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Viral hepatitis (fecal–oral; sexually transmissible via oral–anal contact) Curable

Hepatitis A testing

Hepatitis A is a vaccine-preventable liver infection caused by the hepatitis A virus (HAV). Unlike hepatitis B and C, it <strong>never becomes chronic</strong> — the vast majority of people recover fully within weeks to months and are then immune for life. A single blood test (IgM anti-HAV) confirms it; a safe, highly effective two-dose vaccine prevents it entirely. If you've been exposed, post-exposure vaccination within two weeks can stop illness before it starts. Compare private lab and free health-department testing options below.

Incubation period
15–50 days
Average 28 days after exposure; symptoms appear 2–7 weeks post-exposure
Becomes chronic?
Never
Unlike hep B and C — full recovery confers lifelong immunity; you cannot get HAV twice
Prevention
Vaccine
2-dose series (Havrix / Vaqta / Twinrix); 95–100% protective; post-exposure vaccine works within 2 weeks
At-risk groups (U.S.)
MSM, PWUD, homelessness
Since 2016 large U.S. person-to-person outbreaks in these three groups; >42,000 hospitalizations 2016–2022

Where to get tested

Find hepatitis A testing near you

Choose your test and enter your city — we'll take you straight to local hepatitis A testing: nearby clinics and labs, prices, hours and county rates.

Test from home

At-home STD testing in the U.S.

if you'd rather skip the trip, an at-home kit ships to the U.S., 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.

Understanding hepatitis A

What is hepatitis A?

Hepatitis A is an acute, self-limiting liver infection caused by the hepatitis A virus (HAV), a non-enveloped RNA virus in the family Picornaviridae. It spreads primarily through the fecal–oral route — ingesting contaminated food or water, close household contact with an infected person, or sexual contact via oral–anal (rimming) transmission. Blood-to-blood contact through shared needles among people who inject drugs (PWID) is an additional, well-documented route. The virus is hardy: it can survive on surfaces and in water for months and is relatively resistant to alcohol-based hand sanitizers, making thorough soap-and-water handwashing essential.

Unlike hepatitis B and C, hepatitis A never becomes chronic. The immune system clears the virus completely, and almost everyone makes a full recovery within weeks to a couple of months, after which they are immune for life. Rare cases of fulminant (acute) liver failure occur — most commonly in people with pre-existing chronic liver disease (hepatitis B, hepatitis C, cirrhosis, or alcoholic liver disease) and in older adults — and can require liver transplantation. Roughly 10–15% of people experience a relapsing course where symptoms return after apparent recovery, but even this self-limited relapse resolves without progressing to chronic hepatitis.

Hepatitis A is entirely vaccine-preventable. The two-dose Havrix or Vaqta series (or the three-dose combined Twinrix hepatitis A+B vaccine for adults) achieves 95–100% seroprotection. Since 1996, when routine childhood vaccination was introduced, U.S. incidence has fallen dramatically. However, since 2016 the U.S. has experienced large, sustained person-to-person outbreaks — primarily among people who use drugs (PWUD), people experiencing homelessness, and men who have sex with men (MSM) — that by 2022 accounted for more than 42,000 hospitalizations and over 400 deaths. The CDC reported approximately 13,500 hepatitis A cases in 2022, though substantial under-reporting means actual infections are far higher.

Sexual transmission deserves specific attention: HAV is unique among the hepatitis viruses in that oral–anal contact (rimming) is the primary sexual route of transmission, not vaginal or anal intercourse directly. Condoms offer limited protection against this route because they do not cover the anus adequately; vaccination is the only reliable sexual prevention for MSM and anyone who practices oral–anal sex. People with chronic liver disease who have not been vaccinated are at disproportionate risk of severe outcomes and should discuss vaccination with their provider.

Screening guidance

Who should get tested for hepatitis A?

Because hepatitis A is usually silent, the CDC and U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recommend routine screening for the groups most likely to have it — not just people with symptoms.

