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Do You Need a Follow-Up STD Test After Treatment? What Each Infection Actually Requires

Do You Need a Follow-Up STD Test After Treatment? What Each Infection Actually Requires

Most people assume that finishing treatment for an STD is the end of the story. Take the medication, feel better, move on. But for several common infections, treatment alone isn't how you confirm you're actually clear, and for others, retesting too soon can produce a false positive that looks like treatment failure when it isn't. This article breaks down exactly which infections require a follow-up test, what kind of test that is, and when to take it.
07 April 2026
17 min read
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Last updated: April 2026

There's a question that comes up constantly after STD treatment, and it sounds simple: do I need to test again? The answer depends entirely on which infection you had, and there's an important distinction that most people don't know exists. A "test of cure" and a "reinfection retest" are two different things, done at different times, for different reasons. Getting them confused is one of the most common sources of post-treatment anxiety, false results, and missed reinfections. Here's what each infection actually requires, in plain terms.

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Test of Cure vs. Reinfection Retest: Why the Difference Matters


These two terms get used interchangeably, but they're not the same thing. A test of cure is a follow-up test taken within weeks of finishing treatment, specifically to confirm that the medication worked and that the infection has been cleared. A reinfection retest is taken months later, not to check whether treatment worked, but to check whether the infection has come back through a new or untreated exposure.

Why does the distinction matter? Because the timing, purpose, and interpretation of results are completely different. Testing too early after treatment for certain infections produces false positives; the test picks up fragments of dead bacteria that haven't been cleared from the body yet, not an active infection. That can lead to unnecessary repeat treatment, unnecessary anxiety, and a misreading of what's actually happening.

Still Positive After Antibiotics? Here's What It Means covers this specific scenario in detail. But understanding which category your infection falls into, test of cure, reinfection retest, ongoing monitoring, or none of the above, is what this article is here to establish.

Chlamydia: No Test of Cure Needed (But Retest at 3 Months)


This surprises most people, but for the majority of chlamydia cases in non-pregnant adults, a formal test of cure is not recommended by the CDC. The reason is straightforward: chlamydia tests use a highly sensitive method that can detect fragments of the bacteria for weeks after successful treatment. Testing within 4 weeks of finishing treatment produces a high rate of false positives, results that look positive because of bacterial debris, not because the infection is still active.

According to the CDC's chlamydia treatment guidelines, testing earlier than 4 weeks post-treatment is not recommended for this exact reason. For non-pregnant adults, the appropriate follow-up is a reinfection retest at 3 months, and this one is strongly recommended. The reason is that reinfection within the first few months after treatment is extremely common. Around 1 in 5 people who are treated for chlamydia will test positive again within months, almost always because a partner wasn't treated or because a new exposure occurred in the interim.

The exception is pregnancy. Pregnant people diagnosed with chlamydia should have both a test of cure 4 weeks after completing treatment and a reinfection retest 3 months after diagnosis. The stakes of an untreated or inadequately treated chlamydia infection during pregnancy are significantly higher, which is why the protocol is more rigorous. If you're retesting after chlamydia and want to do it at home, wait the full 3 months; testing earlier will produce an unreliable result. Tested Too Early for Chlamydia? Here's the Timing That Actually Works explains exactly why the window matters.

Gonorrhea: Retest at 3 Months, Plus a Special Rule for Throat Infections


Gonorrhea follows a similar pattern to chlamydia for most people; a reinfection retest at 3 months is recommended, not an early test of cure. The 3-month window exists because gonorrhea reinfection rates in the months after treatment are high, and catching a reinfection early prevents it from being transmitted further or causing complications.

But gonorrhea has one important exception that chlamydia doesn't: pharyngeal gonorrhea, infection in the throat. Throat gonorrhea is harder to clear than genital or rectal infection, which means treatment doesn't always work as reliably in that location. For anyone treated for pharyngeal gonorrhea, the CDC recommends a test of cure at 7 to 14 days after treatment. Testing at 7 days is the earlier end and carries a slightly higher risk of a false positive, so 14 days is generally the cleaner data point if there's flexibility.

If that test of cure comes back positive and there hasn't been a new exposure, that's a genuine treatment failure, not a reinfection, and retreatment is needed. This matters because gonorrhea has a documented and growing problem with antibiotic resistance, and a persistent positive after treatment in a low-reexposure scenario is one of the clearest signals that resistance may be involved. Why Gonorrhea Keeps Coming Back (Even After Treatment) covers the resistance angle in full.

