Healthcare is a high-pace evolutionary global marketplace with multiple and growing opportunities. Groundbreaking biological treatments and techniques provide new profitable niche markets. For instance, only commercial surrogacy in India was producing up to $2.3 billion in revenue annually until 2015 (as Sarojini et. al reported). Despite the high number of potential customers, many health care market niches bring several unique (ethical, legal and religious) controversial issues up. As many other medical procedures it can have many implications in developing countries: Many people need cash for their own survival and they become exploited undertaking process that otherwise would not have chosen (like selling their organs or surrogating their uterus), some practices may raise social problems like isolation or rejection (for example, surrogacy can cause social rejection of many women), cultural differences and poor cultural backgrounds may difficult the thorough understanding of inform consent, government's poor regulation endangers local communities and endangers foreign customers by creating regulatory gaps, etc. Ester Moya. Human Biologist Bioethical issues regarding new market niches