Top 10 Causes of Female Infertility in India (2026 Complete Guide)

cause of fertility

The most common causes of female infertility in India are PCOS, blocked fallopian tubes, endometriosis, ovulation disorders, and age-related decline. Around 1 in 6 Indian couples face fertility challenges, and in nearly 40% of those cases, the cause lies on the female side. The good news is most of these causes are diagnosable and treatable when addressed early.

Female Infertility in India: A Quick Reality Check

Before listing the causes, one clarification matters. Infertility is not a “female problem” by default. National data shows that male factor infertility accounts for 30 to 40% of cases in India, female factor for another 40%, and the remaining are either combined or unexplained. Yet, women still carry most of the social and emotional weight of the diagnosis. That needs to change.

If you and your partner have been trying to conceive for over a year without success (or six months if you are above 35), both partners should get evaluated together. A complete fertility workup checks both sides of the equation, not just one. Skipping the male evaluation is one of the most common mistakes Indian couples make.

With that context set, here are the top 10 causes of female infertility in India, ranked by how often they show up in our patients.

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Cause 1: PCOS (Polycystic Ovary Syndrome)

PCOS is the single biggest cause of female infertility in India. Roughly 1 in 5 Indian women of reproductive age has PCOS, which is one of the highest rates globally. It is a hormonal disorder where the ovaries produce excess androgens (male hormones), develop multiple small cysts, and stop releasing eggs regularly.

Common symptoms: irregular or missed periods, weight gain (especially around the abdomen), acne, excess facial or body hair, hair thinning on the scalp, and difficulty losing weight.

Why it causes infertility: No regular ovulation means no egg available for fertilization. Even when ovulation does happen, hormonal imbalance can affect egg quality and uterine lining receptivity.

Diagnosis involves: ultrasound (to see ovarian cysts), hormone blood tests (LH, FSH, testosterone, AMH), thyroid function, and insulin resistance check.

Treatment options: lifestyle changes are the single most effective first step (weight loss of even 5 to 10% can restore ovulation in many women), Metformin for insulin resistance, ovulation-inducing drugs like Letrozole or Clomid, IUI for mild cases, and IVF when other methods fail. Around 70% of PCOS patients conceive successfully with proper treatment.

Cause 2: Tubal Factor Infertility (Blocked Fallopian Tubes)

Blocked fallopian tubes are the second most common cause in India, partly due to a uniquely Indian factor: genital tuberculosis. India has one of the highest rates of pelvic TB in the world, and it often damages the fallopian tubes silently before any pregnancy attempt.

Common causes of tubal blockage: pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), genital tuberculosis, untreated sexually transmitted infections, endometriosis, previous abdominal or pelvic surgeries, and history of ectopic pregnancy.

Why it causes infertility: Fallopian tubes are where sperm meets egg. If tubes are blocked, fertilization cannot happen naturally. If only partially blocked, the risk of ectopic pregnancy rises significantly.

Symptoms: often silent. Sometimes pelvic pain, heavy or painful periods, or pain during intercourse.

Diagnosis: HSG (hysterosalpingography) is the standard test. Laparoscopy gives a more detailed picture when HSG findings are unclear. TB workup is essential in Indian patients with unexplained tubal damage.

Treatment: tubal surgery has limited success in most cases. IVF is the gold standard solution because it bypasses the tubes entirely. For women with confirmed tubal blockage, IVF often delivers the highest pregnancy success rate.

Cause 3: Endometriosis

Endometriosis affects 10 to 15% of Indian women of reproductive age, but the average diagnosis takes 7 to 9 years from when symptoms start. Many women in India normalize severe period pain, dismissing it as “just how periods are.” It is not.

What it is: a condition where tissue similar to the uterine lining grows outside the uterus, on ovaries, fallopian tubes, or pelvic walls. This tissue still bleeds during menstruation, causing inflammation, scarring, and pain.

Common symptoms: severe period pain that disrupts daily life, painful intercourse, heavy or prolonged bleeding, chronic pelvic pain, pain during bowel movements during periods, and infertility itself.

Why it causes infertility: distorted pelvic anatomy, inflammation that affects egg and sperm quality, scarring around tubes and ovaries, and lower implantation rates.

Diagnosis: clinical examination, transvaginal ultrasound (limited accuracy), MRI for detailed mapping, and laparoscopy as the gold standard.

Treatment: depends on severity. Mild endometriosis may be managed with medication and timed conception. Moderate to severe cases benefit from laparoscopic surgery to remove endometriotic tissue, followed by attempts to conceive. IVF is often the most effective option for moderate to severe endometriosis, especially when combined with surgical treatment.

