The rapid development of reproductive technology in the past several decades has significantly affected everyone's lives. Regarding surrogacy as an example, it has attracted national attention in 2012 when the daughter of former vice president, Taiwan, Lien Hui-hsin, gave birth to three baby girls through a surrogacy arrangement in the United States following 17 years of infertility with her husband. There are many reasons (e.g. fear of exploitation, concern about psychological and health risk or the change of 'the family' normality) for the public to concern whether to legalize one woman bear a child for another and give away at birth. Because of the complexity of surrogacy, different professionals bring varying sets of priorities and concerns to the situations they face. Despite many moral criticisms and issues being raised, this paper proposes an interdisciplinary team model to manage with the complex process of surrogacy. According to the literature, an interdisciplinary team model creates to create a framework to deliberate collaboratively on the best interests of the client and to predict the difficulties that surround surrogacy. In particular, the role of social works in interdisciplinary medical teams is considered increasingly significant. In Taiwan, an interdisciplinary team model has been applied whereby mental health social workers sit on mandatory psychiatric assessment review committees, and medical social workers are included in the hospice medical teams. The role of social workers in surrogacy interdisciplinary teams is to strengthen multidisciplinary assessment, screening clients in their social environment, empower clients, make referrals and use community resources. This paper posits these proposals: (a).Social workers should become involved in the surrogacy professional teams; (b) social workers must assist their team to become aware of the clients' needs, to counterbalance the orthodoxy of medical discourses with more holistic and social perspectives; (c). social workers should know what type of professional competency they should possess to act on surrogacy issues; and (d).social workers should define professional boundaries in the interdisciplinary team.