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Legacy

First cited by AI Jun 22, 2026
legacy.com

Surfaced organically in AI answers about at-home lab testing. Not yet profiled.

Legacy is losing the AEO war.

Not cited in a single tracked AI answer since Jul 5, 2026, down from a peak of 2% visibility in at-home lab testing on Jun 25, 2026. This page stays public, and recovery shows here the day it happens.

AI Visibility

Visibility trend

At-home lab testing, daily share of AI answers mentioning Legacy, through Jul 6, 2026.

0.0%

Last cited Jul 5, 2026 · peak 2% on Jun 25

By engine

Where Legacy is strong, and where it is invisible.

  • No engine data yet.

Mention sentiment

Tone of AI mentions across all tracked answers.

  • 0 positive mentions
  • 2 neutral
  • 0 mixed or cautious

Recent AI answers mentioning Legacy

ChatGPTJul 1, 2026, 13:55 UTC
What are the best at home lab testing services in 2026?

Short answer — there isn’t one “best” at‑home lab service for everyone. Pick by what you need (diagnostic bloodwork, hormones/fertility, STI screening, microbiome, genetic screening, fitness optimization) and look for CLIA/CAP accreditation, physician oversight, and clear privacy policies. Below are reputable services (2024–2026) and what each is best for, with a one‑line why for each. Comprehensive diagnostic-level testing (lab-quality) Labcorp OnDemand / Pixel by Labcorp — wide test menu, national lab network and CLIA-certified labs; best when you want clinical-grade tests and the option to follow up with local providers. QuestDirect / Quest Diagnostics — similarly broad coverage and lab network; good for ordering standard blood panels and confirmatory testing that insurers/clinicians accept. Consumer-friendly at‑home panels + telehealth Everlywell — easy-to-use kits for hormone panels, STIs, metabolism, and more; strong consumer app experience and fast results. LetsGetChecked — broad home blood/urine/STI tests plus nurse/physician support and same-day shipping; good for actionable telehealth follow-up. Fitness, biomarkers, and performance optimization InsideTracker — focused on biomarker optimization for fitness and longevity, integrates lab results with recommendations and wearable data; good if you want data-driven lifestyle guidance. Fertility / reproductive health Modern Fertility (consumer fertility testing for people assigned female at birth) — ovarian reserve and hormone panels designed for family-planning insight. Trak (and services like Legacy) — Trak offers an FDA‑cleared at‑home sperm count test; lab-based services (Legacy, specialty fertility labs) provide full semen analysis and cryopreservation options. STI testing (discrete consumer kits) MyLAB Box and LetsGetChecked — both offer discreet STI panels you can do at home; LetsGetChecked has stronger clinical follow-up. For definitive diagnosis or treatment, use a CLIA lab (Quest/Labcorp) or telehealth service that will prescribe treatment. Microbiome / gut function Viome — metatranscriptomic & microbiome testing with diet recommendations; sophisticated sequencing but interpretive approaches vary and clinical utility is still evolving. Genetic and population health screening Color Health — clinical-grade hereditary cancer and cardiogenetic screening used by employers/health systems; good when you want medically actionable genetic screening and counseling. Telehealth-integrated care (tests + prescriptions) Nurx / Ro and similar telehealth platforms — useful when you need testing paired with prescribing (UTI testing, PrEP, birth control, some STIs). How to choose (quick checklist) Is the lab CLIA-certified (and CAP-accredited if you want higher QA)? Is there physician/nurse review and telehealth follow-up for abnormal results? What sample type (fingerstick vs venous blood, saliva, stool) and will that affect accuracy? Does the test have FDA clearance for the specific device/kit (if applicable)? How are your results delivered and is the company HIPAA-compliant? Cost, turnaround time, and whether insurance is accepted. A few practical recommendations If you need clinically accepted diagnostic testing you might discuss Quest or Labcorp options with your clinician. If you want convenient home hormone, thyroid, STI or cholesterol checks with telehealth, try LetsGetChecked or Everlywell. If you want in‑depth fitness/longevity guidance, consider InsideTracker. For microbiome experiments, consider Viome but interpret recommendations cautiously and in context of a clinician’s input. For genetic hereditary screening, use Color or a clinical genetics provider and request counseling for positive/complex results. If you tell me what specific test(s) you want (e.g., full lipid panel + A1c, thyroid & hormones, STI panel, fertility, microbiome, DNA risk), I can recommend the single best fit, estimate cost/turnaround, and note any gotchas.

Mentioned in position 10 of 15

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ChatGPTJun 22, 2026, 09:35 UTC
Can I order my own lab tests without a doctor and is it worth it?

