The HHS, which has not yet provided an exact date for when ordering begins, is reopening the program at a time of year when COVID-19 cases and other respiratory illnesses are expected to surge.

Americans will soon be able to order free COVID-19 test kits from the federal government to be delivered to their homes.

The program, offered through the Department of Health and Human Services, will offer up to four nasal swab tests per U.S. household when it opens at COVIDTests.gov.

HHS is reopening the program at a time of year when cases of COVID-19 and other respiratory illnesses are expected to make their yearly surges. The tests will detect current virus strains and will be available through the end of the year.

As of Monday, the agency did not have an exact date for when the program would start. The website says the tests will be available for order at the end of September.

Here’s what to know about the free COVID-19 tests.

How to order free COVID-19 tests

To order the tests, visit COVIDtest.gov. Once ordered, the at-home tests will be shipped to homes at no cost.

Each household can receive up to four tests.

When will free COVID tests be available?

An agency spokesman did not provide a program start date when reached Monday by . The website says tests will be available for order by the end of September.

What do the tests detect?

The tests will be able to detect the dominant COVID-19 variants now circulating, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The at-home tests typically provide results within 30 minutes or less and can be administered to vaccinated and unvaccinated people. Many COVID-19 tests now have extended expiration dates.

Though positive results are accurate, the HHS warns that negative results don’t necessarily rule out a COVID-19 infection. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration recommends two negative antigen tests for people with symptoms or three antigen tests for people without symptoms, each performed 48 hours apart.

CDC recommends updated COVID-19 vaccine

The program will begin at a time as COVID-19 is expected to hit its winter peak along with the flu and respiratory virus (RSV.)

As of this month, the COVID-19 variant KP.3.1.1 now accounts for more than half of positive infections in the United States, according to the latest projections from the CDC.

Prior infections or vaccines may give people some degree of immunity or protection, but it doesn’t last forever. The CDC recommends that everyone ages 6 months and older receive an updated COVID-19 vaccine regardless of whether they have ever been vaccinated.

Contributing: Ahjané Forbes

Share.
Exit mobile version