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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.

  • Phil says:

    Does anyone have experience of getting a test before travelling to South Africa? My understanding is that a paper certificate is required as opposed to PDF, am I wrong? My initial thought was to book the Sofitel T5 PCR package, but it looks like the test is self-administered there (please correct me if wrong), is it accepted by foreign countries? Thank you

    • WaynedP says:

      I booked 11am Sunday morning appt at my local Boots for a 22:15 LHR to JNB on the following Tuesday night.

      Received one-page negative test result 46.5 hours later, printed out multiple copies (as per gov.uk advice) and carried with me.

      Had to show test result on checkin at LHR, and relinquish one copy at SA Border Control at JNB, but was never asked for any of my remaining copies at any point in my two week stay in SA , including at a routine traffic police stop on the N3 on my return to JNB airport (officer just looked at m passport, noted the number on his list of drivers stopped, and chuckled that I was very organised when I also insisted on showing him my completed SA Dept of Health Covid-19 form for transit within SA).

      Whole process was straightforward and smooth, although I was organised and self educated beforehand.

      • WaynedP says:

        I think there may have been a problem if I hadn’t arrived at JNB Border Control with only an electronic copy, not a printed hard copy.

        Although a printed pdf should suffice as long as it verifies your identity (mine had both passport number and home address which I could have verified with my UK photo ID drivers licence).

        I got the impression that border force officials needed to retain a hard copy as they were all added to a growing pile. Just flashing an image of a pdf on a hand held device unlikely to suffice.

        • Phil says:

          Thanks WainedP, extremely useful experience, thanks for sharing !! Did your test certificate had your passport details on it?

          • WaynedP says:

            Yes, my full name, passport number and residential address.

            This means authorities have two official photo ID source documents to verify the certificate belongs to you if you carry both passport and UK photo driving licence with you, as I did.

          • WaynedP says:

            Make sure you complete the SA Dept of Health Covid forms beforehand. Doing so saved lots of time.

            There’s one for landing/arriving and a different one for departing the country. A third one for transiting across provincial borders within SA, but as I said in my previous post this seems superfluous to requirements.

            I filled all of these out beforehand with as much detail as I could, leaving only seat number details and signature vacant for filling in and signing on the spot when handing the forms over to officials.

            This was mandatory both on arrival and departure at JNB airport.

    • Bs says:

      I similarly had a physical certificate (and 3 copies) with me. Was checked before boarding by the airline, during walking down the steps off the plane in SA by port health (I wouldn’t have been allowed off the plane otherwise), before immigration, and after immigration. Definitely needed a physical copy, and at one point they noted the timing of the test and calculated how many hours it was. I never had to surrender a copy of the test (despite my photocopying!). They seem pretty hot on it.
      This in addition to multiple screening forms, as well as having my temp taken multiple times.

  • Jase says:

    Does anyone have any experience of the 24-lane drive through ExpressTest testing facility at Heathrow which I hear has now opened? Seems to be one of the most reasonably priced and offers next day results.

    • Gumshoe says:

      The one at Gatwick, which is run by the same company (expresstest), got off to a pretty shambolic start – the booking website crashed, people reported missing flights because results were late etc. There are a few articles on BBC News about it if you search.

      That was two or three weeks or ago though, when it was brand new, so it may have got its act together by now.

    • Heathrow Flyer says:

      I used ExpressTest Gatwick on Sunday. Drive through test was at 15:00 and I received the results with a PDF certificate including my passport number (which they check before the test if you ask for it to be on the certificate) at 08:25 Monday morning.

      I was very impressed with the whole set up and the price was reasonable at £99/test with a 10% discount for 2 tests.

  • Laura Jane says:

    You say the certificate is emailed to you but Dubai authorities state that the certificate must be printed and no digital copies are excepted. Does this mean printing it yourself at home from a pdf is acceptable. When they paper certificate I would have assumed this meant official head paper or equivalent etc. (something more ‘official’ looking)?

    • Andrew says:

      What’s the difference between the clinic printing it on a standard office laser printer on 80gsm bond and you printing it at home on a standard laser printer on 80gsm bond?

      Sounds like it’s more about the authorities not wanting to faff with pdfs on small screens.

      • Laura Jane says:

        No difference as far as I’m concerned, just paranoid about not being allowed entry so trying to mitigate any issues before they arise. Hopefully printing myself will suffice!

      • The real John says:

        Middle East bureaucrats love paper

    • Rob says:

      I have never, ever, heard of anyone being asked to show the cert in Dubai. They have delegates responsibility to the airlines.

      • JOHN CONNOR says:

        Rob, any feedback on the test on arrival in Dubai.

      • Finlay says:

        I flew to Dubai Emirates business on 4/12 and had to show my PCR result on arrival in Dubai when my passport was stamped Also Emirates wanted to see it at Heathrow when checking in.

  • Zark says:

    Rob,
    Is the test time stamped for the time you took the test or some later time?
    I ask as Seychelles requires PCR test to be conducted no more than 48 hours before flying.

  • Stanley says:

    So, a person just needs to create a certificate on Word, and print it off…… And go on holiday.

    • Brian says:

      I wouldn’t want to risk getting caught, especially with 14 day quarantines etc…

    • WaynedP says:

      All the genuine ones have a unique code and contact details of issuing body for verification.

      To falsify, you would have to provide your real passport number with a reference code that wouldn’t match and would fail subsequent verification checks by the foreign country’s border force (who would have your real passport number) even if you were allowed entry on good faith on arrival.

      You’d have to be thick as mince to run the risk of being arrested on attempted departure in a foreign country and charged with falsifying official documents to try to circumvent their Covid regulations.

      • Stanley says:

        I dont see what’s “official” about a random chemist signing a bit of paper. You could put your own passport number on it and your mate Bob’s phone number as the contact for the lab, in case they called. Just seems a system full of holes…..

        • Cat says:

          Your passport number wouldn’t match the reference number, which would be picked up pretty quickly by border authorities.

  • Darren says:

    Thanks for the info Rob, have a lovely trip.

  • Peter Taysum says:

    My concern (ED Doctor) is that the swab SHOULD make you cry (nasal) or gag (throat). That’s nothing to do with “professionalism” it’s that to get a proper swab it MUST be invasive. Professionalism is warning people of this.

    • RussellH says:

      Everything I have read about the test says that it is unpleasant and I can confirm that it is. I made my partner (retired consultant) do the swab when asked to take a test by Imperial College. I both gagged at the throat bit and shouted at the nasal bit.

      • Anna says:

        OH and I had to do them ourselves for the Imperial College study – it is SO difficult to deliberately make yourself gag!

        • RussellH says:

          I can imagine – which is why I got my partner to do it. She told me it was easy; I did not agree with her!

    • Lumma says:

      Been doing the NHS tests since May, people are wildly different in how it feels to them, when having the test done on me, I really struggle with the mouth swab but don’t mind the nose part at all (apart from it makes me sneeze). Others had having it up their nose for even a couple of seconds

  • FloriGuy says:

    Question – do BA require you to show a COVID test in order to fly to Dubai? I am hoping not since we are hoping to take advantage of the Test on arrival at Dubai (we are in Scotland and do not expect to get a quick test result up here).

    Absolute nightmare since when I call BA I get a message to say “They are busy and cannot put [me] through to the team right now”

    Of course I do not want to find out when attempting to Board that BA expect me to have a PCR test!

    • FloriGuy says:

      Thank you. I am aware of the advice. Just checking that this has filtered down to the person at the BA check-in desk that decided whether I get to board the flight or not.

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

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