FAQs

for safe seed donation

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General questions

Of course, your full anonymity is guaranteed at every stage of the donor/recipient process.

Your real name and email address will not be visible on the website at any time. This applies to both donor and seeker members. As administrators, however, we will see your real name and also reserve the right to delete donors who do not provide it correctly.

As a donor, you choose any user name and are contacted by an interested party exclusively via our contact form, which is still completely anonymous. Only when you reply, your email address becomes visible to the seeker as well, and from then on, both of you are in direct contact and decide from when you want to share your full identity. Of course, it is clear that both donor and recipient want to know as much as possible about themselves as soon as an agreement is likely.

You can sneak a peek if you are not a member; search for a donor and generate a list of potential donors, but you cannot see their pictures and their full details, and most importantly you cannot contact them until you are a member.

Membership for donors is free, and as a donor you also have unlimited access to the search function, but to sign up as a member to search only, there is a membership fee. These are the types of membership.

To be honest; you can’t. Since there are no reliable tests to verify the vaccination status yet, the whole donation process is simply based on trust.

Scientists are working on tests around the world, and we can assume that there will be a test in the future, but we don’t know when that will be. Self-declaration is the only way right now to declare that you have not been vaccinated with mRNA injections. SafeReproduction members are certainly among the people who know about mRNA injections and their consequences and are here to help keep humanity free of them. It just doesn’t make sense for someone to pretend to be unvaccinated but actually be the opposite.

To get in contact through our website is the first step to build a relationship with your donor. As you go along you will get to know each other and will certainly get a sense of whether or not the donor is trustworthy.

There is only one way to contact a donor. As a member, you seach for a donor. On the list of potential donors you get as a result, you click on the picture of a donor, which takes you to their details. At the bottom of this information, you click on the button “Message to the donor”. There you enter your name, email address and leave a message. This will create an email to the donor. The donor will then reply to your email address.



We encourage donors to respond to any email they receive, but it is also up to them to do so, as it is their decision to accept or decline a request. The more information you provide about yourself, the more likely they are to respond.

Sperm donation:

Once you have decided on sperm donation, first you choose a sperm donor on our website. You contact them, get to know each other, negotiate the terms and details of the donation. The sperm is usually collected by ejaculating into a sterile container, either at a sperm bank, where the sperm is prepared for further processing and frozen, or optinally directly at the fertilization clinic or at home.

Sperm insertion is usually done in a clinic that specializes in fertilization therapies with IUI or IVF, using frozen sperm supplied by a sperm bank or fresh sperm collected at the facility where the IUI or IVF is performed. Artificial insemination and in vitro fertilization (IVF or ICSI, IntraCytoplasmic Sperm Injection) are types of assisted reproductive technology. Whereas IUI involves artificially introducing sperm into the uterus, IVF and ICSI involve taking both sperm and an egg out of the body and combining them in a petri dish. When the egg becomes fertilized, the resulting embryo is placed back into the uterus to hopefully become a pregnancy.

Optionally, artificial insemination can be performed at home. This has the benefit of lowering the cost of the procedure and adding privacy for the woman. Home insemination kits are available online or from some healthcare providers. Home artificial insemination is usually done by intravaginal or intracervical insemination. The chances of success are slightly lower than intrauterine insemination (IUI) because the semen is not inserted as deeply as with IUI, but they can still be effective. However, since no medical intervention is required, this method is a valuable option for couples who prefer a less clinical approach but do not choose the “natural way” as described below because they live in a monogamous relationship and want to avoid potential problems that this option might bring in these circumstances.

Another option is “the natural way” (intercourse), which is why we added this option under “delivery procedure” in the search/enroll settings. Since couples who want to raise a child together usually live in a monogamous relationship (e.g. marriage), this option is of course only possible if both partners explicitly agree and are aware of the possible psychological issues that may arise. For singles, this could still be the easiest way. There are also countries where intercourse is the only legal option.

In any case you have to consider the legal requirements of the country where the process takes place.

Egg donation:

Once you have decided on egg donation, first you choose an egg donor on our website. You contact them, get to know each other, negotiate the terms and details of the donation. To donate eggs, the donor is given medications that will cause her to develop multiple eggs (usually between 10 and 20) over a single cycle. The eggs are then removed from the donor by placing a needle that is attached to an ultrasound probe through the vaginal tissues. Then they are gently aspirated (suctioned) from the ovaries. Once the eggs are removed, they are evaluated by an embryologist. Then sperm from the male partner or a sperm bank is placed around or injected into each egg. This process is called in vitro fertilization (IVF).

