Die Private Samenspende | Teil 28 | Verträge und Private Samenspende Die Private Samenspende ·
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· 2026-04-04
Private sperm donation contracts cannot lawfully waive a child’s right to contact with its biological parent; courts decide visitation based on the child’s welfare.
Writing down expectations (e.g., donor intends to be only a genetic donor, not a social parent) is useful evidence later, but such clauses may be legally ineffective against third parties.
You cannot contractually waive a child’s right to child support; donor is generally legally liable in the external relationship unless another man legally acknowledges paternity, the mother’s husband is legal father, or a step-parent adoption replaces the donor.
Internally (between donor and recipient mother), the mother can agree to assume the donor’s share of child support, but this is risky: the donor must initially pay if authorities or the mother pursue enforcement, and later reclaimment via lawsuit can take years.
If the mother becomes dependent on social benefits, her claims may transfer to the authority, making internal agreements ineffective and leaving the donor liable.
Step-parent (stiefkind) adoption can shift legal parenthood and support/visitation rights; a donor can renounce visitation in the notarial adoption application, but such renunciations are delicate and potentially reversible.
Always get independent family-law counsel (each party their own specialist) and use professionally drafted documents; DIY templates and informal fees/copies are common pitfalls and may be invalid.
Keep written records (contracts, confirmations, chats, witnesses) of agreements and clear, voluntary consent—don’t coerce.
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