Chlamydia & Gonorrhea Panel

Chlamydia and gonorrhea are the two most commonly reported bacterial STDs in the United States — and most people who have them don't know it. Both infections rarely cause noticeable symptoms, which means testing is the only reliable way to know your status. This panel requires just a urine sample, no exam or undressing, and results are ready in 1–2 business days.

Urine sample only
Results in 1–2 days
99.8% accurate
100% confidential
How it works
1
Order online
Select the Chlamydia & Gonorrhea Panel and find a lab near you. No appointment needed at most locations.
2
Visit a local lab
Over 4,500 locations nationwide. The visit takes about 5 minutes.
No exam · No undressing
3
Provide a urine sample
Both chlamydia and gonorrhea are tested from a single urine sample. No swabs, no blood draw, nothing invasive.
Urine only
4
Get your results
Secure, private results delivered to your email in 1–2 business days.
If positive — doctor consult included
Test Type
Urine Sample
No exam or blood draw required
Results In
1–2 Days
Delivered to your email
Accuracy
99.8%
FDA-cleared test
Privacy
100%
Discreet billing & results

Why get tested for chlamydia and gonorrhea together?

Both infections almost always go unnoticed

The CDC estimates that most people with chlamydia or gonorrhea have no symptoms at all. That means you can carry and transmit either infection for months without realizing it. Testing is the only way to know for certain.

They frequently occur at the same time

Co-infection with both chlamydia and gonorrhea is common. Testing for one without the other can leave an active infection undetected. This panel screens for both simultaneously from a single sample.

Untreated infections can cause serious complications

Left untreated, both chlamydia and gonorrhea can lead to pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) in women, which is a leading cause of infertility and chronic pelvic pain. In men, untreated gonorrhea can cause epididymitis, a painful condition that can affect fertility.

Treatment is simple — if you catch it in time

Both infections are bacterial and highly treatable with antibiotics when caught early. Knowing your status means you can get treated quickly, protect your partners, and prevent long-term complications.

What to expect

01
Before your visit
Don't urinate for at least one hour beforehand
For the most accurate urine test results, avoid urinating for at least one hour before your lab visit. No other preparation is needed.
02
At the lab
A five-minute visit — nothing more
You'll provide a urine sample at the collection site. There's no physical exam, no undressing, and no awkward conversation — just a quick, private visit.
03
Your results
Private email in 1–2 days
Results are sent securely to your email within 1–2 business days. If either result comes back positive, a physician consultation is included at no extra charge.

Know your status — get tested today

Same-day testing at 4,500+ locations. No appointment needed. Results in 1–2 days.

Common questions

No. This panel tests for both infections from a single urine sample collected during one lab visit. You get two results without any extra steps.
The test uses nucleic acid amplification testing (NAAT), which the CDC considers the gold standard for diagnosing both chlamydia and gonorrhea. Accuracy is 99.8% when the sample is collected correctly.
This panel tests via urine only, which detects urogenital infections. If you've had oral or anal exposure and are concerned about throat or rectal infections, speak with a healthcare provider about swab-based testing for those sites.
The CDC recommends waiting at least 1–2 weeks after potential exposure before testing for chlamydia or gonorrhea. Testing too soon may produce a false negative result, even if an infection is present.
The CDC recommends annual chlamydia and gonorrhea screening for all sexually active women under 25, and for older women with risk factors. Anyone with a new or multiple partners, or anyone who has had unprotected sex, should consider testing regardless of age or gender.
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