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Free & same-day STD testing in Georgia

Confidential, low-cost, and free STD testing across Georgia — compare clinics, labs, costs, and at-home options, and see how Georgia's reported STI rates stack up against the South and the nation.

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  • Clinics, labs & at-home kits compared
  • Free & low-cost options included
  • Backed by CDC, CMS & Census data
  • Editorially reviewed

Available testing centers

STD testing locations in Georgia

848 public & community clinics serve Georgia. Below are 14 testing centers from Georgia's largest cities — open any city for its full local list.

Listings tagged Community health center are federally funded health centers and rural clinics that treat everyone regardless of insurance or ability to pay — required to bill on a sliding fee scale and provide confidential care, and in many states minors may consent to their own STI testing. A Title X tag flags centers funded for confidential family-planning services; confirm current participation when you call.

Find your match in 10 seconds

What matters most to you?
Premium Partner
Labcorp

Labcorp

Most popular Results in 1–2 days
4.9 (125 reviews)
?

Review sources

  • EasySTD reviews125
Rated 4.9 out of 5 from 125 reviews
5667 Peachtree Dunwoody Rd Atlanta, GA
Opening hours
  • Monday 7:00 AM – 4:00 PM
  • Tuesday 7:00 AM – 4:00 PM
  • Wednesday 7:00 AM – 4:00 PM
  • Thursday 7:00 AM – 4:00 PM
  • Friday 7:00 AM – 4:00 PM
  • Saturday Closed
  • Sunday Closed

Tests offered

  • Chlamydia
  • Gonorrhea
  • Syphilis
  • Herpes
  • Hepatitis A
  • Hepatitis B
  • Hepatitis C
  • Rapid HIV
  • Conventional HIV
See tests & prices

Today's offer: $10 off any test panel — applied automatically at checkout.

Premium Partner
Quest Diagnostics

Quest Diagnostics

Results in 1–2 days
4.8 (194 reviews)
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Review sources

  • EasySTD reviews194
Rated 4.8 out of 5 from 194 reviews
790 Church St NW Marietta, GA
Opening hours
  • Monday 7:00 AM – 3:30 PM
  • Tuesday 7:00 AM – 3:30 PM
  • Wednesday 7:00 AM – 3:30 PM
  • Thursday 7:00 AM – 3:30 PM
  • Friday 7:00 AM – 3:30 PM
  • Saturday Closed
  • Sunday Closed

Tests offered

  • Chlamydia
  • Gonorrhea
  • Syphilis
  • Herpes
  • Hepatitis A
  • Hepatitis B
  • Hepatitis C
  • Rapid HIV
  • Conventional HIV
See tests & prices

Today's offer: $10 off any test panel — applied automatically at checkout.

When can I test? Exposure-window calculator

Testing too soon can miss an infection. Enter the date of possible exposure to see the earliest a test can reliably detect each STI.

Community health center Atlanta, GA

Southside Medical Center

4.4 (150 reviews)
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Review sources

  • EasySTD reviews150
Rated 4.4 out of 5 from 150 reviews

A free or low-cost STD-testing option in Atlanta, GA, run as a Federally Qualified Health Center with sliding-scale fees.

Tests & treats Title X Ryan White HIV care Sliding-scale PrEP
1046 Ridge Ave SW, Atlanta, GA 30315
English, Interpretation Services Available for Non-English Languages, Spanish
Opening hours
  • Monday 8:00 AM – 8:00 PM
  • Tuesday 8:00 AM – 8:00 PM
  • Wednesday 8:00 AM – 8:00 PM
  • Thursday 8:00 AM – 8:00 PM
  • Friday 8:00 AM – 8:00 PM
  • Saturday 9:00 AM – 2:00 PM
  • Sunday Closed
Website
All testing centers in Atlanta, GA

Listing verified May 2026 · source: CDC NPIN + HRSA

Augusta, GA

Georgia Department Of Public Health

4.5 (81 reviews)
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Review sources

  • EasySTD reviews81
Rated 4.5 out of 5 from 81 reviews

A free or low-cost STD-testing option in Augusta, GA.