Cause 4: Ovulation Disorders Beyond PCOS

Not every ovulation problem is PCOS. Several other conditions disrupt egg release, and each requires a different approach.

Common ovulation disorders in India:

  • Hypothalamic dysfunction: caused by extreme stress, significant weight loss, eating disorders, or excessive exercise. The brain stops sending hormonal signals needed for ovulation.
  • Premature ovarian insufficiency (POI): ovaries stop functioning normally before age 40. Genetic and autoimmune factors play a role.
  • Hyperprolactinemia: elevated prolactin levels (the hormone responsible for breastfeeding) can suppress ovulation in non-pregnant women.
  • Thyroid disorders: both hypothyroidism and hyperthyroidism interfere with ovulation. Hypothyroidism is particularly common in Indian women.

Diagnosis: complete hormone panel including FSH, LH, AMH, TSH, T3, T4, and prolactin. Sometimes additional tests for autoimmune markers or genetic factors.

Treatment: depends on the underlying cause. Thyroid medication, prolactin-lowering drugs, ovulation induction medication, lifestyle adjustments, or IVF in cases where ovulation cannot be restored. The good news is many of these conditions respond well to medication alone, restoring natural fertility within months.

Cause 5: Uterine and Cervical Issues

Even with healthy ovaries and open tubes, problems with the uterus or cervix can prevent pregnancy. These structural issues are surprisingly common in Indian women, especially after age 30.

Common uterine and cervical problems:

  • Fibroids: non-cancerous growths in the uterine wall. Affects up to 30% of Indian women of reproductive age, especially after 30. Large or strategically placed fibroids can interfere with implantation.
  • Polyps: small growths in the uterine lining that can prevent embryo implantation.
  • Adenomyosis: uterine lining tissue growing into the uterine muscle, often coexists with endometriosis.
  • Septate or bicornuate uterus: congenital uterine abnormalities.
  • Asherman’s syndrome: scarring inside the uterus, often resulting from repeated D&C procedures or untreated infections after abortion or childbirth. This is a particularly underdiagnosed cause in India.
  • Cervical mucus issues: thick or hostile mucus that blocks sperm passage.

Diagnosis: ultrasound, hysteroscopy (gold standard for uterine cavity issues), and MRI for complex cases.

Treatment: hysteroscopic surgery for fibroids and polyps, scar removal for Asherman’s syndrome, and surgical correction for some congenital uterine abnormalities. IVF is often used after surgical treatment to maximize conception chances.

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Cause 6: Age-Related Decline in Egg Quality and Quantity

This cause is rising dramatically in India. Two decades ago, the average urban Indian woman married by 24 and conceived by 26. Today, that has shifted to marriage at 28 to 32 and first pregnancy attempts in the early thirties. Biology, however, has not changed.

The reality of fertility timelines:

  • A woman is born with all the eggs she will ever have, around 1 to 2 million at birth, declining throughout life.
  • By puberty, around 300,000 eggs remain.
  • Fertility starts declining gently around age 30.
  • Between 35 and 37, the decline becomes steeper.
  • After 40, both egg quantity and quality drop significantly.
  • By 43, the chance of natural conception per cycle is below 5%.

Why age affects more than just quantity: older eggs are more likely to have chromosomal abnormalities, leading to failed fertilization, miscarriage, or genetic conditions in the baby.

Diagnosis: AMH (anti-Müllerian hormone) is the most reliable marker of ovarian reserve. AFC (antral follicle count via ultrasound) provides another data point. FSH levels on day 2 or 3 of the cycle add context.

Treatment options: ovulation induction with timed intercourse or IUI, IVF (the success rate per cycle drops with age), egg freezing options for women planning to delay pregnancy, and donor eggs for women whose own eggs are no longer viable. Honest, age-appropriate planning conversations should ideally start at 30, not 35.

Cause 7: Hormonal Imbalances

Many cases of unexplained infertility actually trace back to hormonal imbalances that get missed in a basic workup. India has particularly high rates of certain hormonal disorders that affect fertility.

Major hormonal causes:

  • Hypothyroidism: affects 1 in 10 Indian women, often undiagnosed. Can prevent ovulation and increase miscarriage risk.
  • Hyperprolactinemia: suppresses ovulation. Often caused by stress, certain medications, or pituitary issues.
  • Insulin resistance: closely linked to PCOS and weight issues. Affects egg quality and ovulation.
  • Diabetes: poorly controlled diabetes affects fertility and increases pregnancy complications.
  • Cortisol imbalance: chronic stress raises cortisol, which suppresses reproductive hormones.