Short answer: Yes — in many places you can order lab tests without first seeing a doctor, using direct-to-consumer lab services or telehealth. Whether it’s “worth it” depends on what you want the test for, how you’ll act on the results, and the quality of the service you choose. How it works (overview) You pick a service or website, choose the test(s), pay out‑of‑pocket, and either go to a local lab draw site for a venous blood draw or use an at‑home kit (fingerstick or other). Results are delivered online. Some services include a nurse/telehealth consult; others only give results. Legal and availability limits vary by state/country — some tests (especially certain prescription‑related or Medicaid/Medicare reimbursed tests) may require a physician order. Pros Convenience and speed (skip the clinic visit). Control and privacy for screening or monitoring. Often cheaper than a clinic visit + lab order. Good for screening (lipids, HbA1c, basic metabolic panel, vitamin D),STD testing, hormone checks, etc. Cons / risks You may misinterpret results without clinical context. Abnormal results still require a clinician for diagnosis and treatment. Insurance/Medicare often won’t reimburse unless a doctor orders it. Not all at‑home kits are as accurate as venous blood draws; pick CLIA‑certified labs. Some tests may be unavailable or restricted. Which services to consider (brands and why) QuestDirect (Quest Diagnostics) — works with a national, CLIA‑certified lab network; good for standard panels and reliability (availability varies by state). Labcorp Pixel (LabCorp) — similar to QuestDirect: large lab network and broad test menu. HealthLabs.com / DirectLabs — wide test menu, orders run through lab networks (good if you want specific panels). Everlywell — convenient at‑home kits for hormone panels, food sensitivity screening, STIs, etc.; easy, consumer‑friendly interface. LetsGetChecked — at‑home kits plus included nurse follow‑ups for abnormal results (good for convenience + basic counseling). Vault Health / Legacy / Modern Fertility — if you want specialized services like fertility/hormone panels with targeted interpretation. Telehealth services (Carbon Health, One Medical, local telemedicine) — clinicians can order tests and provide interpretation; helpful if you want medical follow‑up. Pick a provider that uses CLIA‑certified labs and has clear sample‑type info (venous vs fingerstick) and return‑to‑lab instructions. Which tests are commonly useful Routine screening: CBC, CMP (electrolytes, kidney/liver), lipid panel, fasting glucose or HbA1c, TSH. Nutrition/hormones: Vitamin D 25‑OH, B12, ferritin (iron), testosterone or estradiol (when indicated). Inflammation/heart risk: hs‑CRP. STIs: comprehensive STI panel, HIV, syphilis, chlamydia/gonorrhea (depending on exposure). Specific symptoms: thyroid panel, cortisol, adrenal, specialty hormone testing — best done with clinician input. When it’s especially worth doing You want routine wellness screening and don’t need immediate treatment. You want to check/confirm a stable issue (e.g., vitamin D level) and plan to share results with your clinician. For privacy or convenience (e.g., STI screening). When to see a doctor instead New or severe symptoms, acute illness, or suspected serious condition. You need prescriptions, treatment decisions, or insurance billing (e.g., Medicare reimbursement). You want interpretation and management tied to your medical history. Practical tips Check whether your state/country allows the test and whether the company provides nurse/doctor follow‑up. Choose a CLIA‑certified lab or a reputable at‑home kit brand (examples above). Know sample type and fasting/medication requirements. Expect costs from roughly $30 (simple tests) to several hundred dollars (panels or hormone tests); compare prices. Bring or forward results to your primary care provider, especially if abnormal. If results are significantly abnormal or you have concerning symptoms, get a clinical evaluation. Bottom line Direct ordering of lab tests is widely available and can be worthwhile for screening, routine monitoring, or convenience — provided you use reputable (CLIA) labs and are prepared to interpret results cautiously or follow up with a clinician if needed. If you tell me what tests you’re thinking about or your goals (wellness screening, hormone check, STI screen, monitoring a chronic condition), I can recommend specific tests and the best services for that purpose.

Mentioned in position 8 of 11

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Competitive Landscape

Legacy vs the brands AI recommends alongside it

The real competitive set in At-home lab testing: brands the engines name in the same answers, ranked on the latest day.

BrandRankAI visibility
Legacy logo
LegacyThis brand
0.0%
Everlywell logo
Everlywell

2 shared answers

#1
75.0%
LabCorp logo
LabCorp

2 shared answers

#2
56.7%
LetsGetChecked logo
LetsGetChecked

2 shared answers

#3
51.7%
Modern Fertility logo
Modern Fertility

2 shared answers

#36
3.3%

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