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Consumer lab · Review

Quest Health, reviewed.

Heme's editorial verdict on Quest Diagnostics' direct-to-consumer arm — the platform that lets you order Quest labs without involving a primary care provider. We scored Quest Health on the same seven criteria — here's where it earns its 7.8.

Affiliate disclosure. Heme has no current affiliate relationship with Quest Health. This review reflects independent editorial coverage. Read our methodology.
Heme Score
7.8/10
Best lab-grade access
Price$39–$199 / panel
FormatOrder online, draw in person
SampleVenipuncture, Quest centre
Clinician layerNetwork physician orders only
Available2,000+ patient service centres

The best traditional-lab option for women who want clinical-grade results without involving a doctor.

Quest Health is the consumer-facing arm of Quest Diagnostics — the same labs that run results for most U.S. hospitals and clinics. The pitch is simple: order any test in their menu online, pay out of pocket, walk into a Quest patient service centre for the draw, get clinical-grade results back through the portal in a few days.

It's not glossy. The website is functional rather than designed. The result UI is the standard hospital lab format. But the underlying labwork is the real thing — the gold-standard venous draw analysed at one of the largest reference labs in the country.

Best for: women who want clinical-grade venipuncture results without going through a primary care provider for ordering — and who are comfortable interpreting their own labs or taking them to a provider after the fact.
Coverage9
Lab10
Reporting6
Clinician5
Sample10
Price9
Claims7

What we tested.

We ordered three Quest Health panels in early 2026: the Comprehensive Wellness Panel ($149), the Women's Health Panel ($99) and the Thyroid Test Panel ($59). Ordering is straightforward — choose panel, pay, receive a digital requisition by email. The requisition is the document the Quest patient service centre will accept at the draw.

We booked a draw at the local Quest patient service centre via the MyQuest app. Walk-in was theoretically available; we found the booked slot ran considerably faster. The phlebotomist asked for ID and the requisition QR code, drew three tubes from a single venipuncture, and we were out in twelve minutes. Most panels required overnight fasting (10–12 hours). The Thyroid Test did not.

Results landed in the MyQuest portal between 36 and 96 hours later — faster than any at-home option. The result UI is essentially the same view a clinician sees: a value, a unit, a reference range, a high/low flag where applicable. No editorial layer. No "what may move this number" recommendations. This is the format the lab industry has used for decades.

"The underlying labwork is the real thing — the gold-standard venous draw analysed at one of the largest reference labs in the country."

Where Quest Health genuinely shines.

Where it loses points.

Who it's best for.

Who it's not for.

Price and what's included.

Quest Health prices by panel. There's no subscription model and no membership tier. What you pay is what you get. Selected panels relevant to women:

Selected Quest Health panels

Basic Metabolic Panel — $39
Lipid Panel — $59
Thyroid Test Panel (TSH, T3, T4) — $59
HbA1c — $39
Vitamin D, 25-Hydroxy — $59
Iron and Ferritin Panel — $79
Women's Health Panel — $99
Comprehensive Wellness Panel — $149
Fertility Panel (AMH, FSH, LH, E2, prolactin) — $179
Advanced Heart Health — $199

The Comprehensive Wellness Panel at $149 is the closest single-panel analogue to Function Health's tiered offer — though Function's panel is broader and includes the MD review and dashboard layer Quest Health doesn't. Choose Quest Health when you want the raw labs and price discipline; choose Function when you want the editorial layer.

How it compares to LabCorp OnDemand.

The natural comparison for Quest Health is LabCorp's equivalent consumer-direct offering, LabCorp OnDemand. The two are structural mirrors — both are the consumer-facing arm of one of the two dominant U.S. reference lab networks.

ServiceLocationsMenuResult UIPrice (entry)Heme Score
LabCorp OnDemand ~1,700 Broad, slightly narrower LabCorp portal (functional) $39 7.6

The honest read: Quest Health and LabCorp OnDemand are functionally interchangeable for most women. Choose by which patient service centre is closer to you. Quest has slightly more locations and a slightly broader test menu; LabCorp's portal is marginally cleaner. Neither is the better choice — the better choice is whichever lab your area better supports. See our at-home vs lab comparison and the best blood tests for women for the broader landscape.

The case against.

Three honest critiques.

The interpretation gap is real. A Quest result page can read as opaque to a first-time user. A flagged "high" on hs-CRP without editorial context can either spike anxiety or get ignored. For women new to bloodwork, the at-home brands' editorial layers are doing real work that Quest Health doesn't even attempt.

The consumer-direct ordering bypasses a clinical conversation that may matter. A primary care provider ordering your labs is also weighing your history, your symptoms, what to do with the results. Quest Health skips that layer by design. The convenience is real; the trade-off is real.

Insurance pricing arbitrage can backfire. Pay $149 out of pocket through Quest Health when your insurance would have covered the same panel with a $30 copay through your doctor — you've paid five times what you needed to. Run the math before deciding the consumer-direct path is the savings path.

Should you actually buy it?

For women who want clinical-grade venous-draw results, have easy access to a Quest patient service centre, are comfortable reading their own labs (or have a provider to bring them to), and have done the insurance arithmetic — Quest Health is the right pick. The 7.8 reflects strong execution on the underlying lab quality and price discipline; deductions for the result UI, the missing clinician interpretation layer, and the friction of getting to a centre.

For women who want a wellness platform with a result layer, action plan, or trending dashboard — Function Health, InsideTracker or Everlywell are all better-fit options.

Sources reviewed

Brand-reviewed materials, Quest Diagnostics and Quest Health public methodology pages, sample requisition and physical results report (Heme review purchase, January–February 2026), Quest Diagnostics CLIA/CAP accreditation public registry. Pricing reflects publicly listed figures as of May 2026 and may change without notice.

Important

Educational only. Not medical advice. Heme is an editorial publication. Test results and the information on this page are educational and may inform a conversation with a qualified healthcare provider — they are not a diagnosis or a treatment recommendation. Pricing reflects publicly listed 2026 figures and can change without notice.