A baby boy has become the first child in the UK to be born using a womb transplanted from a dead donor.
Grace Bell, the mother of the baby was born without a viable womb, says her little boy Hugo, who is now 10 weeks old, is “simply a miracle”.
Bell and her partner Steve Powell, from Kent, paid tribute to the “kindness and selflessness” of the donor and her family for their “incredible gift”, while also thanking medical teams in Oxford and London who supported their journey.
The surgeons involved said the birth was “a ground-breaking moment”, which could give hope to many more women with a similar diagnosis.
Hugo was born just before Christmas 2025, weighing nearly 7lbs, at Queen Charlotte’s and Chelsea Hospital in west London.
Bell was born without a womb and doesn’t have periods but does have normal ovaries – a condition called MRKH syndrome, which affects one in every 5,000 women in the UK.

At the age of 16, she was told she wouldn’t be able to carry her own child.
To have a baby, the couple’s only option was to hope for a womb transplant or go down the route of surrogacy.
When she received a phone call saying a womb had been donated and a transplant was possible, Bell remembers being “in complete shock” and “really excited”.
But she was also acutely aware of the donor family’s “incredible gift”, which has enabled her to carry and give birth to her own child.
“I think of my donor and her family every day and pray they find some peace in knowing their daughter gave me the biggest gift: the gift of life,” Bell said.