Diagnosis: comprehensive hormone panel including TSH, T3, T4, prolactin, fasting insulin, HbA1c, and sometimes cortisol levels.

Treatment: typically straightforward. Thyroid medication, prolactin-lowering drugs, insulin sensitizers, and dietary management. This category of infertility is often the easiest to treat because it responds well to medication alone. Many women conceive naturally within 6 to 12 months of starting treatment.

Cause 8: Sexually Transmitted Infections and Pelvic Infections

Untreated infections are a hidden cause of female infertility in India, partly because many infections are silent and partly because routine STI screening is uncommon in Indian healthcare.

Common culprits:

  • Chlamydia: often asymptomatic, but causes serious tubal damage if untreated.
  • Gonorrhea: similar pattern, often symptomless in women.
  • Genital tuberculosis: uniquely high prevalence in India. Can damage tubes, ovaries, and uterine lining without obvious symptoms.
  • Recurrent vaginal infections: can ascend and cause PID over time.
  • Untreated PID (pelvic inflammatory disease): leaves permanent scarring on tubes and pelvis.

Why this matters: even one untreated infection can cause permanent fertility damage. Many Indian women only learn about a past infection when fertility testing reveals tubal damage.

Diagnosis: STI panel blood tests, vaginal swabs, HSG to check tubal patency, and TB-specific testing in suspected cases.

Treatment: antibiotics for active infections, TB treatment regimens for genital tuberculosis (long but effective), and IVF when permanent damage has already occurred. Prevention through routine screening is far more effective than treatment after the fact.

Cause 9: Lifestyle Factors

This is the most controllable category of fertility issues, and yet it is also the most underestimated. Lifestyle does not just affect general health, it directly impacts hormonal balance, egg quality, and ovulation.

Lifestyle factors that hurt female fertility:

  • Obesity: disrupts hormonal balance, contributes to PCOS, lowers IVF success rates.
  • Underweight: can stop ovulation entirely, especially BMI below 18.
  • Smoking and tobacco: including chewing tobacco and gutka, common in parts of India. Damages eggs and accelerates ovarian aging.
  • Alcohol: moderate to heavy consumption affects ovulation and embryo quality.
  • Chronic stress: elevates cortisol, suppresses reproductive hormones, common among urban working women.
  • Poor sleep: disrupts hormonal cycles, especially melatonin and reproductive hormones.
  • Sedentary lifestyle: worsens insulin resistance and PCOS.
  • Environmental toxins: pollution, endocrine-disrupting chemicals in plastics and pesticides.
  • Excessive caffeine: more than 3 cups daily linked to reduced fertility.

The hopeful part: unlike most other causes, lifestyle factors are within your control. Studies consistently show that addressing these factors can significantly improve fertility outcomes within 3 to 6 months. Many couples conceive naturally after lifestyle improvements alone.

Cause 10: Unexplained Infertility

In 10 to 15% of cases, all standard tests come back normal but pregnancy still does not happen. This is called unexplained infertility. It is not a real diagnosis. It is a category that means current diagnostic tools have not yet identified the cause.

Why this happens:

  • Subtle egg quality issues that standard tests cannot detect
  • Mild endometriosis missed on ultrasound
  • Implantation issues invisible to current imaging
  • Sperm function problems that go beyond standard semen analysis
  • Subtle hormonal imbalances at specific cycle moments

Why “unexplained” feels frustrating: there is no clear villain, no specific fix, and no satisfying answer. Couples can feel stuck in limbo, doing everything right with no result.

Treatment approach: even without a clear cause, treatment progresses in steps. Ovulation induction with timed intercourse or IUI is often tried first. If that fails after 3 to 6 cycles, IVF becomes the next step. Many couples with unexplained infertility actually conceive on IVF because the process bypasses several unknown variables (egg pickup, fertilization in lab, embryo transfer at optimal timing).

Unexplained does not mean untreatable. It just means treatment is empirical rather than targeted.

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When Should You See a Fertility Specialist?

Timing matters in fertility evaluation. The earlier the cause is identified, the more options you have.

General guidelines:

  • Under 35: consult a fertility specialist after 12 months of trying without success
  • Age 35 to 40: consult after 6 months of trying
  • Above 40: consult immediately when you decide to conceive
  • At any age: consult right away if you have known conditions like PCOS, irregular periods, endometriosis, history of pelvic surgery, or repeated miscarriages

The “wait and see” approach is the single biggest mistake in fertility journeys. Time is the one resource that does not come back.

