Scottish Daily Mail

Tinder-style app lets you swipe to find a surrogate

- Jim Norton Technology Editor

‘Fulfilling and happy experience’

A SURROGACY app that uses artificial intelligen­ce to ‘seamlessly match families with the right people’ is set to be launched this summer.

Rainbow asks users to set the criteria most important to them – such as location, age range, ethnicity and even eye and hair colour.

Similar to a dating app, they can then swipe through potential matches on the database which provides a short bio of the surrogate.

The app was founded by Maddison Firth, 34, who having suffered her own fertility troubles aimed to provide a simpler way to go about the ‘confusing, emotionall­y draining and complex process’.

Surrogacy is legal in the UK but it is not allowed to be paid for, so only reasonable expenses – those incurred as a result of the pregnancy like medical bills and compensati­on for time off work – are permitted and any agreements cannot be enforced by the law.

The surrogate is the infant’s legal parent at birth and guardiansh­ip is transferre­d by parental order or adoption after the child is born. The platform – which is open for people to register on already and is set to launch officially next month – will also function as a social media platform for those going through the process, allowing families and surrogates to chat.

Surrogates can also register on the app along with healthcare providers and advertiser­s. Miss Firth, who began working on the app in 2018, said the app ‘marks a change in the surrogacy process’, offering a more seamless and ultimately ‘fulfilling and happy experience’.

The number of UK women volunteeri­ng as surrogates is small, which drives many couples abroad. Ukraine is one of the only places in the world where it is legal for families to pay surrogates, costing couples around £40,000.

Countries such as Cambodia, India, Nepal and Thailand all banned it in recent years. But with no such restrictio­ns in the UK, dozens of highly organised Ukrainian companies are free to target the British market.

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