Medically reviewed by Dr. Shwetha Y Baratikka, Fertility Specialist & IVF Consultant, Janisthaa IVF Bangalore
IUI intrauterine insemination is often the first fertility treatment a couple tries before considering IVF. It is less invasive, significantly more affordable, and for the right candidates, genuinely effective. But it is also widely misunderstood: many couples either continue IUI for too many cycles when IVF would serve them better, or abandon IUI too early when it still has a reasonable chance of working.
The most important question before starting IUI is not “does it work?” but “does it work for my specific situation and for how many cycles?”
This guide answers that question with real numbers. It breaks down IUI success rates by age group, diagnosis, and number of cycles — including cumulative success rates that most clinics do not share with patients. It compares IUI and IVF across the criteria that actually matter when making a treatment decision. And it gives you a clear, evidence-based framework for knowing when it is time to move from IUI to IVF before you spend time and money on cycles that are unlikely to succeed.
Couples who have been recommended IUI and want to understand their realistic chances before starting. Couples who have completed one or more IUI cycles and are deciding whether to continue. And couples weighing IUI against IVF who want a side-by-side comparison rather than a general overview.
IUI Success Rate Tables
How IUI success rates are measured
IUI success rates are reported in two ways:
Per-cycle success rate – the probability of achieving a clinical pregnancy in a single IUI cycle
Cumulative success rate – the probability of achieving a pregnancy after completing multiple cycles
Most clinics quote only the per-cycle figure. The cumulative figure what your actual chances are after 3 or 4 attempts is more useful for planning, and significantly more encouraging for younger patients.
Success rate data used in the tables below is drawn from published Indian and international fertility studies, ICMR-ART registry data, and clinical outcomes reported in peer-reviewed journals. Individual results vary based on clinic protocols, sperm quality, stimulation response, and timing precision.
Table 1A - IUI Success Rate by Age Group (Per Cycle and Cumulative)
| Age Group | Per-cycle success rate | After 2 cycles | After 3 cycles | After 4 cycles | After 6 cycles |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Under 30 | 18–22% | 32–38% | 44–52% | 54–62% | 68–75% |
| 30–34 | 15–20% | 27–35% | 38–48% | 48–57% | 60–70% |
| 35–37 | 10–15% | 18–27% | 26–37% | 33–46% | 43–57% |
| 38–40 | 7–10% | 13–19% | 18–26% | 23–33% | 30–43% |
| 41–42 | 3–6% | 6–12% | 9–17% | 12–21% | 16–27% |
| Over 42 | 1–3% | 2–6% | 3–9% | 4–11% | 5–14% |
How to read this table: A 34-year-old woman has approximately a 15–20% chance of conceiving in any single IUI cycle. If she completes 3 cycles, her cumulative probability rises to 38–48%. After 6 cycles, it reaches 60–70% — comparable to IVF success rates for her age group, at a fraction of the cost.
Table 1B — IUI Success Rate by Diagnosis
| Diagnosis | Per-cycle success rate | IUI recommended? | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Unexplained infertility | 10–17% | ✅ Yes — first line | Best IUI candidates; 3–4 cycles recommended before reassessment |
| Mild male factor infertility (10–20M motile sperm post-wash) | 10–16% | ✅ Yes — first line | Success highly dependent on post-wash count; below 5M motile = poor prognosis |
| Ovulatory dysfunction / PCOS (with stimulation) | 15–25% | ✅ Yes — with monitoring | Requires careful monitoring to prevent multiple pregnancy |
| Cervical factor infertility | 12–18% | ✅ Yes — effective | IUI bypasses cervical mucus — one of its primary advantages |
| Mild endometriosis (Stage I–II) | 8–12% | ⚠️ Yes, with caution | Lower success than unexplained infertility; 3 cycles max before IVF assessment |
| Moderate endometriosis (Stage III–IV) | 2–5% | ❌ Not recommended | IVF significantly outperforms IUI for moderate-severe endometriosis |
| Bilateral tubal blockage | 0% | ❌ Not suitable | IUI cannot bypass blocked tubes — IVF is required |
| Severe male factor infertility (<5M motile post-wash) | 1–4% | ❌ Not recommended | ICSI-IVF is significantly more effective |
| Premature ovarian insufficiency (POI) | 2–5% | ❌ Rarely suitable | Donor egg IVF typically required |
| Single tube patent | 6–10% | ⚠️ Possible | Lower success; assess carefully. IVF may be more appropriate |
Table 1C — IUI Success Rate: Stimulated vs Natural Cycle
| Cycle type | Per-cycle success rate | Risk | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Natural cycle IUI (no stimulation drugs) | 5–10% | Minimal | Ovulatory women with mild male factor or cervical factor |
| Clomiphene-stimulated IUI | 10–14% | Low multiple pregnancy risk | PCOS, anovulatory infertility |
| Letrozole-stimulated IUI | 12–17% | Lower multiple risk than Clomiphene | PCOS — preferred protocol at most Indian fertility centres |
| Gonadotropin-stimulated IUI | 15–22% | Higher multiple pregnancy risk | Women with poor response to oral stimulation |
Clinical note from Dr. Shwetha Y Baratikka: At Janisthaa IVF, we prefer Letrozole-stimulated IUI cycles for most patients because they offer higher success rates than natural or Clomiphene cycles with a better safety profile and lower multiple pregnancy risk. Each patient’s stimulation protocol is individualised based on their AMH, antral follicle count, and previous cycle response.
