Costco is selling at-home COVID-19 tests for $130

July 2024 ยท 2 minute read
2020-10-23T19:51:50Z

Costco is selling COVID-19 tests that you can take in the comfort of your home. 

The retailer is selling at-home tests that allow customers to test for the coronavirus via saliva samples, instead of inserting swabs into their noses for samples. The COVID-19 saliva PCR test kit costs $130 on Costco.com. Costco is charging an extra $10 for the same kit with video observation and assistance.

According to test maker P23, the tests are 98% sensitive and 99% specific. (Sensitivity is the probability that the test will produce a true positive response, while specificity is the probability that the test will produce a true negative.)

Read more: There are 11 coronavirus tests you can use from home. Here's how they work and where to order one.

To take the test, users collect a sample of their saliva by spitting into a tube. These tubes of saliva are sent to a testing center in a return-shipping box, which is included as part of the kit. According to Costco, the tests' results are then available online or via app within 24 to 48 hours.

The test's official name is the P23 Labs TaqPath SARS-CoV-2 Assay. Costco's version of the test is administered by the digital-health group Azova. 

"P23's test uses parts from Thermo Fisher Scientific and works with collection kits made by testing companies Everlywell and OraSure Technologies, according to the FDA and a P23 spokesperson," Business Insider's Blake Dodge reported. "Samples are tested in its lab in Little Rock, Arkansas."

Dodge reported that just a handful of the hundreds of tests for the novel coronavirus have received emergency authorization from the US Food and Drug Administration to be shipped to people's houses. The P23 test, sold at Costco, is one of the few to make the cut.

Companies have been battling to develop inexpensive and speedy tests that people can administer at home. Experts say that frequent testing can help identify asymptomatic people before they expose others to the coronavirus. 

ncG1vNJzZmivp6x7o8HSoqWeq6Oeu7S1w56pZ5ufonyku9Ktmqhlo5q5rb%2BMmqtmoJ%2Bism6vzq%2BgnWVhbnq1sdKtqmato567qHnSmqOirpFiwKK5z6WcrGViZX9xeZBp