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My experience of paying for a PCR covid test in London

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Over the last couple of months a lot of readers have asked us for recommendations for a paid PCR covid test.

We have been offered chunky sums of money to promote a couple of providers. After all, 250 couples sent along by HfP at £150 each is a £75,000 windfall for the clinic involved.

None of the offers were both price competitive and had good user feedback, however, so we let them go.

This week my family had to get a test as we are heading off to Dubai for Christmas. If you fly direct to Dubai you can get a test on arrival for free, but we were booked on SWISS via Zurich. In any event, I didn’t like the idea of failing a test on arrival and having 14 days of ‘hospitality’ at the hands of the Dubai authorities.

The Regenerative Clinic

A friend recommend The Regenerative Clinic to me – website here.

The key benefits seemed to be:

  • these are serious people, as you can tell from the services they offer and the private hospitals they partner with – this is not a start-up aiming to cash in on covid testing
  • they have huge numbers of slots available (you will find that whatever provider is recommended by your airline, or Boots, has no slots for weeks on end) because they process people exceptionally quickly (EDIT: following publication of this article, all pre-Christmas slots were taken)
  • they have their own in-house lab, which meant that I was as certain as I could be that they would meet their promised turnaround time
  • the pricing was competitive – you can have a same-day test result (very few providers can do same-day PCR tests) for £225 or a next-day result for £150
  • they are in Central London – Thayer Street in Marylebone

Booking

You can book online, and American Express is accepted.

The problem is that you need to make separate bookings for each person in your family group. This is not an issue in itself EXCEPT that the website has cache issues and has problems when you try to make bookings back to back.

My wife, who I booked second, got a payment receipt but no confirmation letter. When I called up there was no record of her booking although the clinic quickly slotted her in. If you are booking for 2+ people, use a different browser, or private browsing, for each person.

On the day

We were booked in for 12.30 on Monday. When we arrived there was a 5-6 person queue. We were a little early but we joined the queue anyway and it turned out that they are not totally strict about when you arrive.

(My guess is that this one clinic is doing close to £100,000-worth of tests per day at the moment. Nice work if you can get it especially as there is no VAT.)

The Thayer Street unit is in a row of shops which means that it is not set up like a surgery. You walk in the door and there is a reception desk in front of you. To the right, behind a privacy curtain, is where the swabs are taken. You are not taken to a separate room.

Be aware that the form you are asked to sign does not ask for your passport number. If your destination country requires your passport number to be on the certificate, you need to write it onto the form somewhere and hope it gets added.

The general view of the three of us was that the test was done more professionally than the one we had in Jersey in August, and was therefore less painful and invasive.

We were back on the street within 10 minutes of walking through the door.

The results

We paid for the £150 ‘next day’ test.

Our tests were at 12.30 on Monday. At 14.40 on Tuesday I received three emails, each containing a PDF test certificate showing that we were all negative. The passport numbers had been correctly added to each certificate.

Conclusion

The Regenerative Clinic did what it promised, delivering test results in an appropriate format within the time frame quoted.

Having their own on-site lab is clearly a key part of why this works.

Many other providers simply offer a money-back guarantee if your test result is not back in time or, even worse, the swab turns out to have been taken incorrectly and cannot be processed. This is obviously not acceptable if you need to travel.

(I get a feeling, although I don’t know this for certain, that if my swab had been faulty I could have dashed back over to Marylebone and they would have taken another for immediate same-day processing.)

The clinic website is here.

For absolute clarity, we paid the full price for our tests and we have no commercial relationship with the clinic. Caveat emptor etc.

Comments (141)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Yvo says:

    I’m booking up holidays for 2021 hoping they don’t bring in a vaccination requirement instead of / as well as PCR tests. <50 so not on the list.
    Taking redundancy to do some travelling and using a crystal ball to guess where might let me in…

    • Anna says:

      It’s a huge question as children can’t get the vaccine either so if countries start demanding it as an entry requirment it will spell the end of family holidays for them!

  • Chris says:

    Had mine done at Boots in Piccadilly Circus for £120. I had booked one month in advance, but notice there were a few drop in customers waiting also – so possibly still an option if you can’t book a slot. Not sure how long they’d have to wait. Test was quick, and a bit of discomfort (but not painful). Results were received in about 25 hours (they do say up to 48 hours though).

    • Dave B says:

      As a data point mine came back from boots just over 48 hours. I think it depends when you get them done and they get taken to the lab.

  • The Lord says:

    Thanks Rob, very useful to know. Did you receive any guidance on the passport number or did you just add it to the form yourself and hope for the best?