Who Can Benefit from IUI? Eligibility and Criteria
| Protocol | Per-cycle success rate | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Spontaneous LH surge monitoring | 8–12% | Requires frequent monitoring; timing sensitive |
| HCG trigger injection (Ovidrel/Pregnyl) | 14–20% | Precise ovulation timing — most commonly used |
| Dual trigger (HCG + GnRH agonist) | 16–22% | Used in select cases for stronger ovulation trigger |
IUI vs IVF: Side-by-Side Comparison
For most couples, IUI and IVF are not either-or choices — they are sequential steps in a treatment pathway. The question is not which is better in the abstract, but when to move from one to the other. The comparison below helps you understand the difference across the six criteria that matter most in that decision.
Comparison Table - IUI vs IVF: 6 Key Criteria
| Criteria | IUI | IVF | When IVF wins |
|---|---|---|---|
| Success rate per cycle | 10–22% (age and diagnosis dependent) | 35–55% (age and diagnosis dependent) | Always higher per cycle — but IUI cumulative rates catch up after 3–4 cycles in good-prognosis patients |
| Cost per cycle (India) | ₹8,000–₹25,000 including medications | ₹1.5L–₹3L including medications | IUI is 6–15x cheaper per cycle; IVF is more cost-effective per live birth in poor-prognosis patients |
| Invasiveness | Minimal — a 5-minute outpatient procedure, no anaesthesia | Moderate — egg collection under sedation, 10–14 days injections | IUI for lower physical and emotional burden; IVF if time is a concern |
| Sperm requirement (post-wash) | Minimum 5–10 million motile sperm | As few as 1 motile sperm (with ICSI) | IVF with ICSI for severe male factor — IUI is ineffective below 5M motile |
| Tube requirement | At least one open, functional tube | No tube requirement — fertilisation happens in the lab | IVF for bilateral tubal blockage, hydrosalpinx, or prior tubal surgery |
| Time to pregnancy | 3–6 cycles = 3–6 months | 1 cycle = 4–6 weeks | IVF is faster per attempt; IUI may reach similar cumulative success in 3–4 months for good candidates |
Who is the ideal IUI candidate?
IUI is most likely to succeed when all of the following apply:
– Age under 38 – success rates decline significantly above 37
– At least one open fallopian tube – confirmed by HSG or laparoscopy
– Adequate sperm count – post-wash motile sperm count of 10 million or above
– Diagnosis of unexplained infertility, mild male factor, ovulatory dysfunction, or cervical factor
– No moderate-to-severe endometriosis
– Ovaries responding to stimulation – at least one dominant follicle reaching 18–20mm
If two or more of these criteria are not met, IVF is likely to be recommended from the start rather than after failed IUI cycles.
Who should go directly to IVF?
IVF is the appropriate first treatment without trying IUI when:
– Both fallopian tubes are blocked or absent
– Sperm count post-wash is below 5 million motile sperm, or severe morphology defects are present
– Moderate-to-severe endometriosis (Stage III–IV) is confirmed
– The woman is 40 or older with a time-sensitive prognosis
– Prior IUI has failed and investigation reveals a structural cause not previously identified
– Genetic testing of embryos (PGT) is planned only possible with IVF
When to Stop IUI and Move to IVF: Decision Guide
The most common mistake couples make with IUI
Continuing IUI beyond the point of reasonable probability out of hope, cost concerns, or lack of clear guidance from their clinic is the most common reason couples arrive at IVF later than they should have. Each failed IUI cycle after the optimal number adds months to the timeline and emotional cost, without meaningfully improving the cumulative odds.
