You've been waiting, watching, and symptom-spotting for two weeks. You pick up a pregnancy test from the drugstore, follow the instructions, and then stare at the result window trying to interpret what you're seeing. Is that a line? Is it faint? Does faint count? Do you need to test again?
Home pregnancy tests have come a long way in sensitivity and reliability, but they're not infallible โ and how and when you use them matters enormously. Here's everything you need to know about home pregnancy test accuracy.
Home pregnancy tests detect a hormone called human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) in your urine. hCG is produced by the cells that will become the placenta, beginning almost immediately after a fertilized egg implants in the uterine lining โ typically 6 to 12 days after fertilization.
After implantation, hCG levels double roughly every 48 to 72 hours in early pregnancy. The test contains antibodies that bind specifically to hCG. When hCG is present at sufficient levels, it triggers a color change that produces the line or symbol you see in the result window.
Different tests have different sensitivity thresholds โ typically expressed in mIU/mL (milli-international units per milliliter). A test that detects 10 mIU/mL of hCG can identify pregnancy earlier than one that requires 25 mIU/mL. Most standard drugstore tests are sensitive to 25 mIU/mL; early-result tests are typically sensitive to 10 or 6.3 mIU/mL.
Most home pregnancy tests claim to be "over 99% accurate" when used correctly โ and that's technically true when tested at the time of a missed period with first morning urine. Under ideal conditions, they are indeed highly accurate.
The important qualifier is "when used correctly" and "at the right time." Testing too early (before hCG has reached detectable levels), using diluted urine, or misreading the result window are the main sources of inaccuracy in real-world use. Studies show that when women test themselves in actual conditions โ rather than lab settings โ accuracy rates drop to around 75%, largely because many women test too early.
False positives (the test says pregnant when you're not) are rare โ less than 1%. False negatives (the test says not pregnant when you are) are much more common, particularly with early testing.
The timing of your test is the single biggest factor in its accuracy. Here's the breakdown:
Testing on the first day of your missed period gives you the highest accuracy โ over 99% for most tests. At this point, hCG levels in pregnant women are typically above 25 mIU/mL, well within the detection range of standard tests. This is the recommended testing time for most women.
Early-result tests can detect pregnancy 5 to 6 days before a missed period โ but accuracy at that point is significantly lower. Even early-result tests may only be 60 to 80% accurate at 6 days before a missed period, because hCG levels in very early pregnancy vary widely between individuals. A negative result before your missed period may simply mean your hCG hasn't risen enough yet to be detected โ not that you're not pregnant.
If you test early and get a negative result, test again when your period is due before drawing any conclusions.
hCG is most concentrated in your first urine of the morning, before you've had anything to drink. This is why most instructions say to test with first morning urine. Testing later in the day with diluted urine can result in a false negative, especially in early pregnancy when hCG levels are still rising.
๐งช Best practice: Test with first morning urine, at or after the day your period was expected, and follow the instructions exactly โ including the reading window timing.
A false negative means the test says "not pregnant" when you actually are. This is more common than most people realize. Causes include:
False positives are much rarer but do happen. Possible causes include:
If you can see any line โ however faint โ in the result window within the reading time, that is considered a positive result. A line is a line. The darkness of the line reflects hCG concentration, not whether you're "really" pregnant. In very early pregnancy, lines are often faint because hCG is still low.
What you should do with a faint line: retest in 48 to 72 hours. If the line gets darker, hCG is rising normally โ a very good sign. If it stays faint or disappears, it could indicate a chemical pregnancy. Either way, contact your OB-GYN for a blood test to get definitive hCG levels and guidance on next steps.
An important note: a faint line with color is different from an evaporation line, which has no color at all. Evaporation lines appear after the reading window and are not positive results.
Use our free Pregnancy Due Date Calculator to find your due date and see which week of pregnancy you're in.
Calculate My Due Date โHome pregnancy tests are remarkable tools when used correctly โ but they're only as reliable as the timing and technique behind them. If you're in doubt, test again in a few days, or get a blood test from your doctor. Your health and your peace of mind are worth the extra step.