Cheapest Titer Tests Online (2026): Where to Get Each Immunity Test for Less
No single portal is the cheapest across all titer tests. The lowest price for a Hepatitis B titer is at a different provider than the lowest price for MMR — and checkout fees can flip the rankings. This roundup identifies the current lowest-price option per test, with fees factored in, based on verified pricing from each provider's public website as of May 2026.
Quick summary: cheapest per test
- Hep B titer: LabReqs — $38.88
- MMR titer: DirectLabs — $74.00
- Varicella titer: LabReqs — $49.99
- Full immunity panel (Hep B + MMR + Varicella): LabReqs — $139.00
- All prices verified May 2026 — confirm current totals before ordering
Our recommendation for students
- At standard rack rates, no one portal wins every test: DirectLabs is cheapest for MMR, LabReqs is cheapest for Hep B, Varicella, and the full panel.
- For students, LabReqs (SchoolTiters.com) with student discount code SCHOOL2026 brings its MMR price below DirectLabs' $74 standard rate, making LabReqs the lowest-price option across all four titer tests when the discount is applied.
- LabReqs is also the only listed service that accepts orders for patients under 18, relevant for high school dual-enrollment or early college programs.
Why: With code SCHOOL2026, LabReqs undercuts DirectLabs' $74 MMR standard rate while already leading on Hep B ($38.88), Varicella ($49.99), and the immunity panel ($139).
Why no one portal wins everything
Portal pricing is not uniform across tests. DirectLabs leads on MMR ($74) but is the most expensive for standalone Hep B ($99). LabReqs is cheapest for Hep B ($38.88), Varicella ($49.99), and the full panel ($139) — and now second-cheapest for MMR at $79.00 standard (only DirectLabs is lower). Checkout fees also shift rankings: Ulta adds $12.95 per order; Jason Health's prices already include an $18 fee.
Hepatitis B titer: cheapest option
LabReqs — $38.88 (no stated additional fees)
LabReqs is the clear lowest price for the standalone Hepatitis B surface antibody (anti-HBs) quantitative titer. The next cheapest all-in price is Jason Health at $43 (fee included in listed price). Ulta Lab Tests appears cheaper at $46.90 but its $12.95 checkout fee brings the effective total to approximately $59.85 — higher than HealthLabs ($48), Accesa ($49), and Walk-In Lab ($49).
DirectLabs charges $99 for the same individual Hep B titer — more than twice the LabReqs price. If you only need Hep B, ordering individually from LabReqs or Jason Health will almost certainly save money.
→ Full comparison: Hepatitis B titer cost comparison
MMR titer: cheapest option
DirectLabs — $74.00 (no stated additional fees)
DirectLabs is the cheapest listed price for the MMR titer at $74. LabReqs lists $79.00 with no stated fee — making it the second-cheapest option. Ulta Lab Tests shows $79.90 listed but its $12.95 checkout fee brings the effective total to approximately $92.85. Jason Health lists $83 with the $18 fee included.
The difference between DirectLabs ($74) and the next cheapest all-in option (LabReqs at $79.00) is about $5. DirectLabs uses the Quest network; LabReqs uses LabCorp. With the student discount code SCHOOL2026, LabReqs dips below $74, making it the cheapest MMR option for students.
→ Full comparison: MMR titer cost comparison
Varicella titer: cheapest option
LabReqs — $49.99 (no stated additional fees)
LabReqs is the cheapest for the standalone varicella titer. Jason Health is second at $58 all-in. Accesa Labs charges $59. Fewer portals offer a standalone varicella test than offer Hep B or MMR — Walk-In Lab, for instance, only appears to offer varicella as part of its full immunity panel ($155).
Remember the key limitation: the commercial varicella IgG test is less sensitive for detecting vaccine-induced immunity. If you have documented 2-dose varicella vaccine records, your school may accept those in lieu of a titer. Check before ordering.
→ Full comparison: Varicella titer cost comparison
Full immunity panel: cheapest option
LabReqs — $139.00 (no stated additional fees)
For the complete immunity panel (Hep B + MMR + Varicella — five tests in one draw), LabReqs has the lowest listed price at $139. DirectLabs and RequestATest (Quest) are both $149, Walk-In Lab is $155, and Accesa Labs is $189.
At LabReqs, the panel ($139) is about $29 cheaper than buying Hep B + MMR + Varicella individually ($38.88 + $79.00 + $49.99 = $167.87). If you need all three tests, the panel is the better value at the same portal.
At DirectLabs, the panel ($149) is also a saving versus ordering MMR ($74) + Hep B ($99) = $173 without even adding varicella (not separately listed at DirectLabs).
→ Full comparison: Immunity panel cost comparison
How to pick: individual tests vs. panel
Use this decision framework to minimize cost:
- Check what you already have. If you have two documented MMR vaccine doses and a documented 2-dose varicella series, you may not need those titers at all — schools typically accept documented vaccine records. Only order titers for tests you actually need to demonstrate.
- If you need all three, the LabReqs immunity panel at $139 will almost certainly be cheaper than ordering three individual tests anywhere else.
- If you need only one or two tests, order individually from the cheapest provider per test: Hep B from LabReqs ($38.88), MMR from DirectLabs ($74) or LabReqs ($79 standard, or below $74 with code SCHOOL2026), Varicella from LabReqs ($49.99).
- Factor in checkout fees. Add $12.95 for any Ulta Lab Tests order before comparing. Jason Health's prices are all-in.
For a full side-by-side comparison of all providers across all tests, see the provider comparison table.
Related pages
- Best online labs for nursing school immunization requirements
- How to get titer tests for nursing school
- MMR titer cost comparison
- Hepatitis B titer cost comparison
- Varicella titer cost comparison
- Immunity panel cost comparison
Frequently asked questions
Does it matter which lab network processes my titer?
Both Quest Diagnostics and LabCorp run CLIA-certified, accredited laboratories. The titer methodology is equivalent. Most schools and employers accept results from either network. The practical question is which network has convenient draw locations near you — check both Quest's and LabCorp's website to find patient service centers.
Can I save money by using my insurance?
It depends on your insurance plan. Some insurers cover titer tests for occupational or school purposes at no cost or reduced cost. Before paying out of pocket, call your insurance provider to ask whether immunity titers are covered under your plan. Direct-to-consumer portal prices are relevant when ordering without insurance.
Are cheaper titers lower quality?
No. All portals in this comparison order through Quest Diagnostics or LabCorp, which use identical CLIA-certified laboratory methodology. A $38.88 Hep B titer from LabReqs processed at LabCorp is the same test as a $99 titer from DirectLabs processed at Quest. The price difference reflects portal markup, not test quality.