The recipient’s uterus (womb) must be synchronized with the donor’s stimulation so that they are ready at the same time. There are several ways to achieve this. If the woman still has regular menstrual cycles, a medication is often used to suppress her ovaries and her menstrual cycle. Once the donor starts the medication to stimulate her ovaries, the recipient begins taking estrogen to develop her uterine lining. Around the time of egg retrieval, the recipient will begin taking progesterone to enable implantation of the embryo (fertilized egg). The embryo(s) will be transferred to the recipient’s uterus three to five days after fertilization. Hormones continue to be given until the pregnancy test and then, if the test is positive, during the early part of the first trimester of the resulting pregnancy.

Please note that egg donation – unlike sperm donation – is a medical process that also involves a risk for the donor. Since there is always hormone treatment involved, it can have an impact on every process in the female body in which hormones play a role, including the menstrual cycle and fertility in general. Please make sure your doctor explains you the risks as well as the benefits.

In any case you have to consider the legal requirements of the country where the process takes place.

Breast milk donation:

Once you have decided on breast milk donation, first you choose a breast milk donor on our website. You contact them, get to know each other, negotiate the terms and details of the donation. Breast milk is collected in the same way as it has been for hundreds of years: You can express milk by hand or with a breast pump.

You can then store it in a sterilised container or in special breast milk storage bags:

  • in the fridge for up to 8 days at 4C or lower (you can buy fridge thermometers online) – if you’re not sure of the temperature of your fridge, or it is higher than 4C, use it within 3 days
  • for 2 weeks in the ice compartment of a fridge
  • for up to 6 months in a freezer, if it’s -18C or lower

More tips on collecting and processing breast milk can be found here or here.

Requests related to breast milk donation: 

In any case you have to consider the legal requirements of the country where the process takes place.

This is simply between you and the receiver. You agree on a compensation individually. Some donors will do it for free, while others will say “I want 1’000 $”. In most cases, the amount will be somewhere in between, depending on the country, economy and so on. SafeReproduction is not involved in the compensation process at all.

It could also be an option that you agree on a compensation depending on the result. Sometimes you have to try several times until it finally brings the desired result. So compensation after several attempts could be an option. But everything is, as mentioned, just a matter between you and the receiver. In any case, you should be compensated for all your expenses, regardless of the result.

Parents to be usually spend a fortune for UIU, IVF and the like, so the compensation for the donor will not even be the biggest part of their expenses.

The legal situation varies greatly from country to country and is indeed very complex. In some countries, sperm donation is legal, but egg donation not. Things get even more complicated when it comes to the implantation of eggs or sperm in the clinic. Some countries, such as Spain, Denmark or Cyprus, entice foreigners with liberal laws, while others, such as Switzerland, are extremely restrictive. In some countries, fertility treatments are available to all (singles, heterosexual couples, lesbian/gay couples) and regardless of the desired future relationship to the offspring (release of donor identity or not). In other countries lesbian/gay couples, married couples with large age difference or even singles are excluded from fertility treatments.

What is certainly legal everywhere is “sperm delivery by natural means” – means intercourse, because in this case there are no restricions. That is why we have added the option “Sperm delivery is also possible by natural means” as one of the options under “Delivery procedure”. Also because some recipients – mainly singles – may indeed prefer “the natural way”, since no medical facilities are involved. As always, all details of the arrangement are between donor and receiver only, and no one, neither SafeReproduction nor the government, needs to know details.

It is best to first choose the country where the donation will take place and then google for legal requirements, sperm/egg banks and clinics. If you need help, contact us.

Donating breast milk is usually legal, but you still need to check the specific regulations in your country.
Inquiries related to breast milk donation in Italy: 

You might think that every sperm (or egg) bank would check the donor for residues of mRNA vaccines (mostly known as Covid vaccines). But they don’t. They check for all kinds of diseases and bacteria or viruses, but they don not ask about your vaccination status. Breast milk is not checked at all.

This means if you go to one of the established sperm banks, there is no way to get sperm from an unvaccinated donor. Before we started SafeReproduction, the only option was to buy frozen sperm that was at least 2 years old – before the first mRNA vaccines came on the market.

