Michigan Fertility Institute (Livonia) — An Honest Editorial Review
Metro Detroit's fertility care landscape has long been anchored by large academic centers — the University of Michigan Health System in Ann Arbor and Henry Ford Health in Detroit — plus a handful of established private practices in Oakland County. Into that landscape in 2025 arrived Michigan Fertility Institute, a boutique independent practice founded in Livonia by a University of Michigan-trained reproductive endocrinologist. Operating from a purpose-built clinic at 14815 Farmington Road, the practice serves patients from Livonia, Dearborn, Novi, Northville, and the broader western Detroit suburbs — a densely populated corridor that previously lacked a dedicated fertility specialist of this caliber.
Physicians and Clinical Team
Michigan Fertility Institute is a single-physician practice built around Dr. Ali A. Bazzi, MD, a reproductive endocrinologist and infertility specialist (REI) whose training runs through two of the strongest academic programs in the country.
Dr. Bazzi earned his medical degree from the University of Michigan Medical School, graduating in 2016. He completed his Obstetrics and Gynecology residency at Ascension Henry Ford Hospital, where he received multiple awards for leadership, research excellence, and patient care. He then returned to Michigan for a three-year fellowship in Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility (2021–2024) at the University of Michigan, during which he was active in clinical research and national specialty leadership. He is board-certified in Obstetrics and Gynecology.
After fellowship, Dr. Bazzi joined CCRM Fertility in Chicago — a high-complexity IVF network with among the highest published success rates in the country — before returning to metro Detroit to found Michigan Fertility Institute. That CCRM background is meaningful: the network is sought out by patients with difficult cases, so exposure there signals experience at the demanding end of the specialty.
The practice also operates as Michigan Reproductive Surgery Center PC, the legal entity for surgical and procedural billing. In practical terms, this means Dr. Bazzi handles both the diagnostic and medical management components of fertility care and the surgical side.
Services and Treatments
Michigan Fertility Institute offers a full menu of reproductive endocrinology and infertility services:
- IVF (In Vitro Fertilization) — The clinic's primary treatment, with personalized stimulation protocols built around each patient's ovarian reserve, age, and history. The on-site, purpose-built embryology laboratory handles the full cycle from retrieval through embryo culture and cryopreservation.
- IUI (Intrauterine Insemination) — A less invasive first-line option for unexplained infertility, mild male factor, ovulatory dysfunction, and patients using donor sperm.
- Egg Freezing and Fertility Preservation — Available for elective banking and for patients facing oncofertility situations where cancer treatment may compromise future fertility.
- Donor Egg Cycles — For patients with diminished ovarian reserve, prior poor response, or age-related concerns.
- Gestational Surrogacy and Egg Donation — Full care coordination for intended parents and participants across third-party reproduction pathways.
- PCOS Management — Diagnostic evaluation and individualized treatment for one of the most common causes of ovulatory infertility.
- Recurrent Pregnancy Loss — Diagnostic workup and treatment planning for patients with multiple miscarriages.
- Fertility Surgery — Minimally invasive procedures for fibroids, polyps, and endometriosis.
- Male Fertility Evaluation — Semen analysis and male-factor workup.
For a detailed walkthrough of what an IVF cycle involves — from baseline testing through the two-week wait — see our IVF guide.
Laboratory and Success Rates
Michigan Fertility Institute's embryology laboratory was purpose-built rather than retrofitted — a meaningful distinction because embryo culture environments are sensitive to temperature, air quality, and contamination. A space designed around lab function from the start carries structural advantages over an adapted one.
The clinic opened in 2025, so it does not yet appear in SART or CDC ART Surveillance databases, which require a full calendar year of data before publishing. Ask Dr. Bazzi directly for any available early outcome figures; the absence of SART data reflects the clinic's recency, not a transparency issue.
The training behind the protocols is well-documented: Dr. Bazzi's REI fellowship at the University of Michigan and subsequent work at CCRM — a network with among the highest published IVF success rates nationally — means the clinical and lab approaches here draw from high-performance reference environments.
Patient Experience
Michigan Fertility Institute holds a 5.0-star rating, and the consistent driver of that score is what a single-physician boutique practice can offer that larger clinics structurally cannot: direct, ongoing access to the actual REI.
At high-volume practices, patients often cycle through nurses and coordinators, seeing their REI only at retrieval and transfer. At Michigan Fertility Institute, patients describe interacting directly with Dr. Bazzi throughout — for monitoring, mid-cycle questions, and the emotionally difficult moments that fertility treatment inevitably produces. For patients who have experienced busier practices, that continuity is a meaningful difference.
The Livonia location on Farmington Road is accessible from I-96 and I-275, sparing patients the commute into Ann Arbor or downtown Detroit that daily monitoring otherwise requires. The clinic serves patients from Livonia, Dearborn, Westland, Canton, Northville, Novi, and Garden City.
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
Michigan does not mandate health insurance coverage for IVF. Unlike Illinois, New Jersey, or Massachusetts — where insurers must cover medically necessary fertility treatments — Michigan law imposes no such requirement. Most commercially insured patients are therefore working with either employer benefits that explicitly include fertility coverage (increasingly offered by large employers) or out-of-pocket costs.
Before assuming what your plan covers, call your insurer's member services line and ask specifically about IVF, IUI, and fertility diagnostic coverage — some Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan, Aetna, and Cigna contracts do include fertility benefits.
For self-pay patients, a fresh IVF cycle in Michigan typically runs $12,000–$18,000 before medications ($3,000–$6,000 more) and any genetic testing. Request a full fee schedule at the initial consultation and ask about any multi-cycle pricing or financing options Michigan Fertility Institute offers.
For a broader comparison of Michigan's coverage environment and other clinic options statewide, see our guide to fertility clinics in Michigan.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Michigan Fertility Institute the same as Michigan Reproductive Surgery Center PC? Yes. Michigan Reproductive Surgery Center PC is the legal entity for surgical and procedural billing. Michigan Fertility Institute is the patient-facing brand name. Both refer to the same practice at 14815 Farmington Road in Livonia, led by Dr. Ali A. Bazzi.
Why doesn't Michigan Fertility Institute have SART success rate data? SART requires clinics to report a full calendar year of ART cycle data before publishing results. Michigan Fertility Institute opened in 2025, so its first SART-reportable data would appear in the 2026 publication cycle. The absence reflects recency, not a transparency problem — ask Dr. Bazzi directly for any early outcome information.
Does the clinic serve LGBTQ+ patients and single-parent families? Yes. The service menu — donor sperm IUI, donor egg IVF, gestational surrogacy, and reciprocal IVF — covers the primary family-building pathways used by LGBTQ+ individuals and single parents. Contact the clinic to discuss your specific situation.
How do I schedule a new patient consultation? Reach the clinic through michiganfertilityinstitute.com or at (734) 280-2600. An initial visit typically includes a medical history review, baseline hormone testing, and a transvaginal ultrasound to assess ovarian reserve — the foundation for building an individualized treatment plan.