Common Diagnostic Tests for Female Infertility

A complete fertility workup typically includes the following.

Hormone blood tests: AMH (ovarian reserve), FSH and LH (cycle day 2 or 3), TSH and prolactin (general endocrine function), estradiol (cycle quality).

Imaging studies: transvaginal ultrasound for follicle count and uterine assessment, HSG to check fallopian tube patency, MRI for complex uterine conditions when needed.

Procedural tests: hysteroscopy for direct visualization of the uterine cavity, laparoscopy when endometriosis or tubal disease is suspected.

Other tests as indicated: genetic screening, infection panels, autoimmune workup, glucose tolerance test for insulin resistance.

A thorough workup gives you and your doctor a clear roadmap. Skipping tests to save money or time often costs more in delayed treatment.

Treatment Options Overview

Once a cause is identified, treatment options are matched accordingly.

Lifestyle modification: first-line treatment for PCOS, weight-related issues, and lifestyle-driven infertility.

Medication: ovulation induction drugs (Letrozole, Clomid, gonadotropins), thyroid medication, prolactin management, insulin sensitizers.

Surgical interventions: laparoscopic surgery for endometriosis, hysteroscopy for uterine issues, fibroid removal.

Assisted reproductive techniques: IUI for mild infertility, IVF treatment process for tubal factor, severe endometriosis, advanced age, and unexplained infertility, ICSI when male factor is also present, PGT testing for women with recurrent miscarriages or genetic concerns.

Donor and surrogacy options: donor eggs for poor egg quality, donor sperm when male factor is severe, surrogacy when carrying a pregnancy is medically risky.

The right treatment depends on the cause, your age, your medical history, and personal preferences. A good fertility specialist will explain all options before recommending a path.

Final Thoughts

Female infertility in India is often misunderstood, underdiagnosed, and emotionally heavier than it should be. The truth is that most causes are identifiable, and most are treatable. What matters is timely action, a complete diagnostic workup that evaluates both partners, and a fertility team that treats you with honesty rather than empty reassurance.

If you have been trying to conceive for over a year (or six months if you are above 35), do not wait any longer. The earlier you investigate, the more options you have, and the simpler the treatment path usually becomes.

At RITU IVF Jaipur, Dr. Ritu Agarwal personally consults every new patient. Each diagnostic workup is comprehensive, treatment plans are personalized to your specific cause, and pricing is transparent from day one. Whether you need basic guidance, a second opinion, or advanced fertility treatment, we are here to help you understand what is actually going on and what can actually be done.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q1: What is the most common cause of female infertility in India?

PCOS is the leading cause of female infertility in India, affecting roughly 1 in 5 women of reproductive age. Tubal factor infertility (often linked to genital tuberculosis or untreated infections) and endometriosis are the next most common causes.

Q2: Can female infertility be cured permanently? Many causes of female infertility are treatable, though “cured” is not always the right word. PCOS, hormonal imbalances, and lifestyle factors can be managed effectively. Tubal blockage and severe endometriosis are bypassed through IVF rather than cured. Most women with fertility issues can achieve pregnancy with the right treatment plan.

Q3: At what age does female fertility decline most sharply?

Female fertility declines gently from age 30, more steeply between 35 and 37, and significantly after 40. By age 43, the chance of natural conception per cycle is under 5%. AMH testing helps assess your individual ovarian reserve regardless of age.

Q4: How do I know if I am infertile as a woman?

The clinical definition of infertility is the inability to conceive after 12 months of regular unprotected intercourse (or 6 months if over 35). Signs that warrant earlier evaluation include irregular or absent periods, severe period pain, history of pelvic infections or surgeries, and known conditions like PCOS or endometriosis.

Q5: Can lifestyle changes alone fix infertility?

For lifestyle-related causes such as obesity, underweight, smoking, or chronic stress, yes. Significant improvements in fertility have been documented within 3 to 6 months of addressing these factors. For structural or hormonal causes, lifestyle changes support but do not replace medical treatment.

Q6: Is genital tuberculosis really a major cause of infertility in India?

Yes. India has one of the highest rates of genital TB globally, and it often causes silent damage to fallopian tubes, ovaries, and uterine lining. Many women only discover past TB when fertility evaluation reveals tubal damage. TB screening should be part of any unexplained tubal disease workup in India.

Q7: What is the success rate of treating female infertility?

It depends on the cause and the woman’s age. PCOS treatment helps around 70% of patients conceive. IVF success rates for women under 35 with treatable causes range from 40 to 50% per cycle, and cumulative success across three cycles can cross 80% at well-equipped clinics.

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