Now you simply look for a donor on our website and then either arrange the donation directly with the donor or use a sperm bank to freeze the sperm of that particular donor and then specifically tell the sperm bank that you only want the sperm of that donor. The same applies to egg donations. Breast milk donations are the easiest, as no other party has to be involved.

There are many websites dedicated to sperm and egg donor matching, and even the first ones for breast milk donation pop up, but we are the first and so far only website that focuses exclusively on reproduction for unvaccinated donors. However, you can be sure that there will be many similar websites soon. As a sister site to SafeBlood Donation, we have a lot of experience in matching unvaccinated members – we’ve been doing it for 2 years and have earned an impeccable reputation. Also, we’re a non-profit organization – we’re not in it for the money, we’re in it to make a difference.

SafeReproduction is not involved in the medical part of the donation process – we only match donor and recipient. The actual donation process (IUI, IVF, ICF or similar) is done through a specialized sperm/egg bank if you choose frozen sperms or eggs, and finally at the clinic where the donated sperm/eggs will be used. Breast milk donation is subject to the agreement between donor and receiver.

There are plenty of sperm/egg banks around the world, you just need to google to find the nearest one. The same goes for fertility clinics where the eggs or sperm are used; there are many specialized clinics which are easy to find.

It is important to know that the legal situation varies greatly from country to country – in some countries literally everything related to donation is illegal, in others there are almost no restrictions and you are completely free to choose the sperm/egg bank, the clinic and even the preferred method of performing the donation.

With the introduction of the new mRNA-vaccines (formerly known as Covid vaccines) we have a totally new situation when it comes to fertility. Not only have these vaccines been shown to have the most severe side effects in the history of vaccinations, they also contain many inorganic additives that accumulate in the blood, tissues, organs – literally everywhere in the body of the vaccinated – also in the sperm and the egg cells, and – not surprisinlgy – even in the breast milk. They also damage the immune system in an unprecedented way, but worst of all, they change the DNA of the vaccinated person. And that’s what sperm or egg donation is all about: Passing on your DNA and all the genetic information about the donor’s health to a new life – a new human being. So if you decide to start a family, you should definitely think about the quality of the donated sperm or eggs, and make sure the breast milk is also not contaminated.

Read here what Dr. Arne Burkhardt, one of the leading scientists about mRNA-damage, found out.

How, where, when, what?

To be honest; you can’t. Since there are no reliable tests to verify the vaccination status yet, the whole donation process is simply based on trust.

Scientists are working on tests around the world, and we can assume that there will be a test in the future, but we don’t know when that will be. Self-declaration is the only way right now to declare that you have not been vaccinated with mRNA injections. SafeReproduction members are certainly among the people who know about mRNA injections and their consequences and are here to help keep humanity free of them. It just doesn’t make sense for someone to pretend to be unvaccinated but actually be the opposite.

To get in contact through our website is the first step to build a relationship with your donor. As you go along you will get to know each other and will certainly get a sense of whether or not the donor is trustworthy.

There is only one way to contact a donor. As a member, you seach for a donor. On the list of potential donors you get as a result, you click on the picture of a donor, which takes you to their details. At the bottom of this information, you click on the button “Message to the donor”. There you enter your name, email address and leave a message. This will create an email to the donor. The donor will then reply to your email address.



We encourage donors to respond to any email they receive, but it is also up to them to do so, as it is their decision to accept or decline a request. The more information you provide about yourself, the more likely they are to respond.

Sperm donation:

Once you have decided on sperm donation, first you choose a sperm donor on our website. You contact them, get to know each other, negotiate the terms and details of the donation. The sperm is usually collected by ejaculating into a sterile container, either at a sperm bank, where the sperm is prepared for further processing and frozen, or optinally directly at the fertilization clinic or at home.

Sperm insertion is usually done in a clinic that specializes in fertilization therapies with IUI or IVF, using frozen sperm supplied by a sperm bank or fresh sperm collected at the facility where the IUI or IVF is performed. Artificial insemination and in vitro fertilization (IVF or ICSI, IntraCytoplasmic Sperm Injection) are types of assisted reproductive technology. Whereas IUI involves artificially introducing sperm into the uterus, IVF and ICSI involve taking both sperm and an egg out of the body and combining them in a petri dish. When the egg becomes fertilized, the resulting embryo is placed back into the uterus to hopefully become a pregnancy.