Tests & treats Sliding-scale PrEP
950 Laney-Walker Blvd, Augusta, GA 30901
American Sign Language, Chinese, English, French, Haitian Creole, Interpretation Services Available for Non-English Languages, Portuguese, Spanish, Tagalog, Vietnamese
Opening hours
  • Monday 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM
  • Tuesday 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM
  • Wednesday 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM
  • Thursday 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM
  • Friday 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM
  • Saturday Closed
  • Sunday Closed
Website
All testing centers in Augusta, GA

Listing verified Apr 2026 · source: CDC NPIN

Most reviewed Columbus, GA

Valley Healthcare System

4.6 (232 reviews)
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Review sources

  • EasySTD reviews232
Rated 4.6 out of 5 from 232 reviews

A public STD-testing option in Columbus, GA.

Tests & treats Title X
1600 Ft Benning Rd, Columbus, GA 31903
Appointment required
English
Opening hours
  • Monday 8:30 AM – 5:30 PM
  • Tuesday 8:30 AM – 5:30 PM
  • Wednesday 8:30 AM – 5:30 PM
  • Thursday 8:30 AM – 5:30 PM
  • Friday 8:30 AM – 5:30 PM
  • Saturday Closed
  • Sunday Closed
Website
All testing centers in Columbus, GA

Listing verified Aug 2025 · source: CDC NPIN

Community health center Macon, GA

First Choice Primary Care

4.3 (53 reviews)
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Review sources

  • EasySTD reviews53
Rated 4.3 out of 5 from 53 reviews

A public STD-testing option in Macon, GA, run as a Federally Qualified Health Center with sliding-scale fees.

Tests & treats Sliding-scale
400 Poplar St, Macon, GA 31201
Appointment required
English
Opening hours
  • Monday 7:00 AM – 5:00 PM
  • Tuesday 7:00 AM – 5:00 PM
  • Wednesday 7:00 AM – 5:00 PM
  • Thursday 7:00 AM – 5:00 PM
  • Friday 7:00 AM – 5:00 PM
  • Saturday 9:00 AM – 1:00 PM
  • Sunday Closed
Website
All testing centers in Macon, GA

Listing verified Jun 2026 · source: CDC NPIN + HRSA

Savannah, GA

Jc Lewis Primary Health Care Center

4.2 (213 reviews)
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Review sources

  • EasySTD reviews213
Rated 4.2 out of 5 from 213 reviews

A free or low-cost STD-testing option in Savannah, GA.

Tests & treats Sliding-scale PrEP
5 Mall Annex, Savannah, GA 31406
Appointment required
English, Interpretation Services Available for Non-English Languages, Spanish
Opening hours
  • Monday 7:00 AM – 7:00 PM
  • Tuesday 7:00 AM – 7:00 PM
  • Wednesday 7:00 AM – 7:00 PM
  • Thursday 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM
  • Friday 8:00 AM – 12:00 PM
  • Saturday 8:00 AM – 12:00 PM
  • Sunday Closed
Website
All testing centers in Savannah, GA

Listing verified Mar 2026 · source: CDC NPIN

Community health center Athens, GA

Athens Neighborhood Health Center

4.3 (59 reviews)
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Review sources

  • EasySTD reviews59
Rated 4.3 out of 5 from 59 reviews

A free or low-cost STD-testing option in Athens, GA, run as a Federally Qualified Health Center with sliding-scale fees.

Tests & treats Title X Sliding-scale
675 College Ave, Athens, GA 30601
Appointment required
English, Interpretation Services Available for Non-English Languages, Spanish
Opening hours
  • Monday 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM
  • Tuesday 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM
  • Wednesday 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM
  • Thursday 8:00 AM – 7:00 PM
  • Friday 8:00 AM – 2:00 PM
  • Saturday Closed
  • Sunday Closed
Website
All testing centers in Athens, GA

Listing verified Mar 2026 · source: CDC NPIN + HRSA

Sandy Springs, GA

Southeast Medical Group

4.6 (41 reviews)
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Review sources

  • EasySTD reviews41
Rated 4.6 out of 5 from 41 reviews

A free or low-cost STD-testing option in Sandy Springs, GA.

