Understand your options
Egg freezing, IVF, IUI, donor paths, translated into plain language.
Your doctor provides medical care. Colette helps you navigate everything in between.

Decision unlocked
"I went into my consult knowing the right questions to ask. Game changer."
Maya, 34 · froze at 33
How Colette works
Colette brings them together.
Egg freezing, IVF, IUI, donor paths, translated into plain language.
See why two doctors might disagree, and which view fits your situation.
Real journeys from women with similar ages, goals, and numbers.
Your fertility chief of staff: meds, appointments, next steps.
Fertility specialists, embryologists, and genetic counselors when you need more context.
Understand your options
Not a Google rabbit hole. A real answer, personalized to your numbers, your timeline, and your life. Backed by clinical guidance and real patient experience.
Your snapshot
33 yrs · AMH 2.4
Strong markers
Likely yield now
12–18 mature eggs
Single cycle
If you wait 1 year
~10–15 eggs
Modest decline
Short answer. For someone with your profile, a year is meaningful but not catastrophic. The real question isn't this year vs. next. It's how many eggs you want banked, and whether you'd rather do it in one cycle or two.
Egg quantity declines steadily until ~35, then accelerates. The honest cost of waiting isn't usually the year. It's the second cycle you may need later to hit the same number. That's another $12–18k and a second round of hormones.
✦ Ask your doctor
Women like you chose
Based on 412 Colette members, ages 32–34, AMH 2.0–3.0.
Compare perspectives
See where expert recommendations agree, where they diverge, and how women with your exact profile actually decided.
Dr. Aiyana Patel
Reproductive Endocrinologist · Hudson Fertility
Recommends
Single retrieval, dual trigger
"Your AMH and antral count suggest a strong response. One well-tuned cycle should bank what you need before 35."
Est. cost
$14k
Timeline
6 weeks
Dr. Marcus Liu
Reproductive Endocrinologist · Bay Reproductive
Recommends
Two cycles, banked together
"Two cycles back-to-back give you a buffer for attrition and a higher chance of a live birth per stored egg."
Est. cost
$26k
Timeline
14 weeks
Colette's read
Both are defensible. The real tradeoff is cost & time vs. future flexibility.
Chose one cycle
38%
of members in your age group
Chose two cycles
42%
of members in your age group
Waited 12 months
20%
of members in your age group
Colette
Fertility advocate
You
My third embryo transfer failed, I feel awful. I reached out to another doctor for a second opinion, and they told me I'd have to re-do my testing with them. It would cost thousands of dollars and moving my frozen embryos sounds risky? Does that actually make sense?
Colette
After reviewing your records, your testing and prior protocols appear consistent with current standards of care.
Before repeating the testing, I'd ask the clinic
I'd also explore other factors that can affect transfer success, including uterine receptivity, hormonal factors, and transfer strategy. Would you like help with next steps here?
From the community
27 Colette members have faced a similar decision after multiple unsuccessful embryo transfers.
Many found it helpful to hear how others evaluated second opinions, embryo transfers, and additional testing before deciding what to do next.
27 members available to chat · avg. response 2 hrs
Right now, I wouldn't rush into more testing. I'd focus on understanding whether it would actually change what happens next.
"Here's what I'd do next."
Learn from Colette (and people like you)
Clinic A
"We'd recommend two cycles, minimum."
Clinic B
"One should be plenty for you."
Your friend
"I did it at 32 and never looked back."
Reddit, 2am
"Honestly? Just wait. Or don't. IDK."
The biggest decisions of your fertility journey deserve better than internet searches.
Powered by a verified, likeminded community
Filter by age, AMH, diagnosis, and the path you're considering. See the decisions other women actually made, and directly engage with those you want to connect with.
128 verified members match your profile
Sorted by match"Switched protocols after my first cycle. Happy to share what changed."
"Did 3 IUIs before moving to IVF. Wish I'd known sooner."
"Froze at 33, came back at 35. Ask me anything about the gap."
Stay organized
Meds, appointments, questions for your doctor, and the next decision you owe yourself...all in one place. Colette keeps the timeline so you can stay present.
Tuesday, June 9
Monitoring · Dr. Shwartz
Thu · 7:30 AMBloodwork + ultrasound
Acupuncture
Fri · 4:00 PMFollowing Dr.'s plan
Your saved questions for Dr. Shwartz · Thursday
"Given my estradiol trend, are we still targeting a Sunday retrieval, or should we adjust the trigger window?"
Fertility Specialists
Board-vetted · on-call
Embryologists
Board-vetted · on-call
Dieticians
Board-vetted · on-call
Genetic Counselors
Board-vetted · on-call
Enhanced by expert guidance
We're proud of how accessible ColetteAI makes fertility support...and we know there's still a lot to learn in fertility care. So we layer a board of expert clinicians on top: fertility specialists, embryologists, dieticians, and genetic counselors offering white-glove guidance to every member.
Every fertility journey starts somewhere
Whether you're exploring fertility preservation, actively pursuing treatment, or simply trying to understand your options, Colette helps you navigate what comes next.
Preservation
Understand timing, outcomes, costs, and tradeoffs.
ExplorePreservation
Explore whether embryos may be the right choice for your future plans.
ExploreTreatment
Learn the differences, expectations, and decision points.
ExploreFamily building
Navigate selection, logistics, and family planning considerations.
ExploreFamily building
Understand when donor eggs become relevant and what to expect.
ExploreFamily building
Explore surrogacy pathways and associated decisions.
ExploreUnderstanding
Understand testing options, risks, and implications.
ExploreCare
Navigate the emotional realities of fertility with confidence.
ExploreEight paths, one guide. You don't have to know which one is yours yet.
