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Get Tested

#DoingIt logo and photos of people who get tested for HIV


Who Should Get Tested

Almost everyone should be doing it! CDC recommends that everyone between the ages of 13 and 64 get tested for HIV at least once as part of routine health care and that people with certain risk factors get tested more often.  For example, people with more than one sex partner, people with other sexually transmitted diseases (STDs), gay and bisexual men, and people who inject drugs are likely to be at high risk and should get tested at least once a year.

Learn more about your risk for HIV.

Why You Should Get Tested

Doing it – testing for HIV— can give you important information and help keep you—and others—safe. About one in seven people in the United States who have HIV don’t know they have it. Knowing your HIV status can give you peace of mind—and testing is the only way you can know for sure. Knowing your status is also important because it helps you make healthy decisions to prevent getting or transmitting HIV. HIV testing is a normal part of life and if everyone else is doing it, you can too!

Even if you find out you’re HIV-positive, getting treated for HIV improves your health, prolongs your life, and greatly lowers your chance of spreading HIV to others.

Learn more about why you should get tested for HIV.


Types of HIV Tests

Doing it is easy! Testing for HIV is free, fast, and confidential.

There are three broad types of HIV tests available: antibody tests, combination or fourth generation tests, and nucleic acid tests (NAT). HIV tests may be performed on blood, oral fluid, or urine.

Test results can be ready within as little as 20 minutes to a few days, depending on the type of test. HIV tests are very accurate at detecting HIV, but no HIV test can detect HIV immediately after infection. How soon a test can detect infection depends upon different factors, including the type of test being used.

What we know about the types of HIV tests:

HIV tests are very accurate at detecting HIV, but no HIV test can detect HIV immediately after infection.  How soon a test can detect infection depends upon different factors, including the type of test being used.  In general, nucleic acid tests (NAT) can detect HIV the soonest, followed by combination or fourth generation tests, and then antibody tests.

Antibody Tests

Most HIV tests, including most rapid tests and home tests, are antibody tests.  Antibodies are produced by your immune system when you’re exposed to viruses like HIV and bacteria. Antibody tests look for these antibodies to HIV in your blood or oral fluid.  In general, antibody tests that use blood can detect HIV slightly sooner after infection than tests done with oral fluid.  With a rapid antibody screening test, results are ready in 30 minutes or less.

Home tests are antibody tests you can buy at a pharmacy or online.  There are only two FDA-approved home test kits, the Home Access HIV-1 Test System and the OraQuick In-Home HIV Test. 

  • The Home Access HIV-1 Test System is a home collection kit, which involves pricking your finger to collect a blood sample, sending the sample to a licensed laboratory, and then calling in for results as early as the next business day. This test is anonymous. If the test is positive, a follow-up test is needed to confirm your results. The manufacturer provides confidential counseling and referral to treatment.
  • The OraQuick In-Home HIV Test provides fast results in the home. You have to swab your mouth for an oral fluid sample and use a kit to test it. Results are available in 20 minutes. If you test positive, you will need a follow-up test to confirm your results. The manufacturer provides confidential counseling and referral to follow-up testing sites. Because the level of antibody in oral fluid is lower than it is in blood, blood tests find infection sooner after exposure than oral fluid tests.

If you use any type of antibody test and have a positive result, you will need to take a follow-up test to confirm your results. If your first test is a rapid home test and it’s positive, you will be sent to a health care provider  to get follow-up testing. If your first test is done in a testing lab, and it’s positive, the lab will conduct the follow-up testing, usually on the same blood sample as the first test.

Did you know?

It can take 3 to 12 weeks (21-84 days) for an HIV-positive person’s body to make enough antibodies for an antibody test to detect HIV infection. This time range is called the window period. If you get a negative HIV antibody test result during the window period, you should be re-tested 3 months after your possible exposure to HIV.

Combination or Fourth Generation Tests

A combination, or fourth-generation test looks for both HIV antibodies and antigens. Antigens are foreign substances that cause your immune system to activate. The antigen is part of the virus itself and is present during acute HIV infection. If you’re infected with HIV, an antigen called p24 is produced even before antibodies develop. Combination screening tests are now recommended for testing done in labs and are becoming more common in the United States.  There is now a rapid combination test available.

Did you know?

It can take 2 to 6 weeks (13 to 42 days) for a person’s body to make enough antigens and antibodies for a combination, or fourth-generation test to detect HIV. This time range is called the window period. If you get a negative combination test result during the window period, you should be re-tested 3 months after your possible exposure.

Nucleic acid tests (NAT)

NATs look for HIV in the blood. The test can give either a positive/negative result or an actual amount of virus present in the blood (known as a viral load test). This test is very expensive and not routinely used for screening individuals unless they recently had a high-risk exposure or a possible exposure with early symptoms of HIV infection.

Did you know?

It can take 7 to 28 days for a NAT to detect HIV. Nucleic acid testing is usually considered accurate during the early stages of infection. However, it is best to get an antibody or combination test at the same time to help the doctor interpret the negative NAT. This is because a small number of people naturally decrease the amount of virus in their blood over time which can lead to an inaccurate negative NAT result. Taking pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP15) or post exposure prophylaxis (PEP) may also reduce the accuracy of NAT if you have HIV.

What you can do:

Talk to your health care provider to see what type of HIV test is right for you. They can tell you the window period for the type of test you take. If you’re using a home test, you can get that information from the materials included in the test’s package.

After you get tested, it’s important for you to find out the result of your test so that you can talk to your health care provider about treatment options if you’re HIV-positive or learn ways to prevent getting HIV if you’re HIV-negative.

Learn more about the type of HIV test that may be best for you.

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