INTRODUCTION: Rising trends to postpone motherhood, has coincided with increasing infertility rates. Social fertility preservation offers the potential to overcome this age-related infertility and many women are turning to the Internet to seek medical information. The aim of our study was to evaluate online information on social fertility preservation. METHODS: We used five search terms, “egg freezing,” “fertility preservation,” “social egg freezing,” “social fertility preservation” and “oocyte cryopreservation,” to identify the most popular sites rated by Google. The information and quality were rated based on four categories: Silberg's accountability criteria, Abbott's aesthetic criteria, Flesch-Kincaid readability score and the Canadian Fertility and Andrology Society (CFAS) and the Society of Obstetrics and Gynecology of Canada (SOGC) guideline recommendations. RESULTS: We identified 21 most utilized websites. The average Silberg score was 6.57, with 85.7% of websites meeting the criteria for adequate accountability. Only one website (4.8%) did not meet the criteria for appropriate esthetic appeal. The average Flesch-Kincaid readability score was 11.39, equivalent to a Grade 11 reading level, which is significantly higher than the targeted reading level of the general population (Grade 8). 57% of websites contained less than half of the evidence-based recommendations provided in the CFAS and SOGC guideline recommendations. CONCLUSION: Online information on social fertility preservation is easily accessible and esthetically pleasing, but it is not easily readable and does not reflect evidence-based recommendations. In light of our findings, physicians must fill the knowledge gaps and adequately counsel their patients to optimize a woman's chance at a successful pregnancy.