Why Egg Quality Matters More Than Egg Count
When people first start looking into fertility treatment, one of the first numbers they hear about is their egg count. It is easy to see why count becomes the focus. Numbers feel concrete and measurable. But for some people, the number of eggs is far less important than the quality of those eggs, and understanding the difference between the two can completely change how you approach fertility treatment.
What Egg Quality Actually Means
Egg quality refers to the chromosomal and genetic health of an egg. A high-quality egg has the correct number of chromosomes and is mature enough to be successfully fertilized and develop into a healthy embryo. A low-quality egg may have chromosomal abnormalities that prevent fertilization, cause the embryo to stop developing early, or lead to miscarriage. (Source: NCBI)
Unlike egg count, which can be estimated through blood tests such as AMH and antral follicle counts, egg quality cannot be measured directly before retrieval. It can only be inferred through how embryos develop in the lab. And in some cases, through preimplantation genetic testing. This is one reason why egg quality is often underestimated. It is harder to see and harder to talk about in concrete terms.

Why Age Has Such a Strong Effect on Fertility
The biggest factor affecting egg quality is age. Women are born with all the eggs they will ever have, and those eggs age along with the rest of the body. As a woman gets older, the likelihood of chromosomal errors during egg maturation increases. This is why IVF success rates decline with age, even when the ovaries still produce a reasonable number of eggs. Retrieving ten eggs at 40 is a very different situation from retrieving ten eggs at 32, because the proportion of chromosomally normal eggs is likely to be lower. (Source: ACOG.org)
This also explains why donor egg IVF tends to have significantly higher success rates. When eggs come from a younger donor, the chromosomal health of those eggs is typically much better, regardless of the age of the person carrying the pregnancy. The uterus, it turns out, is far more resilient to age than the eggs themselves.
What This Means for IVF Treatment
In IVF, the goal is not simply to retrieve as many eggs as possible. It is to retrieve enough mature, healthy eggs to give the process the best chance of producing at least one viable embryo. For some people, that happens with just a few eggs. For others, multiple cycles may be needed to accumulate enough embryos for testing or transfer. (Source: University of Gothenburg)
Lifestyle factors such as smoking, excessive alcohol consumption, poor sleep, and chronic stress have all been associated with reduced egg quality. While these factors cannot reverse age-related decline, addressing them can support the best possible outcome from the eggs that are available. Some clinics also recommend supplements such as CoQ10, which has shown promise in supporting mitochondrial function in eggs, though results vary between individuals.
What matters most is working with a specialist who looks at the full picture, including age, embryo development, genetic health, and individual history, to build a treatment plan that reflects your actual situation rather than just a number on a test result.
Sources:
NCBI - https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12048747/
ACOG.org - https://www.acog.org/having-a-baby-after-age-35-how-aging-affects-fertil... University of Gothenburg - https://www.gu.se/increased-chances-of-successful-ivf-if-18-20-eggs-are-...