Tests & treats PrEP
1150 Hammond Dr, Ste 310 Atlanta, GA 30328
Appointment required
English, Interpretation Services Available for Non-English Languages, Spanish
Opening hours
  • Monday 7:30 AM – 5:00 PM
  • Tuesday 7:30 AM – 5:00 PM
  • Wednesday 7:30 AM – 5:00 PM
  • Thursday 7:30 AM – 5:00 PM
  • Friday 7:30 AM – 5:00 PM
  • Saturday 8:00 AM – 12:00 PM
  • Sunday Closed
Website
All testing centers in Sandy Springs, GA

Listing verified Apr 2026 · source: CDC NPIN

Gloster, GA

Gwinnett Clinic

4.2 (172 reviews)
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Review sources

  • EasySTD reviews172
Rated 4.2 out of 5 from 172 reviews

A public STD-testing option in Gloster, GA.

Tests & treats PrEP
1740 Lawrenceville Hwy, Lawrenceville, GA 30044
Appointment required
English
Opening hours
  • Monday 9:00 AM – 6:00 PM
  • Tuesday 9:00 AM – 6:00 PM
  • Wednesday 9:00 AM – 6:00 PM
  • Thursday 9:00 AM – 6:00 PM
  • Friday 9:00 AM – 6:00 PM
  • Saturday 9:00 AM – 11:30 AM
  • Sunday Closed
Website
All testing centers in Gloster, GA

Listing verified Jun 2026 · source: CDC NPIN

Roswell, GA

Nexclin Medicine

4.3 (123 reviews)
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Review sources

  • EasySTD reviews123
Rated 4.3 out of 5 from 123 reviews

A public STD-testing option in Roswell, GA.

Tests & treats
1250 Upper Hembree Rd, Ste B Roswell, GA 30076
Appointment required
English
Opening hours
  • Monday 7:30 AM – 5:00 PM
  • Tuesday 7:30 AM – 5:00 PM
  • Wednesday 7:30 AM – 5:00 PM
  • Thursday 7:30 AM – 5:00 PM
  • Friday 7:30 AM – 5:00 PM
  • Saturday Closed
  • Sunday Closed
Website
All testing centers in Roswell, GA

Listing verified Jul 2025 · source: CDC NPIN

Johns Creek, GA

Fulton County Board Of Health

4.3 (49 reviews)
?

Review sources

  • EasySTD reviews49
Rated 4.3 out of 5 from 49 reviews

A public STD-testing option in Johns Creek, GA.

Tests & treats Sliding-scale
4700 N Point Pkwy, Alpharetta, GA 30022
English, Spanish
Opening hours
  • Monday 8:30 AM – 4:30 PM
  • Tuesday 8:30 AM – 4:30 PM
  • Wednesday 8:30 AM – 4:30 PM
  • Thursday 8:30 AM – 4:30 PM
  • Friday 8:30 AM – 4:30 PM
  • Saturday Closed
  • Sunday Closed
Website
All testing centers in Johns Creek, GA

Listing verified Apr 2026 · source: CDC NPIN

Warner Robins, GA

Core Healthcare For Women Of Central Georgia

4.2 (63 reviews)
?

Review sources

  • EasySTD reviews63
Rated 4.2 out of 5 from 63 reviews

A free or low-cost STD-testing option in Warner Robins, GA.

Tests & treats
239B Smithville Church Rd, Warner Robins, GA 31088
Appointment required
English
Opening hours
  • Monday 9:00 AM – 5:00 PM
  • Tuesday Closed
  • Wednesday 9:00 AM – 5:00 PM
  • Thursday 11:00 AM – 7:00 PM
  • Friday 9:00 AM – 1:00 PM
  • Saturday Closed
  • Sunday Closed
Website
All testing centers in Warner Robins, GA

Listing verified May 2026 · source: CDC NPIN

Community health center Albany, GA

Albany Area Primary Health Care

4.4 (147 reviews)
?

Review sources

  • EasySTD reviews147
Rated 4.4 out of 5 from 147 reviews

A public STD-testing option in Albany, GA, run as a Federally Qualified Health Center with sliding-scale fees.

Tests & treats Sliding-scale PrEP
1712 E Broad Ave, Ste A Albany, GA 31703
Appointment required
English, Interpretation Services Available for Non-English Languages
Opening hours
  • Monday 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM
  • Tuesday 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM
  • Wednesday 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM
  • Thursday 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM
  • Friday 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM
  • Saturday 8:00 AM – 1:00 PM
  • Sunday Closed
Website
All testing centers in Albany, GA

Listing verified Feb 2026 · source: CDC NPIN + HRSA

What will it cost? Estimate your STD test

Typical out-of-pocket ranges by option — actual cost depends on which tests you need.