  1. 1

    Anyone with symptoms of jaundice or liver illness

    Fatigue, nausea, dark (tea-colored) urine, pale or clay-colored stools, or yellowing of the skin or eyes (jaundice) after a potential exposure are the most direct prompts to test. An IgM anti-HAV blood test confirms current or recent infection with ~93% sensitivity and ~97% specificity. Symptoms typically appear 2–7 weeks after exposure; abdominal pain in the upper right quadrant (over the liver) is also characteristic.

  2. 2

    Close contacts and sexual partners of a confirmed case

    If someone in your household, a sexual partner, or someone you shared drugs or drug equipment with has been diagnosed with hepatitis A, get evaluated and discuss post-exposure vaccination immediately — ideally within two weeks of exposure. Receiving the hepatitis A vaccine within 2 weeks of exposure can prevent illness. Every day counts; contact your health department for rapid access.

  3. 3

    People in outbreak settings — MSM, PWUD, people experiencing homelessness

    Since 2016, the CDC has tracked ongoing U.S. outbreaks in these three populations. If you are unvaccinated and belong to one of these groups, vaccination is strongly recommended even without a known exposure. Testing after any potential exposure or onset of compatible symptoms is warranted.

  4. 4

    People with chronic liver disease or HIV

    Hepatitis A causes disproportionately severe illness in people with pre-existing liver conditions — chronic hepatitis B or C, cirrhosis, alcoholic or fatty liver disease — and in people with HIV. Fulminant liver failure is substantially more likely in this group. Testing after any potential exposure and vaccination before exposure are critical preventive steps.

  5. 5

    International travelers to high-prevalence areas

    Travelers to countries in Africa, Central and South America, the Middle East, and parts of Asia and Eastern Europe where hepatitis A is common (or endemic) should be vaccinated at least 2 weeks before departure. If you return with jaundice, dark urine, or fatigue, request hepatitis A testing alongside a standard travel-medicine evaluation. Many travel-health clinics offer combined HAV + HBV (Twinrix) vaccination.

Symptoms

What are the symptoms of hepatitis A?

Young children under 6 are often completely asymptomatic but still shed HAV in their stool and can spread it efficiently to adult caregivers and household contacts. In older children and adults, symptoms typically appear 15–50 days after exposure (average ~28 days) and can range from mild, flu-like illness to severe jaundice and debilitation. Illness usually lasts a few weeks to less than two months, though roughly 10–15% of people experience a relapsing course over 6–9 months. Almost all adults eventually recover fully. Symptoms usually begin abruptly — dark urine is often the first noticeable change, followed within days by fatigue, nausea, and then jaundice. The sequence of symptoms is somewhat characteristic: systemic symptoms (fatigue, nausea, fever, appetite loss) appear first, then jaundice. That's exactly why testing matters — you can have it, pass it on, and never feel a thing.

Common symptoms in older children and adults

  • Fatigue and sudden, pronounced loss of energy — often the most disabling feature
  • Nausea, vomiting, and loss of appetite (anorexia)
  • Abdominal pain or discomfort, especially in the upper right abdomen over the liver
  • Low-grade fever (typically 37.5–38.5°C / 99.5–101.3°F)
  • Dark, tea-colored urine — often the first noticeable sign, appearing before jaundice
  • Pale or clay-colored stools (acholic stools) — reflects bile flow obstruction
  • Jaundice — yellowing of the skin and whites of the eyes (scleral icterus); more common in HAV than in most other hepatitis viruses
  • Diarrhea (particularly in young children)
  • Joint pain (arthralgia)
  • Itching (pruritus) — from bile salt deposition in skin

Young children (under 6)

  • Usually no symptoms at all — the most common presentation in this age group
  • May have mild, non-specific illness: fussiness, poor appetite, vague abdominal discomfort
  • Still infectious to others despite absence of obvious symptoms — stool shedding can be prolonged

Jaundice — while alarming in appearance — actually signals that the immune system is actively fighting the infection. Most people with jaundice from hepatitis A recover fully. Seek care promptly if you develop jaundice, are unable to keep fluids down, have severe abdominal pain, or show signs of confusion (a sign of severe liver impairment). Elderly adults and those with pre-existing liver disease can deteriorate rapidly.

