How to Find a Baby to Adopt

If you are looking to share your home with a child in need of love, food and shelter, the route of adoption is a viable option. Adopting domestic and international children can take several years and cost up to $30,000 in processing fees. Before you contact a foster care center or adoption agency, you must decide what type of baby you are willing to adopt and from where.

Instructions

    • 1

      Consider what type of baby you want to adopt. The three main characteristics when considering adoption include race, gender and ethnicity. In a study conducted at New York University in September 2010, 67 percent of non-white babies in the adoption process will enter the foster care system. If you are considering adopting through the foster care system, take into consideration race and ethnicity. According to Dr. Stanley Grogg of New York University, many parents want to adopt babies because older children pose potential problems as to how they were raised.

    • 2

      Visit with or contact your nearest domestic or international adoption agency, depending on where you want to go for a child. International adoption agencies assist in communicating with orphanages in the country from which you wish to adopt. Domestic agencies match you with birth mothers, usually while the mother is still pregnant, or match you with prospective newborns. Adoption counselors screen families through home inspections, background checks and interviews to make sure the person or family is well-suited for parenthood and have the financial resources to care for the baby.

    • 3

      Contact a foster care system in your area. The foster care system requires the foster parent to attend a parenting course, go through an extensive home interview, provide a background check and show financial capability. According to AdoptUsKids.org, adopting a baby through the foster system has its advantages, including more babies to select from and the state will pay you a stipend each month for clothes and food for the child. Although there is a chance the biological parents will take the child back, once the court finalizes the adoption of your foster baby, it terminates any rights of the birth parents.

    • Adoption is a wonderful way to grow your family, but it can be very expensive. There are grants and private loans available to cover some of the expenses, but its a good idea to do some fundraising as well. It will help you to build up your finances
    • Adopting a teenage boy is often a faster process than adopting an infant since most prospective adoptive families want a young child. Because it is often difficult to find families for teenagers, many states also offer adoption subsides or special ta
    • ​There are approximately 175,000 youth ages 10–18 in foster care in the United States. Of these youth, an estimated 5–10 percent—and likely more—are lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, or questioning (LGBTQ).Like all young people, LGBTQ youth in fos