2024-01-16
Offering free at-home COVID-19 testing-Rapid test
At-home COVID-19 testing, also known as rapid antigen testing, is convenient and accessible, and now American families can once again order four free tests. Be careful though. Test results may be wrong. Learn when and how to use testing.Millions of people living in the United States have ordered free at-home COVID-19 tests. Starting September 25, 2023, every American household can again order four free tests.Ordering a test takes less than a minute. Just visit the popular covid.gov/tests website . Then fill in your address and your free at-home COVID-19 test should arrive within a week or two. Currently, every household in the United States is entitled to four free at-home COVID-19 tests. People living in poor or low-income communities should have access to more free coronavirus testing.Easy, right? Well, ordering a test is quick and easy. But figuring out when and how to use them or how to understand your results isn't always simple. That's because at-home COVID-19 tests, also called rapid antigen tests, are not as accurate as the more reliable nasal swab PCR tests you can get at a doctor's office. PCR stands for polymerase chain reaction. ( Learn more about getting a PCR test .)The appeal of at-home COVID-19 testing is its convenience and accessibility. You can take the test at home (hence the name) and get results in about 15 minutes. But it's important to be cautious about rapid home test results and how you use them. If you get a positive result, the test is probably accurate. If your result is negative but you get sick, you may still have COVID-19. To help you understand what an at-home COVID-19 test is and how to interpret the results you get, we spoke with Dr. Michelle Barron, senior medical director of infection prevention and control at UCHealth and a professor of medicine and infectious diseases at the university . University of Colorado School of Medicine .