Optionally, artificial insemination can be performed at home. This has the benefit of lowering the cost of the procedure and adding privacy for the woman. Home insemination kits are available online or from some healthcare providers. Home artificial insemination is usually done by intravaginal or intracervical insemination. The chances of success are slightly lower than intrauterine insemination (IUI) because the semen is not inserted as deeply as with IUI, but they can still be effective. However, since no medical intervention is required, this method is a valuable option for couples who prefer a less clinical approach but do not choose the “natural way” as described below because they live in a monogamous relationship and want to avoid potential problems that this option might bring in these circumstances.

Another option is “the natural way” (intercourse), which is why we added this option under “delivery procedure” in the search/enroll settings. Since couples who want to raise a child together usually live in a monogamous relationship (e.g. marriage), this option is of course only possible if both partners explicitly agree and are aware of the possible psychological issues that may arise. For singles, this could still be the easiest way. There are also countries where intercourse is the only legal option.

In any case you have to consider the legal requirements of the country where the process takes place.

Egg donation:

Once you have decided on egg donation, first you choose an egg donor on our website. You contact them, get to know each other, negotiate the terms and details of the donation. To donate eggs, the donor is given medications that will cause her to develop multiple eggs (usually between 10 and 20) over a single cycle. The eggs are then removed from the donor by placing a needle that is attached to an ultrasound probe through the vaginal tissues. Then they are gently aspirated (suctioned) from the ovaries. Once the eggs are removed, they are evaluated by an embryologist. Then sperm from the male partner or a sperm bank is placed around or injected into each egg. This process is called in vitro fertilization (IVF).

The recipient’s uterus (womb) must be synchronized with the donor’s stimulation so that they are ready at the same time. There are several ways to achieve this. If the woman still has regular menstrual cycles, a medication is often used to suppress her ovaries and her menstrual cycle. Once the donor starts the medication to stimulate her ovaries, the recipient begins taking estrogen to develop her uterine lining. Around the time of egg retrieval, the recipient will begin taking progesterone to enable implantation of the embryo (fertilized egg). The embryo(s) will be transferred to the recipient’s uterus three to five days after fertilization. Hormones continue to be given until the pregnancy test and then, if the test is positive, during the early part of the first trimester of the resulting pregnancy.

Please note that egg donation – unlike sperm donation – is a medical process that also involves a risk for the donor. Since there is always hormone treatment involved, it can have an impact on every process in the female body in which hormones play a role, including the menstrual cycle and fertility in general. Please make sure your doctor explains you the risks as well as the benefits.

In any case you have to consider the legal requirements of the country where the process takes place.

Breast milk donation:

Once you have decided on breast milk donation, first you choose a breast milk donor on our website. You contact them, get to know each other, negotiate the terms and details of the donation. Breast milk is collected in the same way as it has been for hundreds of years: You can express milk by hand or with a breast pump.

You can then store it in a sterilised container or in special breast milk storage bags:

  • in the fridge for up to 8 days at 4C or lower (you can buy fridge thermometers online) – if you’re not sure of the temperature of your fridge, or it is higher than 4C, use it within 3 days
  • for 2 weeks in the ice compartment of a fridge
  • for up to 6 months in a freezer, if it’s -18C or lower

More tips on collecting and processing breast milk can be found here or here.

Requests related to breast milk donation: 

In any case you have to consider the legal requirements of the country where the process takes place.

This is simply between you and the receiver. You agree on a compensation individually. Some donors will do it for free, while others will say “I want 1’000 $”. In most cases, the amount will be somewhere in between, depending on the country, economy and so on. SafeReproduction is not involved in the compensation process at all.

It could also be an option that you agree on a compensation depending on the result. Sometimes you have to try several times until it finally brings the desired result. So compensation after several attempts could be an option. But everything is, as mentioned, just a matter between you and the receiver. In any case, you should be compensated for all your expenses, regardless of the result.

Parents to be usually spend a fortune for UIU, IVF and the like, so the compensation for the donor will not even be the biggest part of their expenses.

You might think that every sperm (or egg) bank would check the donor for residues of mRNA vaccines (mostly known as Covid vaccines). But they don’t. They check for all kinds of diseases and bacteria or viruses, but they don not ask about your vaccination status. Breast milk is not checked at all.

