Nurx and Everlywell both ship lab-grade at-home STI kits, but they're built on opposite money models. Nurx is the only major kit that bills private insurance — dropping a panel to about $75 — and bundles PrEP, birth control, and treatment. Everlywell is pure self-pay, sells singles around $69, and sits on pharmacy shelves for a same-day start.
The core difference: insurance billing vs self-pay
Strip away the marketing and the decision comes down to one question: do you want to use your health insurance for this, or not? Nurx is the only major at-home kit that bills private insurance, which can pull the price of a full panel down to roughly $75 CDC. Everlywell does the opposite — it's fully self-pay, bills no insurer, and instead accepts HSA and FSA cards. Both companies use CLIA-certified, CAP-accredited labs and self-collected finger-prick, urine, and swab samples FDA CLIA, so the lab science underneath is genuinely comparable. What separates them is who pays, what shows up on paper, and what else you can buy on the same platform.
That insurance billing is a double-edged tool. It saves money, but it also creates a record — and for some people that record is the dealbreaker. Everlywell's appeal is the reverse: no claim, no explanation of benefits, no trail back to a policyholder.
How each one works, step by step
The mechanics are nearly identical. You order online (or grab Everlywell off a shelf), collect your own sample at home — a finger-prick for blood-based tests like HIV and syphilis, urine for chlamydia and gonorrhea, or a swab for genital and throat sites — then mail the kit back in a prepaid package. A partner lab runs the same molecular and antibody assays a clinic would order. Both companies back a positive result with a provider consultation, so you're not left interpreting an abnormal result alone.
The one structural difference: Nurx availability varies by state and isn't sold in all fifty, while Everlywell sits on shelves at Target, CVS, and Walgreens, meaning you can start the same day with no shipping wait. If you're unsure which panel fits your exposure, work out which STD test do I need before you order — paying for the wrong tests is the most common and costly mistake.
Test menu compared
The biggest clinical gap is herpes. Nurx does not test for HSV-1 or HSV-2 in its standard panels, so if herpes screening is your reason for ordering, Nurx can't help. Everlywell includes HSV-2 (but not HSV-1) and offers a roughly 30-minute Visby rapid PCR option for some infections. Nurx, meanwhile, adds HPV screening that Everlywell's STI line doesn't match.
| Feature | Nurx | Everlywell |
|---|---|---|
| Insurance billing | Yes (private insurance) | No — self-pay, HSA/FSA accepted |
| Herpes (HSV) | Not tested | HSV-2 only (no HSV-1) |
| HPV screening | Yes | No |
| Rapid option | No | ~30-min Visby rapid PCR |
| In-store pickup | No (shipped, state-limited) | Target, CVS, Walgreens |
| Bundled PrEP / birth control / treatment | Yes, same platform | No |
A note on what a positive or negative actually means: blood antibody tests for HIV, syphilis, and herpes depend on timing relative to exposure, so an early test can miss a recent infection. That's a property of the assay, not the company — read more on at-home test accuracy and window periods before you trust a clean result from a recent encounter.
Price breakdown
On paper Everlywell looks cheaper, but the real comparison depends on your insurance. Here's how the numbers fall:
- Nurx with insurance: a panel can drop to about $75, plus a mandatory service fee of $14.50–$29.50 that applies to every order — including insured ones.
- Nurx without insurance: kits start at $150, before that same service fee.
- Everlywell singles: most run $69, fully self-pay.
- Everlywell OraQuick HIV self-test: $49.
The Nurx service fee is the detail people miss — it's charged even when insurance covers the kit, so judge Nurx on the total, not the headline price. For someone with good coverage and no privacy concern, an insured Nurx panel plus fee still undercuts a comparable retail bundle. For someone uninsured, the $150 starting point makes Everlywell's $69 single far more appealing. If cost is the whole problem, our guide to STD testing without insurance covers free clinics and lower-cost routes too.
Privacy and insurance billing
Billing insurance through Nurx generates an explanation-of-benefits (EOB) record that's visible to the policyholder. If you're on your own plan, that's harmless paperwork. If you're on a parent's or a partner's plan, that EOB can disclose that STI testing happened — which is precisely the situation where the savings aren't worth it. Everlywell creates no such record: pharmacy purchase plus self-pay equals a clean trail. Weigh the privacy cost honestly against the dollars saved.
Bundled care: what Nurx offers beyond testing
Nurx isn't only a testing company — it folds PrEP, birth control, and STI treatment into the same platform. If you test positive for a treatable bacterial infection like chlamydia or gonorrhea, the provider consult can lead to a prescription without sending you elsewhere. And if you're testing because you're sexually active with multiple partners, Nurx can also manage PrEP for HIV prevention in one account. Managing several services in one place is a real convenience — and arguably the strongest reason to pay Nurx's fee. Everlywell is testing only; a positive result there points you toward outside care.
Turnaround and results
Nurx results are typically ready 2–5 days after the lab receives your sample. Everlywell results arrive in 5–7 days, with the Visby rapid PCR option returning some results in about 30 minutes at home. Add mailing time on both sides for any mailed kit. Everlywell's shelf availability shaves the shipping delay off the front end, so a CVS pickup plus a rapid test can be the fastest path to an answer overall.
Who should choose Nurx
- You have private insurance and don't mind an EOB record — the insured price plus fee beats most self-pay options.
- You want HPV screening alongside an STI panel.
- You also use or want PrEP, birth control, or STI treatment and prefer one platform.
- You're on your own insurance plan (not a parent's or partner's) and live in a state where Nurx operates.
Who should choose Everlywell
- You're uninsured, or you want zero insurance trail and no EOB.
- Herpes (HSV-2) is part of what you want screened.
- You want a same-day start from a pharmacy shelf, or a rapid result.
- You want to pay with an HSA/FSA card and keep it simple.
Whichever route fits, the test you actually take matters more than the brand — when you're ready, get tested on a schedule that matches your risk, and check how often to get tested so you're screening at the right intervals rather than only after a scare.