Left untreated

Why hepatitis A is worth catching early

Treated early, hepatitis A clears with antibiotics and causes no lasting harm. Left untreated, it can climb into the reproductive tract and beyond:

Dehydration requiring hospitalization

Prolonged nausea, vomiting, and markedly reduced appetite can cause significant dehydration. This is the most common reason for hospitalization in an otherwise healthy person with hepatitis A. Intravenous fluids and anti-nausea medications are the main interventions. People with severe vomiting should not wait — go to an emergency department or urgent care for rehydration.

Relapsing hepatitis A

Roughly 10–15% of people experience a relapsing course in which symptoms appear to resolve and then return, sometimes repeatedly. Relapsing HAV can extend total illness over 6–9 months but is still entirely self-limiting — it never progresses to chronic hepatitis. Liver enzymes (ALT/AST) remain elevated during relapse periods. No specific treatment is needed; supportive care and patience are the management approach.

Acute (fulminant) liver failure

Rare — estimated at approximately 0.5% of HAV cases overall — but life-threatening. The immune response is so aggressive that hepatocytes are destroyed faster than the liver can regenerate, causing coagulopathy, encephalopathy, and multiorgan dysfunction. Risk is substantially higher in people with pre-existing chronic liver disease and in adults over 50. Fulminant hepatitis A may require transfer to a liver transplant center. Survival without transplant is possible with intensive care support, but outcomes depend heavily on baseline liver reserve.

Cholestatic hepatitis A

A minority of patients develop a prolonged cholestatic variant, characterized by marked jaundice, intense pruritus, and elevated bilirubin that persists for weeks to months despite other symptoms improving. Cholestatic HAV can mimic biliary obstruction and may require imaging to rule out mechanical causes. It eventually resolves without specific treatment, though ursodeoxycholic acid is sometimes used for symptom relief.

U.S. data

How common is hepatitis A in the U.S.?

Since 2016 the U.S. has experienced the largest sustained hepatitis A outbreaks in decades, primarily among people who use drugs, people experiencing homelessness, and MSM — person-to-person spread rather than a contaminated food source. By 2022 these outbreaks had resulted in more than 42,000 hospitalizations and over 400 deaths across dozens of states. Black Americans and people experiencing homelessness have faced disproportionate mortality. Before routine childhood vaccination began in 1996, HAV was one of the most commonly reported vaccine-preventable diseases in the U.S. — incidence has fallen more than 95% since. Annual U.S. cases for 2022 CDC: approximately 13,500 reported (actual infections estimated substantially higher given under-reporting).

14k
Reported U.S. cases (2022 CDC, significant under-reporting) (2022)
>400 deaths
in U.S. multi-state person-to-person outbreaks, 2016–2022

Where you test and what it costs vary by location — see the by-location links below for hepatitis A testing where you live. Source: CDC Viral Hepatitis Surveillance Report 2022; CDC Hepatitis A Outbreak Surveillance.

How testing works

How a hepatitis A test works

Hepatitis A is detected with a nucleic-acid amplification test (NAAT) — the most accurate method — on a urine sample or a swab. You can do it at a lab, a clinic, or at home.

When to test

Test when symptoms appear (jaundice, dark urine, fatigue, nausea, abdominal pain) or as soon as possible after a known exposure to a confirmed case. IgM anti-HAV remains detectable for approximately 3–12 months after acute infection resolves. If you are asymptomatic after a known exposure, prioritize post-exposure vaccination over testing — early vaccination can prevent illness.

After treatment

A positive IgM anti-HAV confirms current or recent infection. A positive total/IgG anti-HAV with negative IgM indicates past infection or vaccine-induced immunity — not current illness. If you have recently been vaccinated, a positive IgG result is expected and protective.

