where can i get a tb test near me
You can usually get a TB test at walk‑in clinics, urgent care centers, large pharmacy clinics, and local public health departments in your area.
Quick Scoop
- Most people get a TB skin or blood test at:
- Urgent care or walk‑in clinics that offer lab services.
* In‑pharmacy clinics (for example, clinic services inside large chain pharmacies) where you can book online and walk in.
* County or city health departments, which often provide low‑cost or free TB screening, especially for school, work, or immigration requirements.
* Occupational health or employee health clinics if your job requires TB clearance.
How to find a TB test near you
Use these simple steps to locate a spot close to you:
- Search “TB test” or “tuberculosis test” plus your ZIP/postcode or city in a maps app or search engine; filter by “clinic” or “urgent care.”
- Check large pharmacy clinic websites for “TB testing” or “TB screening” and use their “find a clinic near me” or appointment tools.
- Visit your county or city health department website and look for “TB clinic” or “TB testing services.”
- If you need proof for work or school, ask HR or student health which local clinic or lab they accept and whether they require a skin test or a blood test.
What kind of TB test you might get
- TB skin test (PPD/Mantoux)
- A small amount of fluid is injected under the skin of your forearm, and you must return in 48–72 hours so a clinician can read the result.
* Often used for routine work or school clearance in many clinics.
- TB blood test (IGRA, such as QuantiFERON‑TB Gold)
- A one‑visit blood draw, with results reported later; can be convenient if returning for a reading is hard for you.
* Commonly available at labs and some urgent care and pharmacy‑based clinics.
Practical tips before you go
- Check whether you need an appointment or can walk in; many urgent care and pharmacy clinics let you book same‑day slots online.
- Bring:
- Photo ID and your insurance card (if you have one).
- Any TB test forms your employer, school, or immigration office gave you.
- Ask in advance:
- Which test they use (skin vs blood).
- Total cost and whether it is covered by your insurance or offered at a reduced fee by the health department.
If this is urgent or for symptoms
If you have symptoms such as a persistent cough, night sweats, weight loss, or fever, or you were recently exposed to someone with active TB, contact a clinic, urgent care, or your local health department as soon as possible and seek in‑person medical evaluation.
Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.