The decision to move to IVF is not a failure of IUI. It is a clinical progression to a more effective tool one that most fertility specialists would recommend proactively if given clear success-rate data.
The Decision Framework: When to Move from IUI to IVF
Use the checklist below. If you answer **Yes** to any single question in Tier 1, or **Yes** to two or more questions in Tier 2, a conversation about IVF is warranted regardless of how many IUI cycles you have completed.
Tier 1 — Move to IVF Immediately (Regardless of IUI Cycles Completed)
| Question | If Yes → |
|---|---|
| Are both of your fallopian tubes blocked or absent? | IVF is the only option. IUI cannot be effective. |
| Is your post-wash sperm count below 5 million motile? | ICSI-IVF significantly outperforms IUI at this level. |
| Has moderate or severe endometriosis (Stage III–IV) been confirmed? | IVF success rates are 4–6x higher than IUI for this diagnosis. |
| Are you 40 or older with a declining ovarian reserve (AMH below 1.0 ng/ml)? | Time is the primary factor — IVF maximises your window. |
| Has your doctor identified a uterine abnormality (septum, submucous fibroid, Asherman’s) that has not been treated? | IUI cannot succeed until the uterine environment is corrected. Treat first, then reassess. |
Tier 2 — Reassess after 3 IUI cycles (discuss IVF if 2 or more apply)
| Question | Significance |
|---|---|
| Are you between 35 and 39 years old? | Each year above 35 reduces IUI success and IVF egg quality — time matters |
| Have you completed 3 or more IUI cycles without pregnancy? | After 3–4 cycles, the marginal benefit of additional IUI is significantly reduced |
| Was your last IUI cycle gonadotropin-stimulated and still unsuccessful? | This is typically the highest-intensity IUI protocol — if it fails, IVF is the next step |
| Is your AMH below 1.5 ng/ml or antral follicle count below 7? | Low ovarian reserve reduces IUI effectiveness; IVF allows more control |
| Is your partner’s post-wash sperm count between 5–10 million motile? | This is a borderline range — IUI can work but ICSI-IVF eliminates sperm as a variable |
| Have you been trying to conceive for more than 2 years? | Duration of infertility is an independent predictor of IUI outcome |
| Are you experiencing significant emotional distress from repeated failed cycles? | Patient wellbeing is a valid clinical consideration — IVF’s higher per-cycle success reduces cycle count |
What "3 IUI cycles" actually means
The evidence for limiting IUI to 3–4 cycles comes from cumulative probability data. Here is why:
– Cycle 1 and 2 carry the highest success probability -approximately 70–75% of total IUI successes occur in the first three cycles
– Cycle 3 still has meaningful probability (particularly for patients under 35 with good prognosis)
– Cycle 4 and beyond show significantly diminishing returns – each additional cycle adds only 2–5% to cumulative success while adding cost, time, and emotional burden
– After 4–6 failed IUI cycles in a good-prognosis patient, switching to IVF typically achieves pregnancy faster and at lower total cost than continuing IUI
This is why the global consensus among reproductive endocrinologists — including ESHRE (European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology) and ASRM (American Society for Reproductive Medicine) recommends moving to IVF after 3–6 failed IUI cycles, depending on age and diagnosis.
Talking to your doctor: 5 questions to ask at your IUI reassessment
If you have completed 2 or more IUI cycles, ask your fertility specialist the following at your next appointment:
1. “What is my cumulative IUI success rate after the cycles I have completed – and what is the projected rate for cycles 3 and 4?”
A good-faith answer should include a specific percentage range based on your age and diagnosis, not a general assurance.
2. “Has anything changed in my investigation results that would change the recommended treatment?”
AMH, antral follicle count, and sperm parameters should be reassessed after 2 failed cycles — these can change.
3. “At what point would you recommend IVF and why?”
Your specialist should have a clear, individualised threshold, not a default “try a few more.”
4. “If I do move to IVF, would my diagnosis require ICSI, PGT, or any special protocol?”
Understanding the IVF pathway before committing helps with planning and cost estimates.
5. “What is the expected IVF success rate for someone with my specific profile – age, AMH, diagnosis, and sperm parameters?”
A personalised answer, not a clinic average, is what you need.
