With someone you know

Knowing your donor changes everything.

A known donor can offer something a clinic can't: a relationship your child can understand from the beginning. It also brings a different set of conversations, agreements, boundaries and legal considerations, which is why getting the foundations right matters.

First, the language

What a “known donor” actually is and isn't.

A known donor is someone you know personally at the time of donation. They might be a friend, family connection, someone introduced through your community, or someone you've met through a donor introduction service.

What happens next isn't defined by the label “known donor”. It's defined by the conversations you have together. Some donors are very involved. Others aren't. Every arrangement looks different.

The important thing is getting clear on expectations early and putting those agreements in writing before you begin.
The conversations to have first

The talks you'll be glad you had early.

  • Role: donor or co-parent?Start by defining the donor's role. Some donors remain part of a child's life, others step back completely. What matters most is that everyone has the same expectations from the beginning.
  • Contact post-birthNo contact? Occasional updates? Birthday messages? Regular visits? Talk through what this looks like before you begin.
  • What the child is told, whenMost families now choose openness from an early age. You don't need every answer today, but it's worth understanding how everyone feels about future conversations.
  • Future siblingsIf you hope to have more than one child, it's worth discussing this early. Many families prefer the option of using the same donor again later.
  • MoneyIn Australia, donors cannot be paid for sperm itself, although reasonable expenses may be reimbursed. It's worth agreeing on this upfront so everyone is clear from the start.
  • Health screeningStart with STI screening. Genetic testing may also be worth considering depending on your donor's family history, ethnicity and personal circumstances. We explain the common questions to ask on our About Your Donor page. - About your donor.
AU legal essentials, in plain English: If you're using home insemination with a known donor in Australia and the recipient is in a marriage or de facto relationship, the recipient's partner is generally recognised as the second legal parent at birth, while the donor is not. This legal position is strongest when: • the donation takes place via insemination rather than intercourse • a written donor agreement is signed before insemination Getting the paperwork right before insemination can prevent difficult legal questions later.
The process, end to end

What working with a known donor actually looks like.

01

Conversations

Define expectations early. Most issues don't come from insemination itself, they come from assumptions that were never discussed.

02

Agreement

Written and signed before insemination. Independent legal advice is often worth considering.

03

Health checks

Recent STI screening for the donor. Additional testing may be recommended depending on family history, medical history and individual circumstances.

04

Insemination

The part most people focus on. By this stage, the important conversations and decisions should already be behind you.