IgM anti-HAV antibody Confirms active infection
Sample
Blood draw
Results
1–3 days

The diagnostic test for current or recent hepatitis A infection. Sensitivity ~93%, specificity ~97%. Becomes positive at or around symptom onset and remains detectable for approximately 3–12 months. A positive IgM with compatible symptoms confirms acute hepatitis A. Self-pay cost: ~$9–$15 at most private labs. Ordered as a standalone test or as part of a hepatitis panel.

IgG anti-HAV antibody (total or IgG)
Sample
Blood draw
Results
1–3 days

Detects antibodies from past infection or prior vaccination. Sensitivity ~97%, specificity ~97%. Used to assess immunity before starting the vaccine series, to confirm a protective vaccine response, or to document immunity for occupational or travel purposes. Positive IgG with negative IgM = past infection or vaccine-acquired immunity, not current illness. Self-pay cost: ~$9–$15.

Total hepatitis A antibody (combined IgM + IgG)
Sample
Blood draw
Results
1–3 days

A single draw that detects both IgM and IgG. Used when the clinical picture is unclear or when immunity confirmation is needed alongside acute-infection screening. A positive total with negative IgM = immunity; positive total with positive IgM = current or very recent infection. Self-pay cost: ~$10–$25.

Liver function tests (ALT and AST)
Sample
Blood draw
Results
Same or next day

Alanine aminotransferase (ALT) and aspartate aminotransferase (AST) are markedly elevated during acute hepatitis A (often 10–50× the upper limit of normal), reflecting hepatocyte inflammation and injury. Ordered alongside HAV antibody tests to gauge severity, confirm the clinical picture, and monitor recovery. Not specific to HAV — elevated transaminases prompt the diagnostic workup, which then includes HAV serology.

What it costs: IgM or IgG anti-HAV antibody tests self-pay at a private lab: ~$9–$25 per test; combined total antibody panel: ~$10–$40. A basic liver panel (ALT/AST) runs ~$8–$20 additional. Testing at private walk-in labs (Quest, LabCorp affiliates) requires no appointment.. Health departments offer free or very-low-cost hepatitis A testing and the complete vaccine series — especially during active outbreak responses. Community health centers and federally qualified health centers (FQHCs) frequently provide testing and vaccination at no cost for uninsured patients. Check your local health department's hepatitis A outbreak resources.. Hepatitis A testing and the full vaccine series are covered by most ACA-compliant insurance plans. The vaccine is on the routine childhood immunization schedule (covered with no cost-sharing under most plans). For adults, hepatitis A vaccination is a recommended preventive service for at-risk groups and covered by many plans without cost-sharing..

If your result is positive

How is hepatitis A treated?

There is no specific antiviral treatment for hepatitis A — the body clears the infection on its own. Supportive care is the standard: rest, adequate fluids, nutritious eating, and strict avoidance of alcohol and any hepatotoxic medications until liver function normalizes. Most people recover fully within a few weeks to two months. People with severe vomiting, significant dehydration, or signs of liver failure require hospitalization.

Treat partners

Close contacts and sexual partners should be evaluated for post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) as soon as possible. For healthy individuals aged 12 months–40 years: hepatitis A vaccine is preferred (given within 2 weeks of exposure). For immunocompromised individuals, people with chronic liver disease, people over 40, infants under 12 months, or those with vaccine contraindications: immune globulin (IG 0.1 mL/kg IM) is preferred and can be combined with vaccine for extended coverage. All household members, sexual partners, and drug-sharing contacts should be assessed immediately.

In pregnancy

Supportive care is appropriate during pregnancy. The hepatitis A vaccine is safe to give during pregnancy and to breastfeeding people. Immune globulin is also safe in pregnancy. Inform your obstetric provider promptly if you have symptoms or a known exposure; HAV does not cross the placenta and is not transmitted via breastfeeding, but maternal illness can be severe.