Janisthaa IVF: Honest IUI Reassessment — No Pressure, No Guesswork
At Janisthaa IVF, Dr. Shwetha Y Baratikka conducts a structured IUI reassessment after your second or third cycle – regardless of whether you are Janisthaa’s patient or have been treated elsewhere. The reassessment includes:
– Review of all investigation results and IUI cycle records
– Updated AMH and antral follicle count if more than 6 months have passed
– A personalised cumulative probability assessment for continued IUI vs IVF
– A clear IVF success rate estimate if IVF is recommended
– A written treatment recommendation you can take away and consider
There is no pressure to continue treatment at Janisthaa or to move to IVF before you are ready. The goal is to give you accurate information so you make the decision that is right for your situation — not for your clinic’s cycle count.
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Intrauterine insemination (IUI) is a fertility treatment where sperm is put directly into a woman’s uterus.
During natural delivery, sperm needs to go from the vagina through the cervix into the uterus, and up to the fallopian tubes. With IUI, sperm is “washed” and focused, and furthermore put directly into the uterus, which puts them closer to the egg.
This procedure can improve the probability of pregnancy in specific couples who have experienced issues getting pregnant.
Who does IUI?
It may be used in the treatment of:
- People who need to give sperm, however, have no female fertility issues, including single women and same-sex couples.
- Couples who can’t (or would think that it’s exceptionally troublesome) to have vaginal intercourse, for instance on account of physical incapacity or psychosexual issue.
- Those who have a condition which means they need explicit assistance to accomplish a pregnancy securely (for instance, men who are HIV positive and have had sperm washing to lessen the risk of passing on the illness to their partner and potential child).
- You might be offered IUI with your partners’ sperm if you have unexplained infertility, however, the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) Guidelines exhort against this, and, accordingly it is commonly not supported by the NHS. If you have unexplained infertility and would want to have IUI instead of IVF, you are probably going to need to pay secretly.
What’s the success rate like?
Every couple will have a different response to IUI, and it can be difficult to predict its success. Several factors affect the outcome, including:
- Age
- Underlying infertility diagnosis
- Whether fertility drugs are used
- Other underlying fertility concerns
Pregnancy rates following IUI are shifted dependent on your explanations behind requiring fertility treatment. Success rates for IUI will in general decline in women beyond 40 years old, and in women who have not gotten pregnant after three cycles of IUI. You need to talk about your anticipated success rate with your fertility specialist to check whether this a good choice for you.
Also, with any fertility treatment, the younger the woman is the higher her odds of getting pregnant. You’re also bound to get pregnant if you have fertility medications to invigorate your regular cycle.
For women aged under 35, about 18% of IUI cycles bring about a healthy infant being conceived (a cycle is one full round of IUI treatment). Women aged 35 to 37 have a 14% success rate and the birth rate for women aged 38-39 is 12%. For women more than 40, your chances are lower (5% for ladies aged 40 to 42 and 1% for women aged more than 42).
Many women will have a few cycles of IUI before they have a fruitful pregnancy so it merits thinking about that when you’re expenses of treatment.
What are the risks?
There is a little risk of infection following the IUI technique. Your PCP will utilize sterile instruments, so infection is exceptionally uncommon.
If drugs are utilized to actuate ovulation, there is a risk of pregnancy with various infants. Since fertility medications improve the probability that more than one egg will be discharged, they also improve the probability of pregnancy with products. Your doctor will attempt to adjust the sum and kind of medicine, alongside bloodwork and ultrasound to keep an excessive number of eggs from being discharged at once.
Now and then the ovaries over-react to fertility medications (especially the meds given as an injection) and a condition called ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome may result. Countless eggs might be developed at once and perhaps discharged.
This can bring about a broadened ovary, fluid buildup in the abdomen, and cramping. In uncommon cases, ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome can bring about fluid buildup in the chest and stomach area, kidney issues, blood clots, and twisting of the ovary.
In case you’re as of now taking fertility prescriptions for IUI and experience any of the accompanying side effects, you should call your doctor right away.
- Dizziness or lightheadedness
- Sudden weight gain of more than 5 pounds
- Shortness of breath
- Nausea and vomiting
- Severe abdominal or pelvic pain
- A sudden increase in abdominal size
Are you confused about what treatment to take or about the success rate of IUI? Don’t worry, you are in the right place! Janisthaa has years of expertise in treatment infertile couple and also with advanced treatment methods and dedicated staff, our success rates in pregnancy is very high. Consult our expert doctor, Dr.Shwetha.Y. Baratikkae for the most personalized treatment and compassionate care at Janisthaa IVF center.





