Fertility Associates & Gynecology in Baltimore: Reproductive Specialists in Canton
Fertility Associates & Gynecology is a reproductive endocrinology practice in Baltimore's Canton neighborhood that combines OB/GYN care with fertility treatment, serving patients seeking everything from routine gynecological care to assisted reproductive technology (ART). The practice draws both people managing infertility and those seeking general women's health services.
What the practice actually is
Fertility Associates & Gynecology operates as a specialized OB/GYN office with in-house fertility treatment capabilities, meaning fertility consultations, testing, and procedures happen at one location rather than requiring referral elsewhere. The practice is staffed by reproductive endocrinologists trained in IVF, intrauterine insemination (IUI), and hormone management alongside general gynecological providers. Patients can start with a general gynecology appointment and transition to fertility care if needed, or arrive specifically for fertility evaluation.
Services and pricing
Core gynecology services include annual exams, contraception management, menopause counseling, and treatment of conditions like endometriosis and fibroids. Initial gynecology consultations typically cost between $150 and $300 out-of-pocket without insurance coverage; the practice accepts most major insurances including CareFirst, United, and Cigna.
Fertility services span diagnosis through treatment. Initial fertility workups (including bloodwork and imaging) run $500 to $1,000 before insurance. IUI cycles, which involve controlled ovarian stimulation and timed insemination, typically cost $1,200 to $2,500 per cycle. IVF remains the highest-cost intervention: a full fresh cycle (stimulation, retrieval, embryo transfer) ranges from $12,000 to $15,000 before insurance. Many insurance plans in Maryland cover a portion of fertility diagnosis and some cover IUI; IVF coverage varies significantly by plan. The practice can run an insurance verification before your first visit to clarify what your specific plan will cover. Frozen embryo transfer cycles cost $3,000 to $5,000 and are sometimes covered more readily than fresh IVF.
Male factor evaluation, including semen analysis and urologic consultation, is available in-house; fees for this component are typically $400 to $700 initially.
How it compares to other Baltimore options
Baltimore has several fertility options with different structures. The University of Maryland Fertility Center, affiliated with the larger UMD medical system, offers similar IVF and IUI services but operates as part of a hospital network, which can mean longer appointment wait times but potentially broader insurance leverage. Johns Hopkins also provides fertility care, primarily through its gynecology and reproductive medicine department, and tends to see patients with complex medical histories; it is less accessible for straightforward fertility evaluation.
Fertility Associates & Gynecology is smaller and private, which typically translates to shorter wait times for consultation (often two to three weeks versus six to eight weeks at Johns Hopkins) and faster turnaround on initial testing. If you need complex surgical evaluation beforehand (for severe endometriosis or large fibroids), Johns Hopkins has more immediate access to operating-room infrastructure. If you want integrated gynecology and fertility in one place with faster access for straightforward cases, Fertility Associates is the more efficient choice.
Who it suits and who it does not suit
This practice is best for patients seeking fertility evaluation in an outpatient setting, couples managing infertility for one to three years, and people who want gynecology and fertility under one roof. It is well-suited to those with private insurance or who can pay out-of-pocket, since IVF remains expensive and coverage varies widely.
It is less suitable for patients who are uninsured or underinsured, since the practice does not heavily subsidize fertility care costs, and for those who need extensive surgical intervention before fertility treatment can begin. If you have a complex medical history requiring hospitalization or specialized surgical preparation, a hospital-based fertility program may be a better starting point.
First visit
For a gynecology-only first appointment, expect standard intake (medical history, medications, previous procedures), a pelvic exam, and discussion of any specific concerns. You will likely be asked about contraception preferences, sexual history, and family planning timeline. The visit typically runs 45 minutes to an hour.
For a fertility-focused initial visit, the appointment is longer (often 90 minutes). You will complete detailed reproductive history (previous pregnancies, miscarriage history, how long you've been trying to conceive), undergo evaluation for any obvious issues, and receive an overview of testing options and timeline. If you are starting treatment, expect to schedule bloodwork and possibly an ultrasound during that same week.
Bring insurance cards, identification, and a list of all current medications and supplements. The practice requests completion of intake paperwork online before arrival when possible.
Hours, parking, and logistics
Fertility Associates & Gynecology is located in the Canton neighborhood at a street address accessible by car and public transit. Hours are Monday through Friday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., with limited Saturday availability for consultations (confirm current Saturday hours directly, as they change seasonally). On-site parking is available; if full, street parking in Canton is usually available within one block.
The practice does not offer evening hours, which may be limiting for people working standard office jobs. Most fertility-related bloodwork is drawn early morning (typically 7 a.m. to 9 a.m.) to meet hormone-level timing, and this scheduling is managed at the time of treatment planning.
The practice serves Baltimore as one of the few private fertility options offering same-building gynecology and reproductive endocrinology, avoiding the delays and coordination gaps that come from splitting care between providers.