Re-test after treatment

No re-testing for infection is needed once you have recovered — immunity is lifelong. A total/IgG anti-HAV test can confirm immune status at any time (for travel, occupational clearance, or peace of mind). You cannot get hepatitis A twice.

Treatment & online care

Prevention

How to prevent hepatitis A

  • Get vaccinated — the single most effective prevention

    The hepatitis A vaccine is safe, highly effective (95–100% seroprotection), and provides long-lasting — likely lifelong — protection after the two-dose series (Havrix or Vaqta, 6 months apart). The combined hepatitis A + B vaccine (Twinrix, 3 doses over 6 months) is available for adults 18+. Vaccination is routinely recommended for all children at 12–23 months, unvaccinated people through age 18, MSM, PWUD, people experiencing homelessness, international travelers, people with chronic liver disease or HIV, and any adult who wants protection.

  • Post-exposure vaccination within 2 weeks

    If you have been exposed to hepatitis A and are unvaccinated, receiving the hepatitis A vaccine (preferred for ages 1–40) or immune globulin (preferred for immunocompromised individuals, people with chronic liver disease, those over 40, or infants under 12 months) within 2 weeks of exposure can prevent illness. Contact your local health department or provider immediately after a known exposure — every day matters. Both options are free at most health departments during outbreak responses.

  • Thorough handwashing with soap and water

    Washing hands thoroughly with soap and water for at least 20 seconds after using the toilet, changing diapers, before preparing food, and after contact with a sick person is one of the most effective ways to break fecal–oral transmission chains. <strong>Alcohol-based hand sanitizers are significantly less effective against HAV than soap and water</strong> — they should not be relied on as a substitute when soap is available.

  • Safe food and water practices during travel and outbreaks

    When traveling to high-prevalence countries: drink only bottled or boiled water, avoid ice made from tap water, eat only freshly cooked food, and avoid raw shellfish (especially oysters and clams, which concentrate HAV from sewage-contaminated water). Cooking food to 185°F (85°C) for at least 1 minute destroys the virus. During domestic outbreak alerts, follow local public-health guidance on food handling and avoid buffet-style or shared food in high-risk settings.

  • Reduce harm in drug use settings

    For people who use drugs, harm-reduction measures — including using only new or sterile equipment, accessing syringe-service programs, and avoiding shared pipes, straws, or other drug-use equipment — reduce HAV transmission risk alongside risks of bloodborne infections. Hepatitis A vaccination is available free at most syringe-service programs and health department sites serving people who use drugs.

Who is most at risk

Who is most at risk for hepatitis A?

Anyone who is sexually active can contract hepatitis A, but certain groups face significantly higher risk — and should test more frequently.

Men who have sex with men (MSM)
MSM are one of the three U.S. outbreak populations since 2016 and are a priority CDC vaccination group. Oral–anal sexual contact (rimming) is the predominant sexual transmission route for HAV, and condoms offer limited protection against this route. The CDC recommends hepatitis A vaccination for all MSM who have not been previously vaccinated or infected.
Multiple MSM-focused outbreaks documented in U.S. cities 2016–2022
People who use drugs (PWUD / PWID)
Both people who inject drugs and people who use non-injection drugs are at elevated risk, primarily through sharing drug equipment and close social contact in settings where sanitation access is limited. Since 2016, PWUD have been central to U.S. person-to-person outbreaks. Vaccination, harm-reduction services, and syringe-service programs are key interventions.
People who inject drugs account for a significant proportion of post-2016 U.S. HAV outbreak cases
People experiencing homelessness
Lack of access to toilets, handwashing facilities, and clean water creates conditions that accelerate fecal–oral spread in congregate or outdoor living settings. People experiencing homelessness have been disproportionately affected by U.S. HAV outbreaks since 2016, with high hospitalization rates reflecting also higher prevalence of pre-existing liver disease and delayed healthcare access.
Homelessness is one of three core risk groups in CDC multi-state HAV outbreak tracking since 2016
People with chronic liver disease
Chronic hepatitis B, chronic hepatitis C, cirrhosis, alcoholic liver disease, and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD/NASH) significantly increase the risk of fulminant liver failure and death from hepatitis A. Vaccination is strongly recommended for all people with chronic liver disease who are not yet immune — this is among the highest-priority at-risk vaccination groups.

