2026年4月1日
The Life Sciences Legal Lens – A European Perspective – 5 / 9 观点
A European Perspective #1 | AUSTRIA
In a significant decision for the Austrian healthcare and life sciences sector, the Constitutional Court (VfGH) annulled the statutory ban on “social egg freezing”, clarifying the scope of reproductive autonomy under Article 8 ECHR.
The Case at Stake: The applicant, a 36-year-old healthy woman, sought the annulment of Section 2b(1) of the Austrian Reproductive Medicine Act (Fortpflanzungsmedizingesetz – FMedG). Under this provision, the retrieval and storage of oocytes for future medically assisted reproduction was only permitted where a physical illness or its treatment created a serious risk that pregnancy could no longer be achieved through sexual intercourse. In practice, this meant that so-called “social egg freezing” – the preventive freezing of oocytes without medical indication – was prohibited. The applicant argued that this restriction prevented her from entering into a medical treatment contract for the retrieval and cryopreservation of her own oocytes and violated her right to respect for private and family life under Article 8 ECHR.
The Decision: The Constitutional Court upheld the application and declared Section 2b(1) FMedG unconstitutional in its entirety. The Court confirmed that the desire to have a child and to make use of medically assisted reproduction falls within the scope of Article 8 ECHR. This protection extends not only to in vitro fertilisation itself, but also to preparatory steps such as the retrieval and storage of oocytes intended for later use. While the legislature enjoys a margin of appreciation in regulating reproductive medicine, an outright and unconditional prohibition of non-medically indicated egg freezing was found to be disproportionate. The Court held that potential health risks and ethical concerns could be addressed through less restrictive measures, such as counselling obligations or age limits, rather than through a blanket ban. The annulment will take effect on 31 March 2027, giving the legislature time to adopt a constitutionally compliant framework.
This is important for fertility clinics, reproductive medicine centres and healthcare providers:
The judgment fundamentally changes the regulatory landscape for assisted reproduction in Austria. Once the annulment takes effect, the preventive retrieval and storage of oocytes without medical indication can no longer be categorically prohibited. However, the Court explicitly recognised that the legislature may introduce regulatory safeguards, including counselling requirements, documentation duties or age thresholds. Providers should therefore anticipate a new statutory framework governing “social egg freezing”, rather than a deregulated environment. In addition, the ruling reinforces the constitutional dimension of reproductive autonomy, which may influence future challenges to restrictions in the field of reproductive medicine.
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作者 Irina Rebin
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