Most ovarian cysts do not stop pregnancy, though PCOS, endometriomas, and some surgery can make conception harder.
Seeing “ovarian cyst” on an ultrasound can feel heavy when you’re trying to get pregnant. The good news is that most cysts are not the kind that block fertility. Many are linked to the normal menstrual cycle and fade on their own within a few weeks or months.
The part that trips people up is this: “ovarian cyst” is a broad label. A tiny follicle cyst is not the same thing as an endometrioma. A cyst tied to polycystic ovary syndrome is different again. That type difference is what decides whether fertility is untouched, mildly affected, or more seriously reduced.
This article breaks down which cysts matter, why they matter, and when it makes sense to get a fertility workup instead of waiting and guessing.
Can An Ovarian Cyst Cause Infertility? What Changes The Risk
Yes, an ovarian cyst can be linked with infertility in some cases, but the cyst itself is often not the whole story. Many cysts do not interfere with ovulation, egg quality, or the path sperm needs to travel. Others are tied to conditions that do affect those steps.
That is why doctors usually start with one basic question: What kind of cyst is it? Once that answer is clear, the next steps get much easier.
Types That Usually Do Not Affect Fertility
Functional cysts are the usual low-drama kind. These include follicle cysts and corpus luteum cysts. They form during the menstrual cycle, are common in the reproductive years, and often disappear without treatment. According to ACOG’s ovarian cyst guidance, many ovarian cysts are harmless and go away on their own.
Small dermoid cysts and cystadenomas may not affect fertility either, though size and location still matter. A larger mass can twist the ovary, crowd nearby structures, or push a surgeon toward removal.
Types More Closely Linked To Fertility Problems
The types that raise more concern are usually these:
- Endometriomas: cysts tied to endometriosis. These can be linked with lower fertility through inflammation, scarring, pain with sex, and damage to healthy ovarian tissue.
- PCOS-related ovarian changes: these are tied to irregular or absent ovulation, which makes getting pregnant harder.
- Large or persistent cysts: not always a fertility problem by themselves, but they may lead to surgery, and surgery can reduce ovarian reserve in some cases.
Mayo Clinic notes that some ovarian cysts are linked with lower chances of pregnancy, while many others are not. Their breakdown is useful because it separates the common, cycle-related cysts from the cysts tied to endometriosis or polycystic ovary syndrome: ovarian cysts and infertility.
How Different Ovarian Cysts Affect Fertility
Fertility depends on ovulation, open fallopian tubes, healthy eggs, sperm reaching the egg, and an embryo settling into the uterus. A cyst can affect one or more of those steps, or none at all.
That’s why two people can both have an ovarian cyst and have totally different fertility chances.
When The Problem Is Ovulation
PCOS is the clearest example. The trouble is not one large cyst sitting on the ovary. The trouble is a hormone pattern that throws off regular ovulation. No ovulation means no egg release that month, which means pregnancy cannot happen that cycle.
NICHD states that PCOS is the most common cause of anovulatory infertility. That makes PCOS one of the first things doctors think about when cyst-like ovarian changes show up with irregular periods, acne, extra hair growth, or weight gain: NICHD’s PCOS fact sheet.
When The Problem Is Ovarian Tissue
Endometriomas can affect the ovary itself. They may lower the amount of healthy ovarian tissue nearby, and treatment can be tricky because removing the cyst may also remove some normal ovarian tissue. That matters more if you already have a low egg supply, are in your late 30s, or have cysts on both ovaries.
When The Problem Is Pelvic Anatomy
Some cysts are linked with distortion around the ovary and fallopian tube. Endometriosis can also cause scarring in the pelvis. If the tube cannot pick up the egg well, natural conception gets harder even when ovulation is still happening.
| Cyst Type | Usual Effect On Fertility | What Often Happens Next |
|---|---|---|
| Follicle cyst | Usually none | Watchful waiting and repeat scan if needed |
| Corpus luteum cyst | Usually none | Often fades without treatment |
| Hemorrhagic cyst | Usually none unless large or painful | Follow-up scan if symptoms or uncertain features |
| Dermoid cyst | Often none unless large | Surgery only if size, pain, or growth becomes an issue |
| Cystadenoma | Often none unless large | Monitor or remove based on symptoms and scan findings |
| Endometrioma | Can lower fertility | Plan depends on pain, size, ovarian reserve, age, and pregnancy goals |
| PCOS-related ovarian changes | Can lower fertility by blocking regular ovulation | Ovulation-focused treatment is often more useful than cyst treatment |
| Large persistent complex cyst | Variable | More testing, closer imaging review, and sometimes surgery |
Signs The Cyst May Be Part Of A Fertility Problem
A cyst matters more in a fertility setting when it shows up alongside other clues. One isolated ultrasound finding does not tell the whole story.
