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Legal facts for Sperm Donors

What are the Legal Facts for Sperm Donors?

As a sperm donor you can choose to conceive either through a licensed fertility clinic, by home insemination or natural insemination. The laws around parental rights and responsibilities are very different depending on which of these options you choose so make sure you consider your options carefully.

3 Simple Legal Facts if you are Thinking about Becoming a Sperm Donor:

1). If you donate your sperm through a fertility clinic you will not be classed as the child’s legal father and will not have parental responsibility.

2). If you donate to a single woman via home insemination you are very likely to have legal parental responsibility to the child. The woman who is carrying the baby can choose either the sperm donor or the partner to be named on the birth certificate.

3). If you donate to a married couple (lesbian or heterosexual) via home insemination there is a chance that you could have legal parental responsibility to the child. However in most cases if the woman who is giving birth is married the couple are automatically protected and the partner will be legally classed as a parent.

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What if I donate through a licensed clinic?

The donor would have no legal rights or responsibilities as a parent. However when any resulting child born through sperm donation at a clinic or sperm bank reaches 18 years of age, he or she will have the legal right to gain information on their donor and indeed any other children born as a result of that donor.

What rights does a sperm donor have if he helps a lesbian couple conceive?

The law currently indicates that if the lesbian couple are married the donor or co-parent will not be the legal father if you conceive through a licensed fertility clinic. If you are not married you can choose to have your partners name on the birth certificate and your partner will be seen as the child’s second parent and the donor will not be the child’s legal father.

If you conceive at home and are married, in most cases providing a legal donor contract is in place, the donor would not be considered the legal father and both partners can be named on the birth certificate as Mother and Parent. This would then mean the known donor would not legally be seen as the Father. The law around rights of civil partnered lesbians receiving donor sperm is complex and it is strongly recommended to seek specialist advice from a law firm prior to any insemination.

What rights does a sperm donor have when donating to single heterosexual women and single lesbians?

If you conceive via home insemination the sperm donor will be the child’s legal father. If you conceive through a licensed fertility clinic there is a possibility that the donor will be considered as the legal father however this is an emerging area and the decisions will be based on individual circumstance.

If the father is not named on the birth certificate he will have no parental or financial responsibility to the child. If you are not married you can choose to have your partners name on the birth certificate and your partner will be seen as the child’s second parent and your donor will not be your child’s legal Father.

If you conceive at home and are married, in most cases providing a legal donor contract is in place, the donor would not be considered the legal father and both partners can be named on the birth certificate as Mother and Parent. This would then mean the known donor would not legally be seen as the Father.

What rights do I have if I donate to married heterosexual couples?

It may be that the husband in a married heterosexual relationship is having fertility difficulties and the couple choose to use a known sperm donor to conceive. In the UK there have recently been some cases challenging married couples who conceive with a known sperm donor and the donor’s right as the child’s legal father.

This is currently a very grey area of the law and therefore the law in these circumstances is not concrete and is open for challenge as the natural father may apply for rights to the child’s upbringing and likewise the natural father may be pursued for child maintenance. In most cases, if you conceive at home and are married both the husband and wife can be named on the birth certificate as Mother and Father.

How useful is a legal sperm donor agreement?

A written donor agreement is useful if a dispute arises however it may not be considered powerful enough in a court of law to resolve parental responsibility. The legal effect of your agreement will depend on your individual circumstances and the content of your agreement.

You should try to clearly set out your agreements with regards to all aspects of the involvement such as a co-parenting arrangement and state any decision making processes to do with the child’s upbringing such as contact rights, religion, schooling, country of residence etc....

Related Articles:

Guidance for all Sperm Donors