In this paper I shall present a part of an allied queer-feminist and transgender ethics of reproduction. I look at Assisted Reproductive Technologies and how they raise challenges for transgender and queer people. My focus lies on the ways in which these technologies confront queer and people with normative expectations concerning their biological sex, gender, sexuality, kinship relations and their right to procreate and how this leads to medical migration. This presentation gives an overview of current legislation and policies of LGBTQI rights and access to Assisted Reproductive Technologies in various European countries, and therefore the challenges LGBTQI people have to face and how migration plays an important role in their use of Assisted Reproductive Technologies.