What we tested.
We ordered three Everlywell panels across a six-week window in early 2026: the Women's Health Test ($199), the Vitamin D Test ($49) and the Thyroid Test ($99). All three arrived in matching cream-and-burgundy boxes inside three business days. The collection instructions were the cleanest in the at-home category — pictograms, a numbered sequence, a phone-friendly QR code linking to a video walkthrough for the finger-prick step.
Sample collection took between four and eleven minutes per panel. The Women's Health and Thyroid panels both used dried blood spots; the Vitamin D test used a single finger-prick card. Return shipping was prepaid. Results landed in the Everlywell app between six and nine business days after the lab confirmed receipt — faster than the published "5–10 business days" estimate.
The result UI is where Everlywell's brand investment shows. Each marker gets a colour-coded band, a one-line plain-English summary, and a "what may be contributing" panel that reads more like a wellness magazine than a clinical report. Whether you find that reassuring or undercooked depends on what you came in for.
"Everlywell is the brand that proved a woman would mail her blood spot to a lab if the box looked nice."
Where Everlywell genuinely shines.
- Price as a category disruption — most panels sit below $150, and the entry-level Vitamin D test at $49 is the cheapest credible single-marker test in the U.S. consumer market.
- Breadth of catalogue — 30-plus panels across hormones, nutrient status, fertility, food sensitivity, STIs, metabolic health and indoor allergens. No competitor matches the menu width.
- CLIA-certified lab network — sample analysis runs through CLIA-certified and CAP-accredited partner labs, the same accreditation tier hospital labs operate under.
- Mail-in convenience — no appointment, no waiting room, no drive to a Quest patient service centre. For rural women or women with inflexible work hours, this is the single biggest unlock.
- Independent physician oversight — every test is ordered by a physician in your state behind the scenes. You don't get a consult, but the order layer is legitimate.
Where it loses points.
- No included clinician walk-through — Everlywell's results PDF is the end of the experience. A real human-led interpretation is not included with standard panels; live consultations are upsold or unavailable on most SKUs.
- Reporting reads more wellness-y than clinical — the dashboard prioritises tone over technical depth. Women looking for reference ranges, units and comparison-to-population context will find the surface skim frustrating.
- State availability varies by panel — some SKUs (notably hormone and STI panels) are restricted in New York, New Jersey, Rhode Island or Maryland. Check at checkout, not after.
- Dried-blood-spot has known limitations — collection technique matters. A botched finger-prick may invalidate the sample. Everlywell will resend a kit, but it adds a week.
- No longitudinal trending — single-panel purchases don't auto-chart. If you want trend data across years, you'll be exporting PDFs and tracking it yourself.
Who it's best for.
- The "I just want to check vitamin D" woman — single-marker check, $49, six-day turnaround. Hard to beat.
- The budget-conscious early-tester — wants to dip into bloodwork without committing to a $499 subscription. Everlywell is the gateway drug.
- The rural or remote-located woman — no Quest patient service centre within a reasonable drive. Mail-in solves the geography problem.
- Women researching food sensitivity, indoor allergy or STI panels — Everlywell's catalogue width is the strongest in these niches.
Who it's not for.
- Women who want clinician interpretation included — Function Health, LetsGetChecked or your primary care provider will all do this better.
- Optimization-leaning women — if you want an "action plan" output layer with supplement and food recommendations, InsideTracker is the right fit.
- Women with a complex existing diagnosis — Everlywell is built for screening and curiosity, not for managing a known condition.
Price and what's included.
Everlywell's pricing model is single-panel a la carte. There's no subscription tier on most of the catalogue, which means you pay only for the panel you want, when you want it. Headline pricing for the panels most relevant to women:
Selected Everlywell panels
The Women's Health Test is the panel we'd point most women toward for a single comprehensive snapshot. Nine markers covering reproductive hormones, thyroid, adrenal and cortisol — for $199 — is dollar-for-dollar competitive with anything in the at-home category. Cycle-day timing matters for accuracy on the reproductive hormones, and Everlywell does flag this at checkout.
How it compares to LetsGetChecked.
The closest sibling in the consumer at-home category is LetsGetChecked. Both run mail-in kits, both use CLIA-accredited partner labs, both have built consumer-friendly result UIs. The differences are real, though.
| Service | Panels | Clinician | Price (entry) | Heme Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Everlywell | 30+ | Order layer only | $49 | 8.0 |
| LetsGetChecked | ~25 | Nurse follow-up call on flagged results | $89 | 8.7 |
The honest read: LetsGetChecked wins on the clinician layer — a nurse calls you when something is flagged, which is a meaningful step above Everlywell's PDF-and-done flow. Everlywell wins on price floor (the $49 vitamin D test has no LGC equivalent) and on catalogue breadth in food sensitivity and indoor allergen panels. For a head-to-head on the same panels, see our at-home vs traditional lab comparison and the best blood tests for women ranking.
The case against.
Three honest critiques every reader deserves to weigh.
The wellness-magazine framing can soften clinical signal. When a marker comes back at the edge of the reference range, the result-page commentary may read "consider monitoring" when a clinician might phrase it as "this is worth re-testing in 6 weeks." The tone is calibrated for reassurance. That's fine for most readers — but if you're the kind of reader who needs the actual urgency to land, you may under-react.
The lack of a baked-in trending dashboard is a real gap. Repeat-testing on Everlywell is essentially repeat-buying. There's no native "your ferritin has fallen 30% in 12 months" alert. For women using bloodwork as an annual habit, this is the meaningful limitation versus Function Health's subscription model.
State coverage is patchier than the marketing implies. "Available in 50 states" is technically true at the catalogue level, but individual SKUs hit regulatory gaps. Read the small print on hormone and STI panels in particular.
Should you actually buy it?
If your alternative is paying $49 to know your vitamin D number versus continuing to guess at why you're tired, this is a yes. If your alternative is a $499 Function Health subscription with two comprehensive draws and an MD review, the maths shifts — Everlywell is the right pick for the woman who wants one targeted answer, not a comprehensive workup.
For the women's-health audience this site serves, Everlywell is the best value-tier at-home option in the U.S. category. The 8.0 reflects that genuinely — strong on the things it commits to, honest about the things it doesn't try to do.
Sources reviewed
Brand-reviewed materials, Everlywell public methodology pages, sample kit and physical results report (Heme review purchase, January–March 2026), CLIA/CAP accreditation public registry. Pricing reflects publicly listed figures as of May 2026 and may change without notice.