Legal
International Surrogacy Developments: Financial Impact On Families
The author argues that as more people resume foreign travel, with many doing so to consider starting their families through surrogacy, there is a need to look closer to home at reforming domestic UK laws on surrogacy to avoid concerns and pitfalls that can come with an overseas surrogacy arrangement.
In a globalised world, and one where cross-border legal matters are a familiar part of the wealth management world, it can throw up unusual-sounding issues. One such is how surrogate pregnancy can be a cross-border matter, affecting high net worth individuals, among others. In this article, Michael Gregory, a partner at Lowry Legal, talks about the difficulties and offers pointers for clients seeking solutions.
As always, the views of guest contributors are not necessarily shared by the editors of this news service. Jump into the conversation! Email tom.burroughes@wealthbriefing.com
Having acted for many high net worth families over the years,
consideration of overseas countries to address a personal need
when the same is not readily available here in the UK, has always
been high on their priority lists. The same can also be said for
couples planning to start a family.
Now foreign travel has opened after the pandemic, I am once again
seeing more couples who are choosing to embark on their pathway
to parenthood abroad. The legal restrictions here within the UK
which make commercial surrogacy illegal, coupled with the ‘small
pool’ of surrogates available to carry any child to be born
gestationally through a surrogacy arrangement, continues to
compound those decisions for couples to look abroad.
For many couples, they embark on their parentage pathways to the
US. This is due to the well-known ‘pre-birth’ orders that are
readily available there in several states, which ensure that the
new commissioning parents are recognised as the legal parents
immediately upon the birth of any child born through a surrogacy
arrangement. There is also the certainty of being able to enforce
any surrogacy agreement that is entered, since these are
considered legally binding and afford the intended parents and
surrogates alike with the appropriate legal protection they need.
Surrogacy agreements in the US, after all, can cost on average
anything between £140,000 ($160,881) to £250,000.
From a financial perspective, due to the high level of costs
associated with a US-based surrogate arrangement and to also
avoid the lengthy travelling times, many couples venture to other
parts of Europe nearer to home where surrogacy laws are far less
stringent than here in the UK, and where those countries permit
surrogacy for foreign intended parents.
Prior to the war, Ukraine, for example, was one of the largest
suppliers of surrogates and a destination for many couples who
wanted to commence a pathway to becoming parents. The average
cost of surrogacy in Ukraine was approximately £30,000 to £70,000
(significantly less than the US) but provided a legal framework
like a US surrogacy arrangement, whereby the intended parents are
considered the legal parents from birth.
However, the intended parents must show a medical need for
surrogacy and be there for the birth itself. The intended parents
must also be there for a period of time after the birth whilst
immigration requirements are resolved in order to bring any child
back to the UK.
The impact that the onset of the war in the country has had on
surrogates and intended parents alike has been immense, with many
surrogates relocating and/or fleeing to other countries where
surrogacy agreements do not have the same legal protection as in
Ukraine or indeed are recognised or are even legal. Intended
parents have to face being unable to even access the country and
be with their surrogate at the time of the birth or spend
sufficient time in such a war-torn environment to be able to deal
with, or address, all the official documentation needed to be
able to bring any child back to the UK.
Relatively modern
Other European countries such as Georgia for example, despite
having relatively modern views on surrogacy, only recognise those
with opposite sex as intended parents and not those who are
within a same sex relationship.
Therefore, a surrogate relocating/fleeing one country to another
to escape a war as seen in Ukraine, could be faced with a
situation where their commissioning parents’ legal status is not
recognised and the surrogate and intended parents are both
stranded within a country with a child or children that they are
unable to bring back to the UK due to the lack of formal
documentation and/or legal parentage.
Whichever country an intended parent decides to engage a
surrogate to start a family, what many couples are unfortunately
still failing to do is obtain the specialist legal advice that is
essential both here in the UK and in those foreign countries
where the intended parents are recognised at birth. Many intended
parents are travelling back to the UK not knowing that they still
must apply for a Parental Order (the court order that
extinguishes the legal parentage of the surrogate) should they
want to reside here and ensure that their parentage of any child
born through surrogacy abroad is recognised here in England.
Also, immigration advice is not being obtained at all in some
cases in advance of a child being born through surrogacy. Even in
those countries where intended parents are being recognised as
the legal parents from day one, it is essential that immigration
documentation is in order, since the new parents will be
travelling on different passports from the child or children
and this could result in UK border control refusing entry to them
and their new family.
The need for temporary clearance to have been granted by the Home
Office so that the intended parents can then have time to apply
for the Parental Order here in the UK and thereafter British
citizenship for the child, is essential.
As more and more people embark once again on foreign travel, with
many using this to consider starting their families through
surrogacy, surely we need to be looking closer to home at
reforming our own laws on surrogacy to avoid the major concerns
and pitfalls that can come with an overseas surrogacy
arrangement and, in doing so, providing the protection that
the modern family in 2022 so desperately needs? In 2019, the
Law Commission provided a report and consultation paper on the
reform of English surrogacy law, which called for greater
protection and transparency for both intended parents and
surrogates here in England.
Unfortunately, those calls for reform remain at large,
unchanged.
About the author
Michael Gregory is a partner at Lowry Legal. He has nearly 20
years’ experience advising high net worth and high-profile
clients on a diverse range of family law matters, with a
particular emphasis upon financially complex high net worth
cases. He also has niche experience in surrogacy and fertility
law and how this rapidly changing and developing area of law is
impacting the modern family.