  • Public / community clinic

    Free HIV testing is common

    $0–$25
  • Private lab (self-pay)

    Never billed to insurance

    $79–$200
  • At-home kit

    Mailed to your door, private

    $50–$150
  • Doctor / urgent care

    Often $0 preventive with insurance

    $0–$50 copay

Rate this clinic

Rate what mattered to you — no account needed. Reviews are moderated before publishing.

Also in the area

CLIA-certified labs across Georgia

Beyond the public testing sites above, these federally certified (CLIA) labs operate across Georgia — each lab's town is shown on its card below. Many test through a doctor's order or by appointment rather than walk-in, so call ahead to confirm STD/STI testing and availability before visiting.

  • Med-Lake Laboratories

    Milledgeville, GA

    100 Industrial Park Drive

    CLIA certificate
    Certificate of Accreditation
    Accreditation
    College of American Pathologists
    • Full STD panel
    CLIA #11D2162372 Call to ask
  • Washington County Regional Medical Center

    Sandersville, GA

    610 Sparta Road

    CLIA certificate
    Certificate of Accreditation
    Accreditation
    Joint Commission
    • Full STD panel
    CLIA #11D0263806 Call to ask
  • Vascular Health & Wellness Center

    Albany, GA

    2300 Dawson Road, Suite 100

    CLIA certificate
    Certificate of Accreditation
    Accreditation
    Joint Commission
    • Full STD panel
    CLIA #11D2006612 Call to ask
  • Select Specialty Hospital - Augusta

    Augusta, GA

    1537 Walton Way

    CLIA certificate
    Certificate of Accreditation
    Accreditation
    Joint Commission
    • Full STD panel
    CLIA #11D1016181 Call to ask
  • Regency Hospital Company Of Macon

    Macon, GA

    535 Coliseum Drive

    CLIA certificate
    Certificate of Accreditation
    Accreditation
    Joint Commission
    • Full STD panel
    CLIA #11D2019383 Call to ask
  • Wellstar Cobb Hospital Laboratory

    Austell, GA

    3950 Austell Road

    CLIA certificate
    Certificate of Accreditation
    Accreditation
    College of American Pathologists
    • Full STD panel
    CLIA #11D0020351 Call to ask

Source: CMS CLIA registry (Provider of Services), Q1 2026. Federal public records, filtered to active labs certified for moderate-to-high-complexity testing — the level chlamydia/gonorrhea NAAT and syphilis serology require — across Georgia. Any star rating is the CMS Hospital Compare overall rating where the lab is a rated hospital. Inclusion is not an endorsement and doesn't confirm a facility offers STD testing — always call to verify.

Test from home

At-home STD testing in Georgia

if you'd rather skip the trip, an at-home kit ships to Georgia, you collect the sample privately, and mail it back to a CLIA-certified lab. Results come online in days, with a clinician available if anything is positive. Same labs as a clinic, no waiting room — and you can read how accurate at-home STD tests are before you order.

Want a free option first? The CDC-supported TakeMeHome program mails free at-home HIV self-test kits — and, in many areas, free STI kits — to your door, with no insurance or payment needed. The paid kits below add broader panels and faster turnaround.

  • Best range — couples & full panels

    myLAB Box

    $79 & up

    Screens for:
    Up to 14 infections — incl. HIV, syphilis, chlamydia, gonorrhea, hepatitis & herpes
    Sample:
    Self-collect: swab, urine, finger-prick
    Results:
    2–5 days, online
    • Free phone consult if positive
    • CLIA-certified labs
    • Couples & subscription options
    • Discreet packaging
  • Best for simplicity & support

    LetsGetChecked

    $89 & up

    Screens for:
    5–6 common STIs incl. chlamydia, gonorrhea, HIV, syphilis & trichomoniasis
    Sample:
    Finger-prick + urine/swab
    Results:
    2–5 days, online
    • 24/7 nurse support
    • Prescription for positives
    • CLIA-certified labs
    • Free shipping both ways
  • Best value — single tests

    Everlywell

    $49 & up

    Screens for:
    Chlamydia & gonorrhea, up to a 6-test panel adding HIV, syphilis, trichomoniasis & hep C
    Sample:
    Finger-prick + swab
    Results:
    Days, online
    • Telehealth visit if positive
    • CLIA-certified labs
    • HSA/FSA eligible
    • Subscription savings

Every kit uses CLIA-certified labs. At-home testing is for screening; a reactive result should be confirmed and treated by a clinician. Prices and panels shown are illustrative and change often — confirm current details on the provider's site.

