. Some patients find the large-program environment less intimate than a smaller practice; those who prefer more direct physician access should discuss their expectations with the care team at intake.

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

Massachusetts has one of the most comprehensive fertility insurance mandates in the country. Massachusetts law requires group health insurance plans issued in-state to cover a broad range of fertility services, including IVF, IUI, egg freezing, and related diagnostic workup. The mandate applies to insured group plans issued in Massachusetts; self-funded ERISA plans are exempt.

Boston IVF is in-network with most major Massachusetts health insurance plans and has a dedicated insurance verification team. For South Shore patients with Massachusetts employers, mandate coverage is likely to apply, and many patients receive significant IVF coverage through their employer plan.

For patients whose plans do not trigger the mandate or who have employer ERISA plans:

  • Boston IVF Financial Counseling — A dedicated financial counseling team helps patients navigate coverage and plan for out-of-pocket costs.
  • Multi-Cycle Packages — Boston IVF offers bundled and shared-risk programs for patients anticipating more than one cycle.
  • Third-Party Financing — Medical financing options for out-of-pocket expenses.

Given Boston IVF's in-network status with major MA insurers and the state mandate, many Quincy patients find that their IVF coverage is more accessible than patients in states without a mandate.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does Massachusetts' fertility mandate cover IVF at Boston IVF Quincy? Massachusetts law requires coverage for fertility treatment including IVF for insured group plans issued in the state. Boston IVF is in-network with most major Massachusetts insurers. Whether your specific plan is covered depends on whether it is an insured group plan or a self-funded ERISA plan. Contact your insurer and verify your coverage status with Boston IVF's billing team before beginning treatment.

Does the Quincy location have a laboratory, or do I need to go to a main Boston IVF site? The Quincy Crown Colony Dr location supports monitoring appointments and many patient visits. Egg retrievals and embryo culture may be performed at a primary Boston IVF laboratory site. Ask the care team at your consultation which address will be used for each phase of your treatment cycle.

How do I get to Boston IVF Quincy by public transit? The Quincy Adams Red Line station is on the same block as Crown Colony Dr — exit at Quincy Adams and the business park is immediately adjacent. From Boston, the Red Line from South Station or Downtown Crossing reaches Quincy Adams in approximately 20 minutes.

Is Boston IVF associated with any Boston-area hospital? Yes. Boston IVF is affiliated with Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC) at Harvard Medical School, one of Boston's leading academic medical centers. This affiliation supports the program's research activities and provides a clinical connection to BIDMC's broader healthcare resources.

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