Is it normal to feel disconnected from my partner during IVF?

IVF can be brutal on intimacy, and many couples feel disconnected in ways they never expected. Between the hormones, the financial strain, the medical appointments, and the endless waiting, even the strongest relationships get tested.
If you’ve been looking at your partner and thinking, why don’t we feel like “us” anymore? — you’re not broken, and neither is your relationship. You’re going through something really, really hard, and it’s normal that this would test even the strongest of partnerships.
Why IVF puts strain on relationships
The truth is, IVF isn’t just a medical process. It’s an emotional marathon. Here are some of the reasons that distance often creeps in:
- Different coping styles. One of you may want to talk nonstop, the other shuts down. Neither is wrong, but it can feel like you’re on different pages.
- Hormones and emotions. Fertility meds can throw your body (and mood) into chaos. It’s not unusual to feel irritable, withdrawn, or just “off.”
- Financial stress. IVF is expensive in the US, and money pressure has a way of magnifying every other stressor.
- Sex becomes scheduled. When intimacy is linked to appointments, retrievals, and transfers, it can start to feel clinical instead of connecting.
- Fear of hope. Sometimes one partner pulls back emotionally because they’re scared of getting hurt again if it doesn’t work.
It’s a lot. No wonder closeness takes a hit.
Signs of IVF-related disconnection
Disconnection doesn’t always look like blowout fights. It often shows up quietly:
- Conversations feel surface-level or purely practical (appointments, meds, money).
- You avoid intimacy or feel like roommates instead of partners.
- Resentment bubbles up — “I’m carrying the physical load” vs. “I feel helpless on the sidelines.”
- One of you withdraws emotionally, the other feels abandoned.
If any of this feels familiar, you’re not alone. It doesn’t mean your relationship is doomed, rather it means you’re both under pressure.
How to reconnect with your partner during IVF
Disconnection doesn’t have to be permanent and you can find your way back to each other. Here are some ways to bring closeness back into the mix:
- Name it out loud. Sometimes just saying, “I feel like we’re not as close right now, and I miss you” breaks the tension. It’s not blame — it’s an invitation.
- Make space outside of IVF. Schedule one night where IVF talk is off-limits. Order takeout, watch trash TV, or go for a walk. Remember what makes you “you.”
- Redefine intimacy. If sex feels clinical or pressured, lean into other forms of closeness — cuddling, massages, even holding hands. Connection doesn’t have to be tied to performance.
- Divide roles clearly. If one of you is managing meds and appointments, maybe the other handles insurance calls or meal prep. Shared responsibility can ease resentment.
- Consider counseling. Fertility-specific therapists or couples counseling can give you tools to navigate these exact challenges. Sometimes having a neutral third party helps you both feel heard.
A truth you may need to hear
Feeling disconnected from your partner during IVF doesn’t mean you’re failing, or that your relationship isn’t cut out for the long haul. It means you’re human, navigating one of the most stressful, high-stakes experiences a couple can face.
You don’t have to be “perfect partners” every moment. What matters is that you keep finding ways back to each other — even if it’s messy, even if it takes work.
IVF might test your relationship, but it doesn’t have to define it. With honesty, compassion, and intentional effort, you can come out the other side not just as co-survivors of fertility treatment, but as partners who fought for each other along the way.