About Georgia

Getting tested in Georgia

Georgia has one of the country's higher HIV rates, ranking 2nd of 51 states; it also ranks 4th for gonorrhea, 6th for chlamydia, 15th for syphilis, and 18th for congenital syphilis. You can get tested for chlamydia, gonorrhea, syphilis, HIV and more. Testing options in Georgia include public clinics, private labs, and at-home tests. See the clinics and options below.

Free & low-cost testing in all 159 counties · at-home kits ship statewide

Largest metros

Where most Georgia testing demand concentrates — each has its own local guide.

Georgia snapshot

Who gets tested in Georgia

State-level Census (ACS) figures that shape testing demand and access. Median age and income are population-weighted estimates.

Residents
11,029,227
Median age
36
Median income
$73,150
Below poverty
16.4%
College-educated
37%

Statewide data

STDs & HIV in Georgia: the statewide picture

How reported STI rates across Georgia compare with the South region and the United States, using the most recent CDC surveillance data. Data for all 159 counties feeds the county and city pages linked below. About 12.4% of Georgia adults are uninsured — a key reason the free and low-cost testing options below matter.

An estimated ~30% of Georgia residents are aged 15–34 (ACS) — the age group with the highest reported chlamydia and gonorrhea rates nationally, which is why testing access across the state matters.

Georgia ranks #6 of 51 U.S. states & DC for chlamydia

Reported STD rates per 100,000 — Georgia vs South vs U.S.

Georgia South U.S.
Infection Georgia South United States
Chlamydia
646.4 71,294 cases ▲ 31%
545.3 492.2
Gonorrhea
274.8 30,307 cases ▲ 53%
206.3 179.5
Syphilis (P&S)
20 2,210 cases ▲ 27%
18.4 15.8
Syphilis (early)
18.4 2,026 cases ▲ 15%
19.9 16
Syphilis (late/unknown)
35.8 3,947 cases ▲ 21%
34.1 29.5

Rates per 100,000 population, latest year. Source: CDC NCHHSTP AtlasPlus (all-ages basis). Bars are scaled to the highest rate shown; the badge is each Georgia rate versus the U.S. average.

Reported STD rates in Georgia over time (per 100,000)

Chlamydia ▼ 3% vs 2022
Chlamydia Gonorrhea Syphilis (P&S)
0 350 700 2020202120222023

Between 2020 and 2023 in Georgia, chlamydia has risen from 584.2 to 646.4 per 100,000 (11%), gonorrhea has risen from 219 to 274.8 per 100,000 (25%), and P&S syphilis has risen from 16.4 to 20 per 100,000 (22%).

The 2020 dip reflects reduced pandemic-era screening, not lower transmission. Source: CDC NCHHSTP AtlasPlus.

Community health context

What shapes testing access in Georgia

Adults uninsured
12.4%
Primary-care shortage counties
119 of 159
Public & community clinics
848
Pharmacies statewide
3,276

Social Vulnerability Index · Georgia's counties average the 65th percentile nationally

Lower insurance coverage and a thin clinic-to-population ratio raise the value of free public clinics and confidential at-home testing across Georgia (pop. 11,029,227). Sources: U.S. Census ACS (uninsured), HRSA & CDC NPIN (clinics), NPPES & OpenStreetMap (pharmacies), CDC/ATSDR SVI.

Statewide HIV snapshot

HIV in Georgia (2023)

New diagnoses
25.5 / 100k
People living with HIV
61,857
On PrEP (coverage)
29.9%
Virally suppressed
65.9%

Georgia HIV care continuum (2023)

Georgia reports 25.5 new HIV diagnoses per 100,000 — above the U.S. rate of 13.7. The rate has risen16% since 2020. Among Georgia residents living with HIV, 84.4% know their status · 81.6% are linked to care · 76.9% are in care · 65.9% are virally suppressed. On prevention, 29.9% of those who could benefit from PrEP are taking it (below the 31.3% national average). Early, routine testing is what moves these numbers — it is the entry point to PrEP, treatment, and viral suppression.