Table 1. Follow-Up Testing by STD, What's Required and When
Infection Test of Cure Required? Reinfection Retest? Timing
Chlamydia (non-pregnant) No, not recommended Yes, strongly recommended Retest at 3 months
Chlamydia (pregnant) Yes Yes Test of cure at 4 weeks; retest at 3 months
Gonorrhea (genital/rectal) No, not routine Yes, recommended Retest at 3 months
Gonorrhea (pharyngeal/throat) Yes Yes Test of cure at 7–14 days; retest at 3 months
Syphilis Yes, blood titer monitoring Ongoing Blood tests at 6 and 12 months post-treatment
Trichomoniasis Not routine Yes, for women Retest no sooner than 3 weeks post-treatment
Herpes (HSV-1/HSV-2) No, not applicable No, not applicable Ongoing symptom management; no cure
HIV No, not applicable No, not applicable Regular viral load monitoring per care provider
Hepatitis C Yes, SVR test Yes, if ongoing risk SVR test 12 weeks after completing treatment

Syphilis: Follow-Up Blood Tests Are Required, and Work Differently Than You'd Expect


Syphilis follow-up testing doesn't work like chlamydia or gonorrhea follow-up testing, and understanding why is key to not misreading the results. Syphilis is confirmed through blood tests that detect antibodies, the immune system's response to the infection. Some of those antibodies persist in the blood for life, even after successful treatment. That means a standard syphilis blood test will often remain positive indefinitely, which is not the same as having an active infection.

What providers look for after syphilis treatment is not a negative result, it's a declining titer. Nontreponemal blood tests measure antibody levels on a numerical scale, and the expectation after successful treatment is that those numbers drop over time. A fourfold drop in titer within 6 to 12 months is the standard marker that treatment is working. If the titer stays flat or rises, that's a signal worth investigating, either the treatment didn't work, or there's been a reinfection.

The CDC recommends syphilis follow-up blood tests at 6 months and 12 months after treatment for most people. People with HIV, who may respond differently to treatment, are monitored more frequently, at 3, 6, 9, 12, and 24 months. Given how dramatically syphilis rates have risen in recent years, provisional CDC data for 2024 shows primary and secondary syphilis declining but still at historically elevated levels. Keeping up with this monitoring schedule is more clinically relevant than ever. Syphilis Retesting After Treatment: How Long Should You Wait? explains the titer monitoring process in accessible terms.

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Trichomoniasis: Retest for Women, And Don't Do It Too Soon


Trichomoniasis sits in an interesting middle ground. For most people, a formal test of cure isn't required after treatment. The medication is highly effective when taken correctly and when partners are also treated. But the CDC does recommend that women retest for trichomoniasis, and the timing rule is specific: no sooner than 3 weeks after treatment.

The 3-week minimum exists for the same reason as the chlamydia waiting period; the test can remain positive from non-viable organisms for up to 3 weeks post-treatment. Testing before that point risks a false positive result. For men, routine retesting isn't recommended, largely because trichomoniasis so rarely produces symptoms in people with penises that follow-up testing has limited practical utility unless symptoms develop or a partner tests positive again.

The bigger issue with trichomoniasis reinfection is the partner treatment problem. Trich has an unusually high reinfection rate, which is why the CDC recommends that all sexual partners be treated regardless of whether their own test comes back positive; a positive result isn't required to warrant treatment. If a partner goes untreated and sex resumes, reinfection within weeks is likely. The reinfection dynamic for trichomoniasis mirrors what happens with gonorrhea when partners aren't treated simultaneously.

Confirming You're Clear: How to Retest at Home After Treatment


The 3-month reinfection retest after chlamydia or gonorrhea is where at-home rapid testing is particularly well-suited. By the time 3 months have passed, the false-positive risk from bacterial debris is gone, and an accurate test can confirm whether the infection has returned. You don't need a clinic appointment or a lab referral; you need a test taken at the right time.

The window periods for at-home testing after a new exposure (as opposed to post-treatment retesting) are different, and it's worth knowing both. The table below covers new-exposure testing windows, the minimum time needed after a potential exposure for results to be reliable.

Table 2. Reliable Testing Windows After New Exposure
Infection Test From
Chlamydia 14 days after exposure
Gonorrhea 3 weeks after exposure
Syphilis 6 weeks after exposure
HIV 6 weeks (first indicator); retest at 12 weeks for certainty
Herpes HSV-1 and HSV-2 6 weeks after exposure
Hepatitis B 6 weeks after exposure
Hepatitis C 8–11 weeks after exposure

For the 3-month reinfection retest after chlamydia or gonorrhea treatment, the Chlamydia & Gonorrhea 2-in-1 At-Home Rapid Test Kit (98% accuracy) handles both simultaneously at home with results in minutes. For anyone who wants broader confirmation, particularly after an exposure that could have involved multiple infections, the Complete 7-in-1 STD Home Test Kit (98.5% accuracy) covers seven infections in a single session. Peace of mind is one test away

For a full breakdown of which infections require a formal test of cure versus a reinfection retest, and why testing too early produces unreliable results, see Do You Need a Follow-Up STD Test After Treatment? What Each Infection Actually Requires.

