Informal Sperm Donation in Wales
- AI (married context): Recognized by Statute
- AI (single / non-marital): Not Recognized
- NI: Not Recognized
- Sperm donor agreement: Unknown
Key Provisions:
- Parentage:
- Under the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act 1990 (as amended 2008):
- “The woman who … has carried a child as a result of the placing in her of an embryo or of sperm and eggs … is to be treated as the mother of the child” (Section 33(1)).
- If married, the husband is the legal father if he consented to the insemination (Section 35(1)), unless consent is disproven.
- If in a civil partnership, the partner is the second parent if she consented (Section 42(1)), unless rebutted.
- Informal donors (outside licensed clinics) may be the legal father if no spouse/partner consent applies—clinic donors are exempt (Section 41(1)).
- Under the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act 1990 (as amended 2008):
- Assisted Reproduction:
- The Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act 1990 states: “A man who donates sperm … through a licensed clinic is not to be treated as the father” (Section 41(1)). Note: Informal donation lacks this exemption—parentage defaults to common law or Sections 35/42 if applicable.
- The HFEA 2008 reinforces clinic protections but leaves informal arrangements legally exposed.
- Sperm Donor Agreements:
- For single recipients, informal donors may be legal fathers—private agreements aren’t binding, as seen in Re G (A Minor) [2013] EWHC 814 (Fam), a case applicable to Wales, where child welfare overruled donor intent.
- For partnered recipients, the spouse/partner is the second parent if consenting (Section 35; Section 42), but informal donors risk liability if consent fails.
- Case Law: In Re Z (A Child) [2020] EWFC 39, a Welsh informal donation dispute, the court prioritized the child’s needs over an agreement.
- Financial Responsibility:
- If deemed the legal father, an informal donor owes maintenance under the Child Support Act 1991 (Section 1). See Re B (A Child) [2017] EWHC 253 (Fam), applicable to Wales, where contact triggered liability.
- Clinic donors are exempt (Section 41), but informal donors lack this protection.
- Regulation and Risks:
- The HFEA 1990 caps clinic donors at 10 families (HFEA Guidance). Informal donation is unregulated—no health checks or caps apply.
- Case Law: Re H (A Child) [2018] EWHC 3318 (Fam), a Welsh case, examined an informal donor’s role, highlighting legal uncertainty.