Why it matters

Why STD testing matters

Find hepatitis A testing
  • Hepatitis A is the only viral hepatitis that never becomes chronic — almost everyone recovers fully and is then immune for life — but acute illness can be severe, debilitating, and occasionally fatal, especially in people with pre-existing liver disease.
  • A safe, effective two-dose vaccine prevents hepatitis A entirely. Post-exposure vaccination within 2 weeks of a known exposure can also stop illness before it starts — making vaccination and rapid post-exposure prophylaxis the two most important interventions.
  • Since 2016 the U.S. has experienced unprecedented person-to-person outbreaks — more than 42,000 hospitalizations and 400+ deaths — among people who use drugs, people experiencing homelessness, and MSM; vaccination of these groups is a standard CDC recommendation.
  • A single blood test (IgM anti-HAV, ~$9–$15 self-pay) confirms the diagnosis quickly and guides contact notification and post-exposure prophylaxis — there is no reason to delay testing when symptoms or a known exposure are present.

Browse by location

Hepatitis A testing by state & city

Jump to local hepatitis A testing — clinics and labs, prices and county rates — in your state or a popular city, or explore another test.

Popular cities

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Keep reading

More on hepatitis A

Deeper guides from our editorial library on hepatitis A and related topics.

Living with hepatitis A

Questions to ask your provider about hepatitis A

Hepatitis A is common, treatable, and nothing to be ashamed of — millions of Americans are diagnosed every year. The most useful next step after a positive result (or before a first test) is a direct conversation with a clinician. Here are the questions that matter most:

  • Is my hepatitis A test result definitive, or do I need a confirmatory test?
  • What treatment options are available to me, and how long until I'm no longer contagious?
  • Should I notify my recent partners, and can your office help me do that confidentially?
  • How soon can I re-test to confirm the infection has cleared?
  • Are there other STIs I should test for at the same visit?
  • Can this affect my fertility, pregnancy, or long-term health if left untreated?

Good to Know

Hepatitis A testing FAQs

Common questions about hepatitis A and hepatitis A testing, answered.

How do I get tested for hepatitis A?

Hepatitis A testing is a simple blood draw. A clinician orders an IgM anti-HAV antibody test — the test that confirms current or recent infection. You can order at a private lab (Quest, LabCorp, or affiliated walk-in sites — no appointment needed in most cases), visit a local health department or community clinic, or ask your primary-care provider. Results typically return within 1–3 days. The test costs approximately $9–$15 self-pay at most private labs and is covered by most insurance plans. If you want to confirm immunity (from a past infection or prior vaccination), a total anti-HAV or IgG anti-HAV test is ordered instead — same process, similar cost.

Is hepatitis A curable — does it go away on its own?

Yes. Hepatitis A is a self-limiting infection — the immune system clears the virus on its own without antiviral medication. Supportive care (rest, adequate fluids, nutritious eating, no alcohol) is all that is needed for most people. The vast majority recover fully within a few weeks to two months, after which they are immune for life. A minority (roughly 10–15%) experience a relapsing course stretching 6–9 months, but even this eventually resolves completely. Unlike hepatitis B and C, hepatitis A <em>never</em> becomes chronic.

Is hepatitis A an STI?

Yes and no — it depends on how you define the term. Hepatitis A can be transmitted sexually, primarily through oral–anal contact (rimming) and close sexual contact with an infected person. CDC-documented outbreaks among MSM confirm sexual transmission is a real and significant route, which is why MSM are a priority vaccination group. However, hepatitis A also spreads readily through contaminated food and water, close household contact, and shared drug equipment — routes with no sexual component. It is more accurate to say HAV is an infection that can be sexually transmitted than a purely sexually transmitted infection. Vaccination is the only reliable protection regardless of exposure route.