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Herpes and HIV: No Test of Cure, Because There Isn't One


For herpes and HIV, the concept of a "test of cure" doesn't apply, because neither infection can currently be cured. Treatment for both manages the infection rather than eliminating it. Herpes is suppressed with antiviral therapy; HIV is managed with antiretroviral treatment that reduces the viral load to undetectable levels. Neither of these is a clearance event that would trigger a follow-up test to confirm the medication worked.

What both do require is ongoing monitoring. For herpes, the relevant question after a diagnosis isn't "did treatment work", it's "how is the virus behaving" and "what does consistent management look like going forward." How to Manage a Herpes Outbreak: Home Remedies & Medication covers the ongoing management side. For HIV, viral load tests at regular intervals are the standard of care, tracking whether antiretroviral therapy is keeping the virus suppressed. That monitoring is lifelong, not a one-time confirmation.

It's also worth noting that a positive herpes antibody test will remain positive after diagnosis indefinitely; the antibodies don't go away after an outbreak resolves. Testing again after a herpes diagnosis to see if it "went away" will always return a positive result. False Positive Herpes Tests? What HSV-2 Results Can Get Wrong explains the antibody persistence issue clearly.

Hepatitis C: The SVR Test Is the Cure Confirmation


Hepatitis C is the one infection in this group where a genuine test of cure exists and is required. Modern hepatitis C treatment achieves what's called a sustained virologic response, SVR, meaning the virus is no longer detectable in the blood. That's functionally a cure. But confirming it requires a specific test taken at the right time.

The SVR test is typically performed 12 weeks after completing treatment. A negative result at that point, meaning no virus detected, confirms that treatment worked and the infection has been cleared. This is a significant result: it's one of the only moments in STD care where a test genuinely confirms eradication of a viral infection. People with ongoing risk factors for hepatitis C are also advised to retest periodically, since the absence of immunity after clearing the infection means reinfection is possible.

For hepatitis B, there is no equivalent cure confirmation test; hepatitis B can clear on its own in some cases, or require long-term management in others. Monitoring focuses on liver function and viral activity rather than a single clearance confirmation. Hepatitis B Window Periods Explained (Without the Confusion) covers the monitoring timeline for hepatitis B specifically.

What a Still-Positive Result After Treatment Actually Means


A positive test after finishing treatment is one of the most distressing things to deal with, and it's also one of the most misread. The interpretation depends almost entirely on when you tested and which infection you had. For chlamydia or gonorrhea tested within 4 weeks of completing treatment, a positive result is likely a false positive from bacterial debris, not evidence that the treatment failed. For the same infections tested at 3 months, it almost certainly represents reinfection rather than treatment failure.

For syphilis, a persistently elevated or rising blood titer at the 6-month or 12-month mark is the meaningful signal, not the presence of a positive antibody test, which is expected to persist. For trichomoniasis tested before 3 weeks post-treatment, the same false-positive caveat applies as with chlamydia. The pattern across all of these is consistent: timing is what determines whether a result is meaningful or misleading.

If you've tested positive again after treatment and you're not sure what it means, I Treated My STD, So Why Am I Still Testing Positive? and Can Antibiotics Cause a False Negative STD Test? both help untangle what's likely going on based on the specifics of your situation. And for a full walk-through of everything that needs to happen between finishing treatment and resuming sex, our article Treated for an STD? Here's Everything You Need to Do Before Having Sex Again covers the complete sequence.

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FAQs


1. I took antibiotics for chlamydia and retested after 2 weeks; it came back positive. Did treatment fail?

Almost certainly not. Testing within 4 weeks of chlamydia treatment frequently returns a positive result from dead bacterial fragments, not active infection. The CDC doesn't recommend retesting before 4 weeks for this reason, and the reliable window for a reinfection retest is 3 months. Retest then, and you'll get an accurate picture of what's actually happening.

2. Do I need to go to a clinic to do my follow-up test, or can I do it at home?

For the 3-month chlamydia and gonorrhea reinfection retest, an accurate at-home rapid test works well; the timing issue that causes false positives is long past by 3 months. Syphilis follow-up requires blood titer monitoring, which is a lab test and not something at-home rapid tests currently cover. For hepatitis C SVR confirmation, a clinical lab test is also required.

3. My partner and I were both treated at the same time. Do we still need to retest at 3 months?

Yes. The 3-month retest is recommended regardless of whether partners were treated simultaneously. The purpose isn't to check whether treatment worked, it's to catch any reinfection that may have occurred in the interim through any exposure, including from each other if there was any lapse in the treatment timeline.

