The Handmaid's Tale is Margaret Atwood's most famous work and her first dystopian novel, since all her previous fiction had adjusted to the conventions of realism.In general the plot of any dystopia should be based on factuality, or in other words, it has to be a plausible representation of the future of a concrete society.However, either when the novel was published or now that more than thirty years have passed, there is no such thing as "handmaids."Nothing of the sort exist in any democratic country (Kay n.p.).However, as Chaterjee points out, there are many "disturbing" overlaps between Atwood's handmaids' struggle and the real experience and events that take place in contemporary surrogacy agreements.(n.p.).This paper examines Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale from a 21 stcentury posthumanist perspective, which discusses the economic and ethical implications and no insignificant shocking similarities between the handmaids in the novel and our present-day surrogate mothers.