What is the typical hepatitis A symptom timeline?

After exposure, HAV incubates for 15–50 days (average ~28 days) before symptoms appear. Dark, tea-colored urine is often the very first noticeable change. Systemic symptoms — fatigue, nausea, vomiting, loss of appetite, low-grade fever, and upper right abdominal pain — typically follow within days. Jaundice (yellowing of skin and eyes) appears a few days after systemic symptoms and can be alarming in appearance but generally signals active immune response. Acute illness usually lasts 1–2 months. In roughly 10–15% of cases, symptoms resolve and then return (relapsing hepatitis A), potentially extending illness over 6–9 months. Full recovery and lifelong immunity follow in virtually all cases.

How long does hepatitis A last?

Most people with hepatitis A are ill for 2–8 weeks and then recover fully. Mild cases may resolve in under two weeks; severe cases — particularly in older adults or those with pre-existing liver disease — can last longer and may require hospitalization. About 10–15% of people experience a relapsing course where symptoms return after apparent recovery, stretching total illness over 6–9 months. Even prolonged or relapsing hepatitis A always resolves completely without becoming chronic, which distinguishes it from hepatitis B and C.

Can you get hepatitis A twice?

No. Once you recover from hepatitis A — or complete the full two-dose vaccine series — you are immune for life. The immune system produces IgG anti-HAV antibodies that persist indefinitely in the bloodstream and provide complete protection against reinfection. This lifelong immunity is one of the most important distinctions between hepatitis A and hepatitis B or C, which can establish chronic infections. A total/IgG anti-HAV blood test can confirm your immune status at any time if needed for travel, occupational clearance, or peace of mind.

How is hepatitis A sexually transmitted?

Hepatitis A spreads sexually primarily through <strong>oral–anal contact (rimming)</strong> — placing the mouth on or near the anus of someone who is shedding the virus in their stool. This route can transmit a sufficient inoculum of HAV to establish infection. Outbreaks among MSM are well-documented and are a primary reason MSM are a CDC priority vaccination group. Anal intercourse and close sexual contact may also transmit HAV, though oral–anal contact is the most efficient sexual route. Condoms offer limited protection because they do not cover the anal area during rimming; vaccination is the only reliably protective prevention strategy for people who engage in oral–anal sex.

Is there a vaccine for hepatitis A — and who needs it?

Yes — the hepatitis A vaccine is one of the most effective vaccines available, achieving 95–100% seroprotection. Two doses of Havrix or Vaqta (given 6 months apart) provide long-lasting, likely lifelong protection. A combined hepatitis A + B vaccine (Twinrix) is available for adults 18+ and requires three doses over 6 months. People who should be vaccinated include: all children at 12–23 months; unvaccinated people through age 18; MSM; people who use drugs; people experiencing homelessness; travelers to high-prevalence countries; people with chronic liver disease or HIV; food-service workers and healthcare workers; and any unvaccinated adult who wants protection.

How is hepatitis A different from hepatitis B and C?

Three key differences set hepatitis A apart. <strong>Transmission:</strong> HAV spreads mainly fecal–oral (contaminated food, water, close contact, oral–anal sex); HBV and HCV spread primarily through blood and body fluids (sex, shared needles, childbirth). <strong>Chronicity:</strong> HAV never becomes chronic — everyone clears it and gains lifelong immunity. HBV can become chronic in ~5% of adults and ~90% of newborns; HCV becomes chronic in ~50–55% of cases and can silently damage the liver for decades. <strong>Vaccine:</strong> Safe, highly effective vaccines exist for both hepatitis A and hepatitis B. There is currently no approved vaccine for hepatitis C.

What should I do if I've been exposed to hepatitis A?