This means if you go to one of the established sperm banks, there is no way to get sperm from an unvaccinated donor. Before we started SafeReproduction, the only option was to buy frozen sperm that was at least 2 years old – before the first mRNA vaccines came on the market.

Now you simply look for a donor on our website and then either arrange the donation directly with the donor or use a sperm bank to freeze the sperm of that particular donor and then specifically tell the sperm bank that you only want the sperm of that donor. The same applies to egg donations. Breast milk donations are the easiest, as no other party has to be involved.

There are many websites dedicated to sperm and egg donor matching, and even the first ones for breast milk donation pop up, but we are the first and so far only website that focuses exclusively on reproduction for unvaccinated donors. However, you can be sure that there will be many similar websites soon. As a sister site to SafeBlood Donation, we have a lot of experience in matching unvaccinated members – we’ve been doing it for 2 years and have earned an impeccable reputation. Also, we’re a non-profit organization – we’re not in it for the money, we’re in it to make a difference.

SafeReproduction is not involved in the medical part of the donation process – we only match donor and recipient. The actual donation process (IUI, IVF, ICF or similar) is done through a specialized sperm/egg bank if you choose frozen sperms or eggs, and finally at the clinic where the donated sperm/eggs will be used. Breast milk donation is subject to the agreement between donor and receiver.

There are plenty of sperm/egg banks around the world, you just need to google to find the nearest one. The same goes for fertility clinics where the eggs or sperm are used; there are many specialized clinics which are easy to find.

It is important to know that the legal situation varies greatly from country to country – in some countries literally everything related to donation is illegal, in others there are almost no restrictions and you are completely free to choose the sperm/egg bank, the clinic and even the preferred method of performing the donation.

With the introduction of the new mRNA-vaccines (formerly known as Covid vaccines) we have a totally new situation when it comes to fertility. Not only have these vaccines been shown to have the most severe side effects in the history of vaccinations, they also contain many inorganic additives that accumulate in the blood, tissues, organs – literally everywhere in the body of the vaccinated – also in the sperm and the egg cells, and – not surprisinlgy – even in the breast milk. They also damage the immune system in an unprecedented way, but worst of all, they change the DNA of the vaccinated person. And that’s what sperm or egg donation is all about: Passing on your DNA and all the genetic information about the donor’s health to a new life – a new human being. So if you decide to start a family, you should definitely think about the quality of the donated sperm or eggs, and make sure the breast milk is also not contaminated.

Read here what Dr. Arne Burkhardt, one of the leading scientists about mRNA-damage, found out.

Membership

Of course, your full anonymity is guaranteed at every stage of the donor/recipient process.

Your real name and email address will not be visible on the website at any time. This applies to both donor and seeker members. As administrators, however, we will see your real name and also reserve the right to delete donors who do not provide it correctly.

As a donor, you choose any user name and are contacted by an interested party exclusively via our contact form, which is still completely anonymous. Only when you reply, your email address becomes visible to the seeker as well, and from then on, both of you are in direct contact and decide from when you want to share your full identity. Of course, it is clear that both donor and recipient want to know as much as possible about themselves as soon as an agreement is likely.

You can sneak a peek if you are not a member; search for a donor and generate a list of potential donors, but you cannot see their pictures and their full details, and most importantly you cannot contact them until you are a member.

Membership for donors is free, and as a donor you also have unlimited access to the search function, but to sign up as a member to search only, there is a membership fee. These are the types of membership.

There is only one way to contact a donor. As a member, you seach for a donor. On the list of potential donors you get as a result, you click on the picture of a donor, which takes you to their details. At the bottom of this information, you click on the button “Message to the donor”. There you enter your name, email address and leave a message. This will create an email to the donor. The donor will then reply to your email address.



We encourage donors to respond to any email they receive, but it is also up to them to do so, as it is their decision to accept or decline a request. The more information you provide about yourself, the more likely they are to respond.

There are two types of members – searchers and donors.

Membership 1 (searcher)

You are looking for a sperm or egg donor – you enrol here.
Membership fee 25 or 50 USD, depending on the plan you choose.

The lifetime membership fee of 50 USD/EURO/or equivalent entitles you to unlimited searches and contact as many donors as you like, without time limit.

The yearly membership does the same for 25 USD/EURO, but expires after 12 months.

Membership 2 (donor)

You want to become a sperm or egg donor – you enrol here. Membership is free.