Create a Canadian sperm donor contract that complies with the Assisted Human Reproduction Act (S.C. 2004, c. 2). This template references AHRA sections 7 and 12 prohibiting payment for gametes, Health Canada donor screening regulations, and provincial family law regarding parentage. Covers donor and intended parent information, donation method, health screening, expense reimbursement, anonymity preferences, and parental rights. Select your governing province and download as PDF or Word — free.
What Is a Sperm Donor Contract (Canada)?
A Canadian Sperm Donor Contract is a legal agreement between a sperm donor and one or more intended parents that establishes the terms of a sperm donation arrangement. The contract documents the parties' intentions regarding parentage, parental rights and responsibilities, the donation method, health screening requirements, expense reimbursement, donor anonymity, and any ongoing contact between the donor and the child.
Sperm donation in Canada is primarily regulated by the Assisted Human Reproduction Act (AHRA, S.C. 2004, c. 2), a federal statute that governs all aspects of assisted human reproduction. Section 7 of the AHRA makes it a criminal offence to purchase, offer to purchase, or advertise for the purchase of sperm or ova from a donor. This prohibition carries a maximum penalty of 10 years imprisonment and a fine of up to $500,000. However, section 12 of the AHRA permits reimbursement of expenditures actually incurred by the donor in connection with the donation process, provided the expenses are documented with receipts and comply with the regulations established by Health Canada.
Health Canada's Safety of Sperm and Ova Regulations (SOR/2019-192) establish mandatory testing and screening requirements for donors. These regulations require testing for infectious diseases including HIV-1 and HIV-2, hepatitis B surface antigen, hepatitis C, syphilis, HTLV-I and HTLV-II, and chlamydia and gonorrhea. Donors must also provide a comprehensive medical and sexual health history.
Parentage is determined by provincial family law, which varies across Canada. In Ontario, the Children's Law Reform Act (as amended by the All Families Are Equal Act, 2016, S.O. 2016, c. 23) provides that a donor is not a parent of a child conceived through assisted reproduction unless the donor has entered into a written pre-conception agreement to be a parent. In British Columbia, the Family Law Act (S.B.C. 2011, c. 25, s.24-30) recognizes pre-conception agreements and provides that a donor who is not an intended parent under such an agreement has no parental rights or responsibilities.
A sperm donor contract serves as critical evidence of the parties' pre-conception intentions. While Canadian courts have not definitively ruled on the enforceability of all terms of a private donor contract, the existence of a written agreement significantly strengthens the intended parents' legal position regarding parentage and protects the donor from unwanted parental obligations.
This template is designed for both known (directed) and anonymous donations and complies with federal AHRA requirements while allowing the parties to address province-specific parentage considerations.
When Do You Need a Sperm Donor Contract (Canada)?
When an individual or couple plans to conceive a child using a known (directed) sperm donor rather than through an anonymous sperm bank, and both parties need to document their intentions regarding parentage, parental rights, and responsibilities before conception takes place.
When intended parents want to establish legal clarity that the donor will have no parental rights or financial obligations toward the child, and the donor wants assurance that they will not be held liable for child support or other parental responsibilities.
When a donor agrees to provide sperm for assisted reproduction and the parties need to comply with the Assisted Human Reproduction Act (AHRA) prohibition on payment for gametes while documenting permissible expense reimbursement under section 12.
When the parties need to establish health screening requirements and confirm the donor's compliance with Health Canada's Safety of Sperm and Ova Regulations, including mandatory infectious disease testing.
When intended parents and a donor wish to establish boundaries regarding the donor's involvement with the child after birth — ranging from complete anonymity to specified contact arrangements — and need a written record of their mutual agreement.
When a single parent, same-sex couple, or other family configuration uses a known donor and wants to document the arrangement to support a future court application for a declaration of parentage under provincial family law.
When the parties want to limit the number of donations and establish clear terms for when the donation arrangement will be complete, to protect both the donor's and the intended parents' interests.
Without a written sperm donor contract, the donor may be presumed to be a legal parent under provincial family law, the intended parents may face challenges establishing sole parentage, and both parties are exposed to unintended legal obligations.
