Where is the Money in Births?
👶 How is the birth industry transforming from a clinical event into a holistic ecosystem?
From fertility clinics to doulas and online maternity retail, the birth economy is booming.
📖 Key insights:
- Mother and child healthcare market: 842 million 2024, projected to nearly triple 2.67 trillion by 2033.
- Fertility services market: $45 billion in 2025, growing at 6.45% CAGR.
- Online maternity market in China alone reached CN¥224 billion in 2025, up 12.6%.
📖 Read the article
🔗 https://supporttips.com/news/where-is-the-money-in-births/
🎧 Listen to the podcast
🔗 https://supporttips.com/media/podcast-26-30-money-in-birth/
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Source Post:
https://supporttips.com/news/where-is-the-money-in-births/
The birth industry is undergoing a fundamental transformation. The article “Money in Births” explains how what was once viewed as a hospital‑based medical event has blossomed into a vast, multi‑billion‑dollar economy of holistic care, technology and support.
The numbers are staggering. The mother and child healthcare market is projected to nearly triple from 842 million to 2.67 trillion by 2033. Fertility services are growing at over 6% annually. Even doulas – once a niche profession – can gross $14,000 or more per year, with postpartum overnight care commanding premium rates.
Key growth segments include doula support, fertility services, neonatal and prenatal care, and online maternity retail. Successful entrepreneurs understand that modern parents are not just seeking a service – they are seeking a transformation. The birth economy is fertile ground for growth.
The fertility preservation market – egg freezing, sperm banking, and embryo storage – has become mainstream, driven by women delaying childbirth for careers. Costs are thousands of dollars annually, and success rates are far from guaranteed.
“Baby tech” is another trend: smart monitors that track breathing, motion, and even room temperature; breast pumps with app connectivity; and formula dispensers that mix bottles at the touch of a button. While helpful, these products also prey on parental anxiety.