Source: CDC NCHHSTP AtlasPlus. The CDC recommends everyone aged 13–64 test for HIV at least once — every clinic and lab listed above offers HIV testing.

Also screened

Viral hepatitis in Georgia

Comprehensive panels also screen for hepatitis B and C, both sexually transmissible. Per 100,000, Georgia vs U.S.

Hepatitis A (acute)
0.3U.S. 0.5
Hepatitis B (acute)
1.1U.S. 0.7
Hepatitis C (acute)
0.7U.S. 1.5

Congenital syphilis in Georgia

Pregnant or planning to be?

Congenital syphilis — passed from parent to baby in pregnancy — is the fastest-rising STI in the country. Georgia reported 127 cases in 2023, up from 81 in 2020. Nationally, cases climbed from 2,163 (2020) to 3,882 (2023). It is almost entirely preventable with a syphilis test at the first prenatal visit.

Source: CDC NCHHSTP AtlasPlus, 2023.

How Georgia's STD rates compare

Georgia reported a chlamydia rate of 646.4 per 100,000 in its most recent surveillance year — 31% above the U.S. average of 492.2, and above the South regional rate of 545.3. Gonorrhea ran 274.8 per 100,000, and primary-and-secondary syphilis 20.

Among the 50 states and DC, Georgia ranks #6 of 51 for chlamydia. Statewide chlamydia has risen 11% since 2020. The 2020 dip in the trend reflects reduced pandemic-era screening, not lower transmission — and because most STDs are silent, reported counts understate true spread.

Access and cost across Georgia

Testing reaches every corner of Georgia: 848 public and community health clinics test free or on a sliding scale, private walk-in labs return results in 1–2 days, and at-home kits ship to every ZIP code — with the densest options around Atlanta, Augusta, and Columbus.

About 12.4% of Georgia adults are uninsured and 16.4% live below the poverty line, so cost is the most common reason testing gets delayed. Free public-clinic testing, sliding-scale community health centers, and self-pay private labs that never bill insurance keep screening within reach — weigh them on price, privacy, and turnaround using the comparison above.

Who's most at risk — and how often to test

About 30% of Georgia residents are aged 15–34. The CDC estimates people aged 15–24 account for roughly half of all new STIs nationwide despite being a small share of the population, so screening guidance is age-aware.

Sexually active women under 25 — and anyone with new or multiple partners — should test for chlamydia and gonorrhea every year; everyone aged 13–64 should test for HIV at least once; and pregnant residents are screened early in pregnancy. Because most STDs cause no symptoms, testing on the CDC's schedule — not only when something feels wrong — is the reliable way to catch an infection before it spreads.

Prevention, vaccines, and where to get help

Testing is one pillar; prevention is the other. Georgia county and city health departments distribute free condoms, offer HIV counseling, and provide hepatitis A/B and HPV vaccination that heads off several of the infections screened for here, while PrEP and DoxyPEP sharply cut HIV and bacterial-STI risk.

If a result is positive, treatment is close to home: chlamydia, gonorrhea, syphilis, and trichomoniasis are curable with antibiotics, while HIV and herpes are managed with ongoing care. Public health departments treat on site and most private labs include a clinician consult — start with a free or low-cost Georgia clinic above, or an at-home kit for private, mail-in screening.

Why it matters

Why STD testing matters

Find a lab near you
  • Reported counts only capture people who got tested — and with Georgia's rates running above the national average and most STDs causing no symptoms, the true spread is higher still. That gap is exactly why routine screening matters here.
  • Untreated, these infections do lasting damage: chlamydia and gonorrhea scar the reproductive system and cause infertility; syphilis can lead to stillbirth and organ damage; any active STI raises HIV risk. Caught early, almost all are curable or controllable with a single course of treatment.
  • Make it routine, not reactive: test as part of your annual check-up if you're sexually active, every three months with new or multiple partners, and before unprotected sex with a new partner. Since 2015 the CDC has urged insurers to cover annual screening for women under 25 at no cost.
  • Testing protects more than you: a silent infection passes to partners unknowingly. When Georgia residents test on a schedule, the whole state's transmission drops — knowing your status is the single highest-leverage thing you can do.