    • Rob says:

      We were told to write it on if we needed it, but I imagine they occasionally forget to mention it.

  • Adam says:

    Travelled to Dubai 2 weeks ago equipped with our negative test results. Whilst BA did a good job of checking it, the border official in Dubai did not even open the test result or health declaration form given to us by BA!

  • Michael C says:

    There is still not a single supplier on the Test to Release list that can test on Dec 27 and have result back on same day.

    Btw the wording is: “GUIDANCE: The Department of Health and Social Care is aware of the following private sector (non-NHS) providers…”.
    Does that mean I can also look for a provider NOT on that list? Or must it be from the list to comply with the Passenger Locator Form?

  • Unsure says:

    Not impressed that you have to give all your personal details to Boots including passport number before you can see if there are any slots available.

    • Andrew says:

      It’s not ideal, but if it discourages test touts from making block bookings and reselling them for £lots, all the better.

  • Jessiefan says:

    Very wise not to start promoting medical services on commission, good on you.

  • ChrisW says:

    I’m surprised these tests are still so expensive. Is it just a matter of there being a limited number of people / companies / capacity to do them so they can charge whatever they like?

    I would have thought if somewhere like Super drug is selling far less, say, cosmetics and fragrances because people are barely leaving the house right now, they would pivot into something that is on demand. I know counter staff aren’t medical professionals but surely they could partner with a clinic that does?

    • Ian M says:

      You don’t need to be a ‘medical professional’ to carry out the swab for the test. The government test centres hire anyone and give them an hour training in how to do it.

    • Brian says:

      People are willing to pay for them, despite appearing to be expensive

      • ChrisW says:

        Seems like a huge opportunity then!

        • Brian says:

          Possibly but are these tests expensive to buy in the first place? I’ve no idea what margins are like, even at silly prices.

          The very small minority of people who are still flying, compared to last year, either really want to fly or need to fly so I can’t see prices coming down too much, given the captive audience.

    • Andrew says:

      When even the expensive tests are stil selling out why would anyone offer them cheaper?

      • BuildTheWall says:

        To get market share. As long as you can make a profit.

        • Andrew says:

          But all providers are running at full capacity. There’s no point gaining more market share if you can’t fill it.

    • RussellH says:

      We had antibody tests done via Superdrug last August (both +ve, so we assume that the nasty bug we had in March/April was covid-19).
      Could not be done locally, though – we had to drive across the country to the Metro Centre, where the shop has a small consulting room at the back – blood samples taken there, packaged up and then handed to us to put in the post to the lab.
      Cost £89 per test, so I do feel that £150 is expensive.

    • Peter says:

      Yeah it’s very strange, the Canary Islands are accepting antigen tests which should be significantly cheaper, but still the cheapest I could find in the UK is £100.
      In Turkey, loads of private clinics offer PCR tests for £30!

      • Jonathan says:

        I’d be wary of anywhere offering PCR tests for £30. We still struggle to get adequate volumes of quick turnaround tests (<12 hours) in the NHS with onsite labs. Trained staff to process the sample as well as the machines to run them on are the bottlenecks, neither of which can be rectified quickly.

      • Jonathan says:

        The rapid antigen tests are cheap (<£10) so there’s definitely profiteering at play with those although they’re not widely accepted at present so a waste of time & money.

      • Optimus Prime says:

        The Spanish Courts have just ruled against the Canaries government. They can only accept PCR tests, not antigen ones.

    • Cat says:

      The science is *incredibly* expensive to run. Polymerase is insanely expensive, the Hamilton Star (unrelated to Lin-Manuel Miranda) instruments that do the sample prep cost a quarter of a million each, the next gen sequencers cost another quarter of a million, the chips that the samples are put onto can only handle a hundred samples each, then they have to be thrown away after each use (they cost about £500 each) to avoid contamination, all equipment has to be specially treated to ensure that it’s entirely free of RNA, it’s expensive stuff. Rate limiting steps slow things down, which makes it incredibly difficult to scale things up and benefit from economies of scale.
      Science is expensive.

      • Rob says:

        What you can do though is run 10 tests at once as long as you split the swab. If the test is negative then all 10 are negative. If it is positive then you retest all 10 second swabs.

        • Cat says:

          That can work, but when positives appear, and need retesting, that disrupts the workflow through the lab, which makes it harder to guarantee results within 24 hours. It makes it cheaper, but the duration of time to get results will be a function of the prevalence of the virus in your samples.

          It’s also worth noting that this method would not pick up on inconclusive samples from people who need retesting – it will just give them a negative (which increases the rate of false negatives).

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

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