Confidential, low-cost, and free STD testing across Nevada — compare clinics, labs, costs, and at-home options, and see how Nevada's reported STI rates stack up against the West and the nation.
135 public & community clinics serve Nevada. Below are 14 testing centers from Nevada'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.
Beyond the public testing sites above, these federally certified (CLIA) labs operate across Nevada — 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.
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 Nevada. 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 Nevada
if you'd rather skip the
trip, an at-home kit ships to Nevada, 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
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 Nevada
Getting tested in Nevada
Nevada has one of the country's higher congenital syphilis rates, ranking 6th of 51 states (CDC); it ranks 6th for HIV, 11th for syphilis, 13th for gonorrhea, and 20th for chlamydia. These STIs include chlamydia, gonorrhea, syphilis, HIV and more. To get tested, choose between public clinics, private labs, and at-home tests. Explore the available options below.
Free & low-cost testing in all 17 counties · at-home kits ship statewide
Largest metros
Where most Nevada testing demand concentrates — each has its own local guide.
State-level Census (ACS) figures that shape testing demand and access. Median age and income are population-weighted estimates.
Residents
3,194,176
Median age
39
Median income
$75,927
Below poverty
12.8%
College-educated
27%
Statewide data
STDs & HIV in Nevada: the statewide picture
How reported STI rates across Nevada compare with the West region and the United States, using the most recent CDC surveillance data. Data for all 17 counties feeds the county and city pages linked below. About 11.5% of Nevada adults are uninsured — a key reason the free and low-cost testing options below matter.
An estimated ~27% of Nevada 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.
Nevada ranks #20 of 51 U.S. states & DC for chlamydia
Reported STD rates per 100,000 — Nevada vs West vs U.S.
NevadaWestU.S.
Infection
Nevada
West
United States
Chlamydia
493.615,766 cases▼ 0%
458.2
492.2
Gonorrhea
204.76,538 cases▲ 14%
164.3
179.5
Syphilis (P&S)
22.7725 cases▲ 44%
17.9
15.8
Syphilis (early)
21.8696 cases▲ 36%
16.3
16
Syphilis (late/unknown)
56.91,819 cases▲ 93%
39.6
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 Nevada rate versus the U.S. average.
Reported STD rates in Nevada over time (per 100,000)
Chlamydia ▼ 3% vs 2022
Chlamydia
Gonorrhea
Syphilis (P&S)
Between 2020 and 2023 in Nevada, chlamydia has risen from 474.7 to 493.6 per 100,000 (4%), gonorrhea has fallen from 205 to 204.7 per 100,000 (0%), and P&S syphilis has fallen from 24.7 to 22.7 per 100,000 (8%).
The 2020 dip reflects reduced pandemic-era screening, not lower transmission. Source: CDC NCHHSTP AtlasPlus.
Community health context
What shapes testing access in Nevada
Adults uninsured
11.5%
Primary-care shortage counties
17 of 17
Public & community clinics
135
Pharmacies statewide
577
Social Vulnerability Index · Nevada's counties average the 73rd 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 Nevada (pop. 3,194,176). Sources: U.S. Census ACS (uninsured), HRSA & CDC NPIN (clinics), NPPES & OpenStreetMap (pharmacies), CDC/ATSDR SVI.
Statewide HIV snapshot
HIV in Nevada (2023)
New diagnoses
21.1 / 100k
People living with HIV
12,196
On PrEP (coverage)
34.7%
Virally suppressed
62.7%
Nevada HIV care continuum (2023)
Nevada reports 21.1 new HIV diagnoses per 100,000 — above the U.S. rate of 13.7. The rate has risen39% since 2020.
Among Nevada residents living with HIV, 82.5% know their status · 83.8% are linked to care · 72.7% are in care · 62.7% are virally suppressed.
On prevention, 34.7% of those who could benefit from PrEP are taking it (above 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 Nevada
Comprehensive panels also screen for hepatitis B and C, both sexually transmissible. Per 100,000, Nevada vs U.S.
Hepatitis A (acute)
0.4U.S. 0.5
Hepatitis B (acute)
1.3U.S. 0.7
Hepatitis C (acute)
0.3U.S. 1.5
Congenital syphilis in Nevada
Pregnant or planning to be?
Congenital syphilis — passed from parent to baby in pregnancy — is the fastest-rising STI in the country.
Nevada reported 77 cases in 2023, up from 46 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 Nevada's STD rates compare
Nevada reported a chlamydia rate of 493.6 per 100,000 in its most recent surveillance year — 0% below the U.S. average of 492.2, and above the West regional rate of 458.2. Gonorrhea ran 204.7 per 100,000, and primary-and-secondary syphilis 22.7.
Among the 50 states and DC, Nevada ranks #20 of 51 for chlamydia. Statewide chlamydia has risen 4% 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 Nevada
Testing reaches every corner of Nevada: 135 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 Las Vegas, Henderson, and Reno.
About 11.5% of Nevada adults are uninsured and 12.8% 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 27% of Nevada 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. Nevada 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 Nevada clinic above, or an at-home kit for private, mail-in screening.
Reported counts only capture people who got tested — and with Nevada'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 Nevada 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 Nevada
Two quick references for getting tested in Nevada: 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 Nevada 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 Nevada-area provider.
These are the federal Medicare reference prices for processing each lab test. Public clinics and the
community health centers serving Nevada 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 Nevada
The questions Nevada residents ask most before testing, answered under Nevada 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 Nevada, a minor of any age can consent to confidential STI testing and treatment on their own — no parental permission is required.
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 Nevada health departments offer free or low-cost STI testing, and several sites provide anonymous HIV testing.
Can my partner be treated too?
Yes. Nevada 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 Nevada, 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
Pricing varies by insurance and changes often — confirm on the provider's site. These services are not a
substitute for emergency care.
Browse by city
STD testing in every Nevada city
Choose your city for the local picture — nearby clinics, lab prices, county STI rates, and at-home kits shipped to your door. We cover all 508 Nevada cities and towns; the largest are below.
Answers to the questions people ask most before getting tested.
How much does STD testing cost in Nevada?
It depends where you go. Nevada's 135 public and community health clinics often test free or on a sliding scale — useful given that about 11.5% of Nevada 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 Nevada?
County and city health departments, Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs), and Title X family-planning clinics across Nevada 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 Nevada?
Yes. At-home kits ship to every ZIP code in Nevada: 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 Nevada?
In Nevada, a minor of any age can consent to confidential STI testing and treatment on their own — no parental permission is required.
How soon after exposure can I get tested in Nevada?
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 Nevada 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.