Act quickly — time is critical. Post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) given within 2 weeks of exposure can prevent illness or significantly reduce its severity. For healthy people aged 12 months–40 years: the hepatitis A vaccine is preferred and is highly effective. For immunocompromised individuals, those with chronic liver disease, adults over 40, infants under 12 months, or anyone with vaccine contraindications: immune globulin (IG 0.1 mL/kg IM) is preferred, and can be given alongside the vaccine for people who fall into more than one category. Contact your health department, urgent-care clinic, or primary-care provider as soon as you learn of a potential exposure. All household members, sexual partners, and people who shared drugs or drug equipment with the case should also be evaluated.

How soon after exposure should I get tested?

IgM anti-HAV antibodies appear around the time symptoms begin — roughly 2–7 weeks after exposure. If you have symptoms (jaundice, dark urine, fatigue, nausea, abdominal pain), get tested right away. If you are currently asymptomatic after a known exposure, the immediate priority is post-exposure vaccination, not testing — a test taken too soon after exposure may be negative even if you are incubating the virus. Once symptoms appear, the IgM test is highly accurate and confirms or rules out HAV infection within 1–3 days.

Am I at higher risk if I have hepatitis B, C, or another liver condition?

Yes — significantly. Hepatitis A causes much more severe illness in people with pre-existing liver disease, including chronic hepatitis B or C, cirrhosis, alcoholic liver disease, and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). Fulminant (acute) liver failure — a rare but life-threatening complication — is substantially more common in this group and may require emergency liver transplantation. If you have chronic liver disease and have not previously been vaccinated or infected with HAV, hepatitis A vaccination is strongly and urgently recommended regardless of exposure status.

How much does hepatitis A testing and vaccination cost?

Testing: IgM or IgG anti-HAV antibody tests cost approximately $9–$25 self-pay at private labs; a combined total antibody panel runs $10–$40. Vaccination: the two-dose vaccine series and testing are often free at health departments, particularly during outbreak responses. Most ACA-compliant insurance plans cover hepatitis A vaccination at no out-of-pocket cost for eligible groups, since it is on the routine immunization schedule. Community health centers and FQHCs offer sliding-scale pricing for uninsured patients. Many syringe-service programs offer free hepatitis A vaccination as part of harm-reduction services.

Why are young children often asymptomatic but still infectious?

Children under 6 infected with HAV typically have no recognizable illness — no jaundice, no nausea, no fatigue — because the immune inflammatory response that causes most hepatitis A symptoms is less pronounced in young children. Despite being asymptomatic, they shed large quantities of HAV in their stool for weeks before and after the expected symptom window. This makes unrecognized infection in young children a powerful driver of household and daycare outbreaks — adults caring for these children can become significantly ill from an exposure they never knew had occurred. Vaccination at 12–23 months closes this gap.

Editorial standards

Medically reviewed · Updated

Reviewed by Mark Riegel, MD · Sexual Health Physician · Chief Medical Reviewer

Physician focused on sexual health — STI testing, treatment and prevention — and EasySTD's chief medical reviewer. Owns the condition guides and is the clinical backstop for any page without a more specific specialist.

9 Sources

Clinical guidance

  1. CDC — Hepatitis A: Information for the Public https://www.cdc.gov/hepatitis/hav/index.htm
  2. CDC — STI Treatment Guidelines 2021: Hepatitis A https://www.cdc.gov/std/treatment-guidelines/hepatitis.htm
  3. CDC — Hepatitis A Vaccine: Who Needs It https://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/vpd/hepa/
  4. CDC — Hepatitis A Outbreak Surveillance (Person-to-Person) https://www.cdc.gov/hepatitis/outbreaks/hepatitisaoutbreaks.htm
  5. CDC — Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP): Hepatitis A Vaccination https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/69/rr/rr6905a1.htm
  6. AASLD — Hepatitis A Practice Guidance https://www.aasld.org/publications/practice-guidelines

Data & references

  1. CDC — Viral Hepatitis Surveillance Report 2022 https://www.cdc.gov/hepatitis/statistics/
  2. MedlinePlus — Hepatitis A https://medlineplus.gov/hepatitisa.html
  3. Office on Women's Health — Hepatitis A https://www.womenshealth.gov/a-z-topics/hepatitis