HR-2557-119
Referred to the House Committee on Armed Services.
Sponsored by Sara Jacobs (D-CA)
What it does
This bill would amend Title 10 of the U.S. Code to require TRICARE Prime and TRICARE Select — the health insurance programs for active-duty military members and their dependents — to cover fertility-related care. Covered services would include IVF (up to three egg retrievals and unlimited embryo transfers), sperm and egg retrieval, artificial insemination, genetic material transfer, fertility medications, and related coordination services. The bill would also direct the Secretary of Defense to establish a fertility care coordination program and provide training to community health providers serving military families. Coverage would take effect for services provided on or after October 1, 2027.
Who benefits
Active-duty service members and their dependents who face infertility challenges, including those whose infertility may be linked to combat injuries, toxic exposures, or frequent deployments that delay family formation. Single service members and same-sex couples would benefit under the bill's broad definition of infertility, which does not require a partner. Community health care providers near military installations who would receive training and referral coordination. Fertility clinics and reproductive medicine specialists who would gain a new covered patient population. Military retention advocates who argue family-building benefits improve recruitment and retention.
Who is hurt
TRICARE program administrators and the Department of Defense, which would bear new mandatory coverage costs. Taxpayers who fund the TRICARE program would indirectly bear those costs. Private fertility clinics not integrated into the TRICARE network may face administrative burdens to become participating providers. Service members or dependents in remote postings with limited access to fertility specialists may face practical barriers even with coverage. Religious or conscience-objecting medical providers within the military health system may face tension with mandatory coverage requirements.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that military service uniquely disrupts family planning — deployments, combat injuries, and toxic exposures can impair fertility — and that service members deserve the same reproductive health benefits increasingly available in the civilian sector. They contend that the current TRICARE exclusion of IVF creates a significant gap: a 2023 RAND Corporation study found military families face higher rates of infertility-related stress and that fertility benefits are a growing factor in retention decisions. Supporters also argue the bill's broad definition of infertility, which includes single individuals and same-sex couples, ensures equitable access across the entire force.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that adding IVF as a mandatory TRICARE benefit would impose substantial new costs on the Defense Department at a time of constrained budgets, potentially diverting funds from readiness, equipment, or other medical priorities. They contend that IVF coverage raises unresolved legal and ethical questions — including the status of unused embryos — that Congress has not addressed, as highlighted by the legal uncertainty following the Alabama Supreme Court's 2024 ruling treating frozen embryos as children. Opponents may also argue that the three-retrieval limit and unlimited embryo transfer structure could generate open-ended long-term costs that the bill does not cap or offset.