Reference

STD testing guidelines for Georgia

Two quick references for getting tested in Georgia: the CDC's screening schedule (who should test, and how often) and the detection "window" for each infection (the earliest a test can reliably detect it). Select any infection to open its in-depth testing guide — every clinic and lab listed above for Georgia screens for them.

Who should get tested, and how often

Based on current CDC screening recommendations.

Group Tests How often
Everyone aged 13–64 HIV At least once
Sexually active women under 25 Chlamydia, gonorrhea Every year
Women 25+ with new or multiple partners Chlamydia, gonorrhea Every year
Pregnant people HIV, syphilis, hepatitis B & C, chlamydia Early in pregnancy
Gay & bisexual men (MSM) Chlamydia, gonorrhea, syphilis, HIV Every 3–6 months
Anyone who shares injection equipment HIV, hepatitis B & C At least yearly
All adults at least once Hepatitis C At least once

When to test: STD detection windows

Testing too early can return a false negative — confirm timing with a Georgia-area provider.

Infection Earliest reliable test Sample
Chlamydia 1–2 weeks Urine or swab
Gonorrhea 1–2 weeks Urine or swab
Trichomoniasis 1–4 weeks Urine or swab
HIV (RNA / 4th-gen) 10–33 days Blood
HIV (antibody) 3–12 weeks Blood / oral
Syphilis 3–6 weeks Blood
Hepatitis B 3–6 weeks Blood
Hepatitis C 8–11 weeks Blood
Herpes (HSV) 4–6 weeks (antibody); swab a sore Blood / swab
Browse all STD testing guides

Cost reference

What each STD test costs

These are the federal Medicare reference prices for processing each lab test. Public clinics and the community health centers serving Georgia often test free or on a sliding scale; private labs and at-home kits bundle several tests into one fee. Use this as a per-test benchmark before you pay out of pocket, or see the full guide to STD test costs for insurance, free, and at-home options.

Test Reference price CPT / HCPCS
Chlamydia (NAAT) $47.80 87491
Gonorrhea (NAAT) $47.80 87591
Trichomoniasis (NAAT) $47.76 87661
HIV-1/2 antigen/antibody $79.20 87389
HIV-1/2 antibody $22.44 86703
Syphilis (RPR/VDRL) $5.61 86592
Syphilis (treponemal antibody) $17.49 86780
Herpes (HSV NAAT) $47.76 87529
Hepatitis B surface antigen $15.33 87340
Hepatitis C antibody $29.16 86803

Source: Medicare Clinical Laboratory Fee Schedule, CMS — 2025 rates (data.cms.gov). Reference rate for the lab assay only — a clinic visit, sample collection, or a bundled multi-test panel may cost more. Medicaid and most insurers cover STD screening at no out-of-pocket cost.

Privacy

Confidentiality & consent in Georgia

The questions Georgia residents ask most before testing, answered under Georgia law — which sets confidentiality and consent the same way statewide. Prefer to keep your name off the record? See our guide to anonymous STD testing.

Can a minor consent?

In Georgia, a minor of any age can consent to confidential STI testing and treatment on their own — no parental permission is required. A physician is permitted (but not required) to inform a parent.

Will it show on my insurance?

If you use health insurance, an Explanation of Benefits (EOB) may be mailed to the policyholder. Under HIPAA you can ask your insurer in writing to send communications confidentially. To keep a test fully private, choose a self-pay private lab, an at-home kit, or a public health clinic — none of these bill your insurance.

Anonymous & no-insurance options

Public health clinics and at-home kits let you test without involving insurance or your regular doctor. Many Georgia health departments offer free or low-cost STI testing, and several sites provide anonymous HIV testing.

Can my partner be treated too?

Yes. Georgia permits Expedited Partner Therapy (EPT): if you test positive for chlamydia or gonorrhea, your provider can give you medication to pass to your partner — no separate exam or appointment needed for them.

Source: Guttmacher Institute — Minors' Access to STI Services; HIPAA 45 CFR 164.522; CDC — Legal Status of Expedited Partner Therapy (last updated Jul 2025). General information, not legal advice.

Prevention & treatment

PrEP, prevention & online treatment

Testing is one step. For residents of Georgia, telehealth covers the rest of the picture — HIV-prevention medication (PrEP) and DoxyPEP to lower future risk, and discreet online treatment if a result comes back positive. All prescribed by licensed U.S. clinicians.

