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Best Fertility & TTC Influencers of 2026

We evaluated the top fertility and TTC influencers on medical accuracy, responsible messaging, content quality, and whether their platforms genuinely help people understand their reproductive health — not just feel seen.

Editorially reviewedUpdated January 2026
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Showing 5 of 5 results

  1. 1
    Dr. Natalie Crawford

    Dr. Natalie Crawford

    Dr. Natalie Crawford (@nataliecrawfordmd)

    9.5

    Free to FollowBest Overall

    • Board-certified OB/GYN and REI means the medical information is accurate and current — she is not just a patient sharing her experience, she is the doctor who treats patients
    • Co-host of the 'As A Woman' podcast extends her reach beyond Instagram into long-form education, covering topics like egg quality, IVF protocols, and the biology of aging and fertility in real depth
    Follow Now
  2. 2
    Dr. Lucky Sekhon

    Dr. Lucky Sekhon

    Dr. Lucky Sekhon (@lucky.sekhon)

    9.2

    Free to FollowBest for IVF Education

    • Deep focus on IVF protocols, PGT testing, and egg quality makes her the go-to account for anyone in active fertility treatment who wants to understand what is actually happening in their cycle
    • Consistently calls out fertility misinformation — supplements, "fertility diets," and pseudoscientific claims get fact-checked with actual citations
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  3. 3
    Dr. Lora Shahine

    Dr. Lora Shahine

    Dr. Lora Shahine (@lorashahinemd)

    8.9

    Free to FollowBest for Pregnancy Loss Support

    • One of the only fertility REIs on social media who focuses specifically on recurrent pregnancy loss — a topic that is underserved and often badly explained elsewhere
    • Compassionate communication style balances clinical accuracy with genuine emotional attunement — she acknowledges the grief without losing the medicine
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  4. 4
    F

    Fertility Tribe

    Fertility Tribe (@fertilitytribe)

    8.7

    Free to FollowBest Community Account

    • Community-first editorial approach surfaces real patient stories alongside expert input — the result feels less like a medical resource and more like a support group that also has good information
    • High engagement means questions and comments get real responses from people who have been through the same experiences
    Follow Now
  5. 5
    RESOLVE

    RESOLVE

    RESOLVE (@resolveinfertility)

    8.5

    Free to FollowBest Nonprofit Voice

    • Institutional credibility that no individual creator can match — as the national nonprofit, RESOLVE's messaging carries weight with insurers, employers, and legislators
    • Covers infertility as a public health and policy issue, not just a personal medical one — advocacy content keeps followers informed about insurance mandates and legal protections
    Follow Now

Fertility & TTC Influencers Buying Guide

Why follow fertility experts on social media?

A remarkable thing happened in fertility content: board-certified reproductive endocrinologists started explaining their field directly on social media — cycle science, IVF realities, egg freezing math — in plain language, for free. Following the right accounts turns your feed into ongoing education from people qualified to teach it. The catch is that the same feed contains supplement sellers with ring lights. This ranking is the credentialed shortlist.

What to look for

  • Verifiable credentials

    For medical content, follow actual clinicians — several of our ranked accounts are board-certified fertility physicians. A "fertility coach" certification from a weekend course is not the same thing.

  • Education, not diagnosis

    Responsible medical accounts teach concepts and consistently say "ask your own doctor" — because good medicine is individualized. Accounts diagnosing strangers in comments are performing, not practicing.

  • Disclosure discipline

    Reputable accounts clearly mark sponsored posts and affiliate links (it’s also an FTC requirement). An account that blurs the ad line on supplements will blur other lines.

  • Claims that match evidence

    Be wary of accounts promising fertility fixes — special diets, cleanses, one weird supplement. Real experts talk in probabilities and evidence tiers, which is less viral and more true.

  • Emotional intelligence

    The best fertility accounts handle loss, treatment failure, and childlessness with visible care. How an account treats its most vulnerable followers tells you its character.

  • Your feed, your nervous system

    Even excellent TTC content can saturate. Curate for accounts that leave you informed and calmer — and prune ruthlessly during hard cycles.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I verify a fertility influencer is a real doctor?

Check for board certification claims and cross-reference: physicians list verifiable affiliations, and certification boards have public lookup tools. Genuine fertility physicians name their credentials precisely (reproductive endocrinologist, OB-GYN) rather than vaguely ("fertility expert"). Our ranked physician accounts all check out — that vetting is much of what this ranking is.

Is social media fertility advice ever dangerous?

It can be — mainly through delay and diversion: unproven supplement protocols and "natural fertility" programs that postpone real evaluation cost exactly the months that matter most in fertility. The safe pattern: use social accounts for education and morale, act only on advice your own clinician confirms, and treat any account selling the solution to the fear it stokes as marketing.

Why follow these accounts instead of just reading medical sites?

Format and cadence: a 90-second explainer on how AMH actually works, repeated across a scroll month, teaches in a way a static article doesn’t — and the good accounts answer the questions people are actually asking this week. It’s supplementary education with a human voice; the medical sites and your own doctor remain the reference layer.

Our Ranking Methodology

Influencers evaluated on medical accuracy and responsible messaging, content quality and production, authenticity and relatability, and community engagement.

Learn more about how we test and score →