Tober, DianePavone, VincenzoLafuente Funes, SaraKonvalinka, Nancy Anne2024-05-202024-05-202023-09-01https://doi.org/10.1111/maq.12767https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14468/11477Regulations governing assisted reproduction control the degree to which gamete donation is legal and how people providing genetic material are selected and compensated. The United States and Spain are both global leaders in fertility treatment with donor oocytes. Yet both countries take different approaches to how egg donation is regulated. The US model reveals a hierarchically organized form of gendered eugenics. In Spain, the eugenic aspects of donor selection are more subtle. Drawing upon fieldwork in the United States and Spain, this article examines (1) how compensated egg donation operates under two regulatory settings, (2) the implications for egg donors as providers of bioproducts, and (3) how advances in oocyte vitrification enhances the commodity quality of human eggs. By comparing these two reproductive bioeconomies we gain insight into how different cultural, medical, and ethical frameworks intersect with egg donor embodied experiences.eninfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessEggonomics: Vitrification and bioeconomies of egg donation in the United States and Spainjournal articleegg donationcommodification of the bodycryopreservationbioeconomiesUnited StatesSpain