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MakeAMom Impregnator Kit Review: For Low-Motility Sperm

D
Dr. Priya Kapoor, PhD , PhD, Reproductive Biology
Updated
MakeAMom Impregnator Kit Review: For Low-Motility Sperm

makeamom impregnator kit review

Male factor infertility — specifically low sperm motility — accounts for roughly 40% of fertility challenges in couples, yet most at-home ICI kits are designed as one-size-fits-all solutions. The MakeAMom Impregnator kit attempts to address this directly with a design intended to maximize delivery efficiency when sperm motility is below optimal levels. Here’s our complete assessment.

How the Impregnator Addresses Motility Issues

Low sperm motility means fewer sperm are actively swimming toward the egg, so placement precision becomes critical. The Impregnator uses a slightly longer catheter tip than the BabyMaker, allowing for closer cervical-os placement that reduces the distance low-motility sperm need to travel independently.

The kit also includes a collection cup with a non-toxic, inert coating that helps prevent sperm from adhering to cup walls — a small but meaningful design detail that maximizes the number of viable sperm transferred to the syringe. MakeAMom does not use any chemical motility enhancers, which is an important safety consideration.

Kit Contents and Build Quality

Inside the box you will find the extended-tip catheter syringe, sperm collection cup with lid, step-by-step illustrated guide, and a reusable storage case. The materials are body-safe medical-grade plastic, BPA-free, and latex-free. Build quality is noticeably solid compared to single-use disposable competitors.

The kit is designed for approximately 10 reuse cycles when properly cleaned between uses. MakeAMom recommends washing components with mild unscented soap and allowing full air-dry before storage, and explicitly warns against dishwasher cleaning, which can warp the catheter tip geometry.

Pricing Analysis

At around $79.95, the Impregnator is priced identically to the CryoBaby and slightly above the BabyMaker. Across ten cycles, the effective cost per attempt is approximately $8, which compares favorably to clinical IUI procedures that can cost $300–$1,000 per cycle even before medication.

Replacement components are available for purchase if a single piece becomes damaged before the kit life is exhausted. MakeAMom’s website also offers bundle discounts when purchasing with fertility supplements like their sperm health support products.

Who Should Choose the Impregnator

This kit is best suited for heterosexual couples or solo users working with a known donor whose semen analysis shows suboptimal motility — typically defined as below 40% progressive motility per WHO 2021 reference values. It is not a medical treatment and cannot correct severe motility deficits, but it does optimize the physical delivery process.

Users with normal-motility fresh sperm may not see a meaningful advantage over the BabyMaker kit. However, given that the price difference is minimal and the design accommodates a wider range of sperm parameters, the Impregnator is a sensible default choice for couples who haven’t yet had a semen analysis done.

For a complete at-home insemination solution, the MakeAmom Impregnator Kit includes everything you need for a properly timed, sterile ICI cycle.


Further reading across our network: MakeAmom.com · IntracervicalInseminationSyringe.info


This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before making decisions about your fertility care.

D
Dr. Priya Kapoor, PhD

PhD, Reproductive Biology

Reproductive biologist and researcher whose work focuses on gamete quality, sperm-cervical interactions, and optimizing home insemination success.

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