- Irregular or missing periods
- Known endometriosis or pain that flares with periods
- Trouble trying for pregnancy for 12 months, or 6 months if age 35 or older
- Cysts on both ovaries
- Prior ovarian surgery
- Pelvic pain, pain with sex, or a history of pelvic infection
If those signs are present, the fertility issue may come from ovulation problems, endometriosis, reduced egg supply, tubal issues, or a mix of them.
When Surgery Helps And When It Can Backfire
This is where many people get stuck. Taking a cyst out sounds like the clean fix. Sometimes it is. Sometimes it is not.
Surgery can help when a cyst is large, keeps growing, causes pain, twists the ovary, has unclear ultrasound features, or blocks fertility treatment access. But ovarian surgery can also remove or damage healthy tissue. That can lower ovarian reserve, which is the number of eggs left in the ovaries.
That trade-off is one reason fertility-minded care can look different from general gynecology care. A person with an endometrioma who wants pregnancy soon may need a different plan than someone whose main problem is pain.
Questions Worth Asking Before Cyst Surgery
- What type of cyst does the scan suggest?
- Is this cyst likely to affect ovulation or egg supply?
- Would surgery improve pregnancy odds, or just remove the cyst?
- Should AMH or antral follicle count be checked first?
- Is referral to a fertility specialist smart before operating?
| Situation | Why Fertility May Change | Typical Next Step |
|---|---|---|
| Small functional cyst with regular periods | Usually no real fertility effect | Repeat scan only if it does not settle |
| PCOS pattern with irregular cycles | Egg release may not happen regularly | Ovulation workup and cycle-focused treatment |
| Endometrioma with pain or infertility | Inflammation, scarring, or lower ovarian reserve | Plan based on age, reserve tests, symptoms, and timing goals |
| Large cyst needing surgery | Surgery may help symptoms but can reduce ovarian tissue | Balance symptom relief with pregnancy goals before operating |
| Trying for 6 to 12 months without pregnancy | Cyst may be one part of a wider fertility issue | Full fertility evaluation for both partners |
What A Fertility Workup Usually Includes
If pregnancy is not happening and a cyst is in the picture, the workup often checks more than the ovary alone. That matters because infertility can have more than one cause at the same time.
Tests Your Clinician May Order
- Pelvic ultrasound to sort out cyst type, size, and change over time
- Ovulation clues from cycle history and hormone tests
- AMH or antral follicle count to estimate ovarian reserve
- Fallopian tube testing if tubal trouble is possible
- Semen analysis, since male factor is common too
If your periods are regular and the cyst looks functional, the answer may be simple watchful waiting. If your cycles are irregular or the cyst looks like an endometrioma, the next step is often more active.
When To Get Help Soon
Book an earlier review if you are 35 or older and have been trying for 6 months, if you are under 35 and have been trying for 12 months, or if you already know you have endometriosis, PCOS, prior ovarian surgery, or very irregular periods.
Get urgent medical care for sudden severe pelvic pain, vomiting, fainting, fever, or a swollen abdomen. Those symptoms can point to torsion, rupture, bleeding, or another urgent problem.
What This Means If You Want To Conceive
One ovarian cyst does not automatically mean infertility. In many cases, fertility is unchanged. The real issue is whether the cyst is a harmless cycle cyst, a marker of PCOS, a sign of endometriosis, or a mass that may push you toward surgery.
If you are trying to conceive, ask for the cyst type, not just the cyst size. That single detail often tells you far more about your next step than the ultrasound report alone.
References & Sources
- American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG).“Ovarian Cysts.”Explains that many ovarian cysts are common, benign, and often go away without treatment.
- Mayo Clinic.“Ovarian Cysts And Infertility: A Connection?”Separates cyst types that usually do not affect fertility from those linked with lower pregnancy chances.
- Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD).“Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS).”States that PCOS is the most common cause of anovulatory infertility and explains how ovulation problems affect conception.
