Japan has two kinds of mail-in testing, and they suit different needs. There's a free, anonymous community HIV service run out of the gay scene, and there are paid commercial kits covering a wider STI panel. If getting to a clinic is the problem β€” hours, distance, privacy β€” postal testing is often your most practical route to a result. It's especially valuable outside the big cities.

πŸ†“ The Free Route: HIVcheck (akta)

HIVcheck, run through the akta community centre in Shinjuku Ni-chōme with Ministry of Health funding, is free, anonymous, postal HIV self-testing aimed at gay and bisexual men.

  • How it works: you take a small finger-prick blood sample yourself (a dried blood spot), post it anonymously to the lab, and get your result. Confirmatory testing is included.
  • Cost: Free.
  • Anonymity: Full β€” the whole service was designed around anonymity to reach men who avoid face-to-face testing.
  • Availability: kits have gone out from the akta drop-in centre (historically Thursday evenings) and through the programme; check akta's current channels for how to request one, since availability follows the funded cycle.

If HIV is your main concern, HIVcheck is the best-value option in Japan: free, anonymous, done at home, and tied to a community that can support you if the result is positive.

πŸ’³ The Paid Route: Commercial Mail-In Kits

Several private labs sell mail-order STI kits covering a broader panel than HIVcheck β€” typically HIV, syphilis, and gonorrhoea/chlamydia, with some kits offering throat and rectal swabs on top of blood and urine.

  • How it works: order online, take the samples yourself (finger-prick blood, plus swabs/urine per the kit), post them back, read results online.
  • Cost: Self-pay, depending on how many infections and sites the panel covers.
  • Why it matters for you: a kit with three-site swabbing closes the gap the hokenjo leaves open β€” throat and rectal gonorrhoea/chlamydia. Pick a panel that explicitly offers throat and rectal swabs if you want a complete check.

Window periods still apply, and a positive home result needs clinic confirmation and treatment. A kit tells you your status; it doesn't treat you. Anything positive goes to a clinic β€” the result-management guides below cover next steps. Test too soon after a risk and a negative isn't conclusive yet.

🧭 Which One?

  • HIVcheck (free): best for a private, no-cost HIV check β€” but HIV only.
  • Commercial kit (paid): best for a full multi-site STI panel from home, throat and rectal swabs included.
  • Either beats no test: if reaching a clinic is the barrier, both postal routes are strong.
  • Self-sampling technique matters: a badly taken swab can miss an infection β€” follow the kit instructions exactly.
  • No same-day treatment: a positive still means a clinic visit afterwards.

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