What to Include in Your Sperm Donor Contract (Canada)
Parties and Identification — Full legal names, addresses, and dates of birth of the donor and intended parent(s). If there is a second intended parent (spouse, partner, or co-parent), their information must also be included. This establishes the identity of all parties for parentage purposes.
AHRA Compliance — Express acknowledgment that the arrangement complies with the Assisted Human Reproduction Act (S.C. 2004, c. 2), including the prohibition on payment for gametes under section 7 and the permissible reimbursement of documented expenses under section 12.
Donation Method — Whether the donation will be through a licensed fertility clinic (in vitro fertilization, intrauterine insemination) or self-insemination. The method may affect the applicable Health Canada regulations and provincial parentage rules.
Health Screening — Confirmation that the donor will undergo health screening in accordance with Health Canada's Safety of Sperm and Ova Regulations (SOR/2019-192), including testing for HIV, hepatitis B and C, syphilis, HTLV, and chlamydia/gonorrhea. Include the donor's obligation to disclose genetic health history.
Parental Rights and Responsibilities — Clear statement that the donor relinquishes all parental rights and responsibilities, and the intended parent(s) assume full parental rights. Reference the applicable provincial legislation (e.g., Ontario's Children's Law Reform Act, BC's Family Law Act, Alberta's Family Law Act).
Expense Reimbursement — Permitted expenses that may be reimbursed under AHRA s.12, such as travel costs, medical testing fees, and lost wages. All expenses must be documented with receipts. The contract must not provide for any payment beyond documented out-of-pocket expenses.
Donor Anonymity and Contact — Whether the donor's identity will remain anonymous or be disclosed to the child, and whether there will be any ongoing contact between the donor and the child. Specify the terms and frequency of any permitted contact.
Confidentiality — Obligations of all parties to maintain the confidentiality of the arrangement, the donor's identity, and medical information, subject to any court order or legal requirement for disclosure.
Governing Province — The province whose family law governs parentage determinations, which is critical because parentage rules vary significantly across Canadian provinces.
Frequently Asked Questions
Related Documents
You may also find these documents useful:
Consent Form (Canada)
Create a professional Canadian Consent Form to obtain informed, voluntary agreement from an individual for a specific action, procedure, or arrangement. Compliant with PIPEDA and provincial privacy legislation including Ontario's FIPPA, BC's PIPA, Alberta's PIPA, and Quebec's Law 25. Covers consent scope, withdrawal rights, privacy protections, and governing law. Suitable for medical procedures, research participation, educational programs, recreational activities, and business services across all provinces and territories.
Consent Form Medical For Minor (Canada)
Create a professional Canadian Medical Consent Form for a minor child. Authorize a designated decision maker to consent to medical treatment on behalf of your child in accordance with provincial health care consent legislation including Ontario's Health Care Consent Act (1996), BC's Health Care (Consent) and Care Facility Act, and Quebec's Civil Code (art. 11-25). Covers emergency care, routine treatment, immunizations, hospitalization, surgery, dental care, allergies, medications, provincial health card information, and preferred medical facility. Suitable for all provinces and territories.
Parenting Agreement / Child Custody Agreement (Canada)
Create a comprehensive Canadian Parenting Agreement covering decision-making responsibility, parenting time schedules, child support under the Federal Child Support Guidelines, and relocation provisions. Uses the 2021 Divorce Act terminology replacing 'custody' with 'decision-making responsibility' and 'access' with 'parenting time.'
Child Support Agreement (Canada)
Formalize child support obligations with a Canadian Child Support Agreement based on the Federal Child Support Guidelines (SOR/97-175). Covers table amounts, s. 7 expenses, shared parenting offsets, income disclosure, and annual review provisions.
Parental Consent Form (Canada)
Provide written parental consent for your child's participation in activities, medical treatment, travel, or media use. Compliant with the Health Care Consent Act, PIPEDA privacy law, and the mature minor doctrine recognized by the Supreme Court of Canada.