Axios Portland

March 30, 2026
It's Monday! We're coming into your inbox today with a special edition from our colleague Carly Mallenbaum, who writes about a growing path to parenthood that's colliding with rising costs, uneven laws and ethical debate.
😎 Today's weather: Sunny, but crisp with a high of 56 and a low of 36.
This newsletter is 1,048 words — a 4-minute read.
1 big thing: Surrogacy goes more mainstream


More Americans are turning to surrogacy to build their families, making ethical, legal and cultural tensions harder to ignore.
How it works: A surrogate carries a pregnancy for intended parents — typically via IVF with an embryo that uses a donor or the intended mother's egg.
- That's called gestational surrogacy, and the surrogate can be referred to as the gestational carrier.
It's an option for people who want biological kids but can't — or can't safely — carry a pregnancy.
- It's "not something I would recommend for somebody who doesn't have a medical indication or a reason to do it," says Laura Meyer, reproductive endocrinologist at Illume Fertility.
By the numbers: U.S. clinics reported more than 11,500 gestational carrier cycles in 2023 — nearly seven times as many as were done in 2004, when the ASRM began tracking the data.
- Yes, but: Less than 2% of all fertility treatment cycles are meant for genetic carriers.
State of play: Surrogacy has become something more people actually picture for themselves, because there are more public figures talking about pregnancy challenges and surrogacy, Meyer says.
The latest: Olympic figure skater Alysa Liu was born via surrogacy. And singer Meghan Trainor recently shared that medical complications from her first two pregnancies led her family to surrogacy for their third child.
- But the headlines on surrogacy aren't all celebratory: Reaction to Trainor's baby news was mixed, and a recent criminal investigation involves the surrogate births of more than 20 children.
The big picture: The topic of surrogacy remains fraught, because it involves complex health and rights implications for everyone involved — surrogates, intended parents, donors, and the children born.
2. Laws are all over the map

Without a federal law, surrogacy in the U.S. is governed by a patchwork of state regulations that can determine everything from whether agreements are legally binding to who is recognized as a parent at birth.
By the numbers: As of 2026, surrogacy agreements are enforceable in Oregon and 30 other states (with some limitations), void in one, and unregulated in 17, Surrogacy360 tells Axios.
Major differences between state laws include:
- How a surrogate must be compensated (if not considered "altruistic").
- Who becomes the legal parents of a child born via surrogate.
- And whether genetic surrogacy (when the surrogate uses her own egg) is even allowed.
Between the lines: Some state regulations have barriers for intended parents who are single, unmarried, not a heterosexual couple and/or not genetically related to the child.
- And, often, surrogacy agreements happen across state lines, so multiple state laws might need to be considered.
What they're saying: A growing number of lawyers "have begun to specialize in advising either intended parents or being the separate counsel for a surrogate," says Ming Wong, an attorney and the director of community justice and access at the National Center for LGBTQ Rights.
The latest: New surrogacy regulation was enacted in Massachusetts, Michigan and Illinois last year, and in Oregon and Hawaii this year.
3. The steep cost
Surrogacy in the U.S. can cost from $100,000 to more than $250,000, making it inaccessible for many.
By the numbers: According to data compiled by fertility benefits company Carrot, average costs for surrogacy include:
- Surrogacy compensation through an agency: $30,000- $65,000 (doesn't include additional expenses like travel).
- Agency fees: $15,000- $45,000 (could include legal and other services).
- Legal fees: $15,000-$20,000 (includes representation for all parties).
- IVF and other medical expenses: $25,000- $50,000 (more if you do multiple cycles and transfers).
4. Why she wants to become a surrogate
MaRiahh Hodgkinson knows she has "unique" origins: She grew up with a mom and dad — and an "auntie" who gave birth to her in 1999.
The big picture: Hodgkinson's origins have "always been a part of my family and story," she says. She doesn't even remember a time she was sat down and told about her parentage.
Between the lines: The surrogate is not only Hodgkinson's biological mother but also her aunt — the wife of a half-brother her adoptive father only discovered as an adult.
- When she learned Hodgkinson's parents had struggled with fertility for years, she offered to help. Their first IUI cycle worked.
"I was just the oven," her auntie would tell her. "You were always your mom's bun."
- Years later, that philosophy is also guiding Hodgkinson's surrogacy journey, this time as the oven.
Her turn: After birthing her own kids — a son and then twins 19 months later — Hodgkinson wants to be a surrogate for somebody else.
- "I got whatever crazy gene that is of loving being pregnant," she says. "I want to do it a million more times."
What's next: Hodgkinson already matched with intended parents and is in early talks about carrying their baby — she's just waiting for her doctor's clearance, at least a year postpartum, before moving forward.
- She found the family not through a Facebook group for intended parents and surrogates.
- Her base compensation: $45,000. "I don't want to get rich off of this," she says.
The bottom line: "I want to bless somebody's family," she says.
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5. Rose City Rundown
🪧 Tens of thousands of demonstrators flocked to downtown for the third No Kings rally on Saturday to protest the policies of the Trump administration.
- A few hundred gathered at the ICE facility in South Portland after the larger demostration and Portland police made several arrests, but federal agents did not use tear gas, as they had during previous protests. (The Oregonian)
🌲 Congressional Democrats from Oregon are asking the federal government to allow for more public input on a plan remove restrictions on logging for 2.5 million acres of public lands in the state. (Oregon Capital Chronicle)
❄️ Climate change is causing more precipitation to fall as rain, rather than snow, in the mountains of the Pacific Northwest, which is causing problems for avalanche forecasters. (KOIN)
🎬 Movie Madness, the last video store operating in Portland, is moving to a new location, bringing it's more than 100,000 videos to a larger space at Northeast Sandy and 41st in the fittingly-named Hollywood neighborhood. (The Oregonian)
🥳 Carly is attending multiple birthday parties.
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