Explainer

Microplastics blood tests, explained

Since researchers first found plastic particles in human blood in 2022, a small market of at-home microplastics blood tests has appeared. Here's what they measure, what they cost, and the caveat their marketing tends to skip — written by a company that doesn't sell one.

Where this came from

In 2022, a study in Environment International reported microplastics in the blood of most participants tested — the first direct evidence that plastic particles circulate in the human bloodstream. Since then, follow-up research has linked microplastics in artery plaque to cardiovascular events, and a wave of coverage has made “plastic in your blood” a mainstream worry.

Several companies stepped into that worry with consumer products — finger-prick or mail-in kits that report a particle count from a blood sample. They are typically priced around $130–$150.

What they actually measure

A microplastics blood test counts particles in the specific sample you provide — usually via fluorescent staining and imaging, the same family of method used for water. What it returns is a number of particles. What it does not return is a diagnosis, a health risk, or a comparison to a validated normal range, because no such range exists.

The caveat the marketing skips

Microplastics testing's hardest problem is contamination. Plastic is in the air, in collection tubes, in clothing fibers. A blood sample drawn, handled, and shipped outside a contamination-controlled lab can pick up stray particles that have nothing to do with your body. Without field blanks and clean-room handling, a high number can be the environment, not you.

This isn't a reason to dismiss the research — it's a reason to read a consumer result modestly. In 2025–2026, scientists publicly questioned several high-profile body-microplastics studies on exactly these grounds. The honest read: plastic in human blood is real; the precise count from any single consumer test is soft.

A more useful place to look

If the goal is to do something rather than just get a number, exposure is more actionable than blood. You can't change what's already circulating, but you can see — and cut — what's still going in. Two honest next steps:

Frequently asked

How much does a microplastics blood test cost?

Consumer microplastics blood tests generally run $130–$150. Some are finger-prick kits you mail back; others require a blood draw. Pricing and turnaround vary by company — check the provider's current page.

Are microplastics blood tests accurate?

They can detect and count particles in the blood sample you send. The hard part is contamination control — plastic is everywhere, including in collection tubes and the air — and a sample handled outside a clean lab can pick up stray particles. There is also no established 'normal' blood level to compare against, so a number on its own is hard to interpret.

Should I get a microplastics blood test?

It can satisfy curiosity, but treat it as an experiment, not a health screen. No blood test currently tells you a health risk, a disease state, or a meaningful trend. If you mainly want to act on the information, measuring and reducing your exposure — starting with drinking water — is the more useful move.

Does The Water Test sell a blood test?

No. The Water Test makes an at-home water kit and runs a citizen-science urine kit. We don't offer a blood test. This page is an honest explainer of the blood-test market, not a product page.

Related: can you test your body for microplastics? · microplastics urine test

Not a medical or diagnostic test. The Water Test makes at-home kits that visualize and count particles in a sample. Nothing on this page diagnoses, screens for, or assesses any disease or health condition, and no “normal” level of microplastics in the body has been established. If you have health concerns, talk to a doctor.