4. What's the difference between a false positive and a reinfection after treatment?

Timing and context. A false positive happens when you test too soon, and the test detects fragments of dead bacteria; it's a lab artifact, not active infection. A reinfection is a genuinely new infection that occurred after treatment cleared. Distinguishing between the two is mostly about when you tested: within a month of treatment, false positive is likely. At 3 months with no untreated partners, a positive is almost certainly reinfection.

5. I had throat gonorrhea. When do I retest?

Pharyngeal gonorrhea requires a test of cure at 7 to 14 days after treatment. This is the one scenario where early retesting is specifically recommended, because throat infections are harder to clear. If that test comes back positive and you haven't had new sexual contact, that's a treatment failure, not reinfection, and a different approach is needed.

6. My syphilis blood test is still positive 6 months after treatment. Does that mean I still have it?

Not necessarily. Syphilis antibody tests remain positive for life in most people even after successful treatment. What matters is whether the titer, the numerical measurement, has dropped since treatment. A fourfold decline is the standard marker of successful treatment. If the titer is declining, treatment worked. If it's flat or rising, that's worth investigating with your provider.

7. I was treated for trichomoniasis, but my partner didn't get treated. Can I still retest to check if I'm clear?

You can retest at 3 weeks or later for a reliable result, but if your partner was never treated and you've had sex with them since, a positive result most likely means reinfection, not treatment failure. The retest in that scenario is still useful, but the more pressing issue is ensuring your partner gets treated before sex resumes.

8. Does a negative result at 3 months mean I definitely don't have the infection anymore?

For chlamydia and gonorrhea, a negative result at 3 months is a reliable indicator that the infection isn't currently active. It doesn't guarantee you won't get it again, there's no immunity after treatment, but it confirms you're clear at that point in time. Regular retesting going forward is the practical way to stay on top of it.

9. How soon after hepatitis C treatment can I confirm I'm cured?

The SVR test is typically taken 12 weeks after completing treatment. A negative result at that point, no virus detected, is considered a functional cure confirmation. Testing earlier than 12 weeks isn't the standard protocol and may not give a definitive result. Wait the full 12 weeks for a meaningful answer.

10. I had chlamydia during pregnancy. Is my retesting schedule different?

Yes, pregnancy changes the protocol significantly. Pregnant people diagnosed with chlamydia should have a test of cure 4 weeks after completing treatment (unlike non-pregnant adults, for whom this isn't recommended) and a reinfection retest at 3 months. The higher stakes of chlamydia during pregnancy justify the more rigorous monitoring schedule.

Ready to Retest? Here's Where to Start


The 3-month mark after chlamydia or gonorrhea treatment is when a reinfection retest becomes meaningful, and it's one of the most skipped steps in post-treatment care. Catching a reinfection early prevents it from going untreated and being passed on further. At-home testing makes that window easy to act on without a clinic visit or a waiting room.

The Chlamydia & Gonorrhea 2-in-1 At-Home Rapid Test Kit (98% accuracy) is the direct option for the post-treatment retest. For anyone whose original exposure could have involved multiple infections, the Complete 7-in-1 STD Home Test Kit (98.5% accuracy) covers seven infections at once. And for women who want full coverage including trichomoniasis, the Women's 10-in-1 Complete STD Test Kit is the most comprehensive option available. Your results, your privacy, take control at STD Rapid Test Kits.

How We Sourced This: Our article was constructed based on current advice from the most prominent public health and medical organizations, and then molded into simple language based on the situations that people actually experience, such as treatment, reinfection by a partner, no-symptom exposure, and the uncomfortable question of whether it "came back." In the background, our pool of research included more diverse public health advice, clinical advice, and medical references, but the following are the most pertinent and useful for readers who want to verify our claims for themselves.

Sources


1. CDC STI Treatment Guidelines: Retesting After Treatment to Detect Repeat Infections

2. CDC STI Treatment Guidelines: Chlamydial Infections

3. CDC Sexually Transmitted Infections Surveillance, 2024 (Provisional)

4. Chlamydial and Gonococcal Infections: Screening, Diagnosis, and Treatment, AAFP

5. Updates on Testing, Treatment, and Prevention of Sexually Transmitted Infections in the United States, 2025, PMC/NCBI

6. CDC Laboratory Recommendations for Syphilis Testing, United States, 2024, MMWR

About the Author


Dr. F. David, MD is a board-certified infectious disease specialist focused on STI prevention, diagnosis, and treatment. He writes with a direct, sex-positive, stigma-free approach designed to help readers get clear answers without the panic spiral.

Reviewed by: Rapid STD Test Kits Medical Review Team | Last medically reviewed: April 2026

This article is for informational purposes and does not replace medical advice.