Prevent (PrEP & DoxyPEP)

Daily or on-demand medication that prevents HIV — and DoxyPEP, which lowers the risk of syphilis, chlamydia and gonorrhea.

Mistr

Free online PrEP & DoxyPEP — HIV prevention, home lab kits, no in-person visit

$0 with most insurance

Q Care Plus

Telehealth PrEP & DoxyPEP with at-home testing and ongoing monitoring

From $0 insured

Treat online

Tested positive? Get a prescription from a licensed clinician without an in-person visit.

Wisp

Online STI treatment & DoxyPEP — same-day prescriptions to your pharmacy

Visit from $39

Nurx

Telehealth STI treatment and sexual-health care, delivered or to your pharmacy

Visit from $0 insured

Pricing varies by insurance and changes often — confirm on the provider's site. These services are not a substitute for emergency care.

Good to Know

STD testing FAQs

Answers to the questions people ask most before getting tested.

How much does STD testing cost in Georgia?

It depends where you go. Georgia's 848 public and community health clinics often test free or on a sliding scale — useful given that about 12.4% of Georgia adults are uninsured. At-home kits run roughly $50–$150 for a full panel, while private walk-in labs charge per test (see the per-test reference prices above).

Where can I get free STD testing in Georgia?

County and city health departments, Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs), and Title X family-planning clinics across Georgia offer free or low-cost testing. Choose your city below to see the specific free and sliding-scale clinics nearest you.

Can I take an at-home STD test in Georgia?

Yes. At-home kits ship to every ZIP code in Georgia: you collect the sample, mail it to a CLIA-certified lab, and get results online in about a week, with a clinician consult if anything comes back positive.

Can a minor get tested for STDs without a parent in Georgia?

In Georgia, a minor of any age can consent to confidential STI testing and treatment on their own — no parental permission is required. A physician is permitted (but not required) to inform a parent.

How soon after exposure can I get tested in Georgia?

It depends on the infection. Chlamydia and gonorrhea are usually detectable about 1–2 weeks after exposure, HIV from 2–4 weeks with a 4th-generation test (up to 90 days for full reliability), and syphilis around 3–6 weeks. See the detection-window guidance above before booking.

Editorial standards

Reviewed by EasySTD Editorial Team · Updated

How we rank, source & review

Full transparency on how this Georgia testing guide is built and kept accurate.

How we rank clinics

Vetted partner labs (clearly marked Sponsored) are pinned first; every other center is listed free of charge and ordered by proximity, then verified review score. We never hide or down-rank a free public clinic.

How we source data

Clinic details come from official provider directories; STI rates, demographics, and community-health figures from the CDC, U.S. Census Bureau, and County Health Rankings — each cited in Sources.

Affiliate disclosure

EasySTD may earn a commission when you book through a partner lab. That never changes which free or public options we show, or the order we show them in.

11 Sources

Data & references

  1. CDC — NCHHSTP AtlasPlus (STI, HIV & congenital syphilis surveillance) https://www.cdc.gov/nchhstp/atlas/
  2. CDC/ATSDR — Social Vulnerability Index https://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/place-health/php/svi/index.html
  3. HRSA — Health Professional Shortage Areas (HPSA) https://data.hrsa.gov/topics/health-workforce/shortage-areas
  4. U.S. Census Bureau — American Community Survey https://www.census.gov/programs-surveys/acs
  5. U.S. Census Bureau — Population Estimates https://www.census.gov/programs-surveys/popest.html
  6. CMS — Provider of Services file (CLIA-certified labs) https://data.cms.gov/provider-characteristics/hospitals-and-other-facilities/provider-of-services-file-clinical-laboratories
  7. HRSA & CDC NPIN — public & community clinic directories https://npin.cdc.gov/
  8. NPPES & OpenStreetMap — pharmacy locations https://npiregistry.cms.hhs.gov/
  9. CMS — Medicare Clinical Laboratory Fee Schedule https://www.cms.gov/medicare/payment/fee-schedules/clinical-laboratory-fee-schedule
  10. Guttmacher Institute — Minors' Access to STI Services https://www.guttmacher.org/state-policy/explore/minors-access-sti-services
  11. HHS — HIPAA Privacy Rule (45 CFR 164.522) https://www.hhs.gov/hipaa/for-individuals/index.html