Excellent 4.6 out of 5
Environmental Exposure

Lead Toxin Test

Measure your personal lead level quickly and confidently so you can act if it’s elevated. Knowing your result can help you reduce exposure and seek care to lower the risk of lead-related neurological and developmental harm in children and kidney, reproductive, and cardiovascular problems in adults.

Get the Lead Toxin Test
Cancel anytime
HSA/FSA eligible
Results in a week
Physician reviewed

Every result is checked

·
CLIA-certified labs

Federal standard for testing

·
HIPAA compliant

Your data is 100% secure

Key Insights

  • Understand how this test reveals your body’s current biological state—whether it reflects recent lead exposure, accumulated body burden, or recovery after removing a source.
  • Identify a key biomarker (lead in whole blood) that can help explain symptoms like fatigue, headaches, brain fog, anemia patterns, numbness or tingling, high blood pressure, or slowed workout recovery.
  • Learn how environment, age, pregnancy, nutrition, and genetics may shape your result—such as exposure from older housing, hobbies, imported goods, or increased absorption with iron deficiency.
  • Use insights to guide prevention or treatment strategies with your clinician, such as confirming exposure sources, deciding when additional testing is warranted, or monitoring a medical intervention.
  • Track how your level changes over weeks and months to monitor progress, recovery, or response after removing a suspected exposure.
  • When appropriate, integrate findings with related panels—iron studies, complete blood count, kidney function, and, if indicated, zinc protoporphyrin—for a more complete picture of health.

What Is a Lead Toxin Test?

A lead toxin test measures the amount of lead circulating in your blood. The standard sample is whole blood collected from a vein; fingerstick screening can be used, but any elevated fingerstick result should be confirmed with a venous sample to avoid skin-dust contamination. Results are reported as a number (typically in micrograms per deciliter, µg/dL) and interpreted against public health reference values for age and pregnancy. Modern laboratories use highly sensitive methods such as inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP‑MS) or graphite furnace atomic absorption to quantify very low concentrations with strong accuracy and precision.

Why it matters: blood lead reflects recent exposure and, to some extent, release from long‑term stores in bone. Your number gives objective data about how your body is interacting with a known environmental toxin that can affect the nervous system, blood formation, kidneys, cardiovascular health, and reproductive outcomes. Because lead can cross the placenta and children absorb more than adults per dose, understanding your level provides early warning long before symptoms are obvious. Tracking over time helps clarify whether exposure is ongoing, decreasing, or fully controlled.

Why Is It Important to Test Your Lead?

Lead is a heavy metal that interferes with fundamental biology: it disrupts enzymes in heme synthesis (how your body makes hemoglobin), competes with calcium in nerve and muscle signaling, and contributes to oxidative stress. Even low levels have been linked with higher blood pressure, subtle cognitive effects, and changes in kidney function in adults, while children are especially sensitive during brain development. Testing becomes particularly relevant after a plausible exposure—renovating older housing with peeling paint, using imported glazed pottery, visiting indoor firing ranges, certain arts like stained glass or ceramics, or consuming some imported spices or traditional cosmetics. It is also important in pregnancy and breastfeeding, when bone stores can release lead into the bloodstream.

Zooming out, a blood lead test is a preventive lens. There is no known safe level for children, and lower is better for everyone. Regular testing is not about passing or failing; it is about measuring where you stand, identifying patterns, and seeing how your biology adapts after changes in your environment. When interpreted with your clinician and, when needed, aligned tests like iron studies or kidney markers, your results can guide smarter choices that reduce risk over time—helping protect cognition, energy, cardiovascular health, fertility, and family safety.

What Insights Will I Get From a Lead Toxin Test?

Your report presents a numeric value for lead in whole blood, often with a reference interval or public health reference value for your age group. “Normal” describes what is common in a general population; “optimal” aims lower to reflect minimal exposure. Context matters: a mildly elevated result may be most meaningful when paired with symptoms, a clear exposure history, or a rising trend across repeat tests.

Lower values generally suggest limited recent exposure, efficient elimination, and stable mineral balance. Variation is expected and can be shaped by iron status, calcium intake, hydration, genetics affecting lead binding proteins, and life stage (for example, pregnancy can mobilize bone stores).

Higher values indicate recent exposure or release from body stores. That does not equal disease, but it signals the need to consider sources and, with your clinician, whether additional evaluation is appropriate. In children and pregnancy, even small increases warrant attention. Because lead’s half‑life in blood is roughly weeks, declining numbers over time often reflect successful source control.

Testing has limits. Capillary (fingerstick) samples can be falsely high if skin is contaminated, so confirm with a venous draw for decisions. Chelation or intense exposure right before the test can shift levels temporarily. Different labs and methods have different detection limits, so compare your own results over time rather than across laboratories. The real power of the lead toxin test is in the pattern—linking your number to exposures, symptoms, and related labs to support prevention and long‑term resilience.

Superpower also tests for

See more heavy metals tests

Frequently Asked Questions About

What does the lead toxin test measure?

A lead toxin test measures the amount of lead in your body—most commonly the blood lead level (BLL), reported in micrograms per deciliter (µg/dL). A blood test reflects recent exposure (typically weeks to months) and indicates how much lead is circulating and available to affect organs; some tests can also assess lead in urine, hair, or bone (X‑ray fluorescence) or measure related biomarkers (for example zinc protoporphyrin) that show lead’s effect on red blood cell production.

These tests are intended for individuals to understand their personal lead levels and exposure; results are used to monitor exposure, guide clinical follow‑up or treatment, and inform exposure‑reduction steps, but do not by themselves identify specific environmental sources.

How is your lead sample collected?

We collect a small whole‑blood sample by venipuncture performed by a trained phlebotomist; the blood is drawn into tubes certified for trace‑element testing to avoid contamination and ensure accurate lead measurement.

For screening in very young children a capillary (fingerstick) sample may be used initially, but any elevated result is confirmed with a venous draw. Proper skin cleaning and use of trace‑element‑free supplies minimize external contamination.

What can my lead toxin test results tell me about my health?

A lead toxin test (usually a blood lead level) primarily shows how much lead is circulating in your blood now — a marker of recent exposure and, to some extent, overall body burden. Higher results indicate greater risk of harm: even low levels are linked with developmental and cognitive effects in children and with neurological, kidney, reproductive and cardiovascular effects in adults. Labs report results in standard units and compare them to reference ranges used by public‑health agencies; there is effectively no known safe lead level for children and pregnant people.

One test is only part of the picture: trends over time, symptoms, age, pregnancy status and exposure history matter for interpreting risk. A single normal result does not rule out past exposure or cumulative bone lead stores, and an elevated result typically prompts repeat testing, investigation of exposure sources (home, work, hobbies), public‑health follow‑up and, in high cases, medical treatment such as chelation under specialist care. Discuss your specific value and next steps with a clinician or local health department.

How accurate or reliable are lead toxin tests?

Capillary (finger-stick) screening tests are convenient but more prone to contamination from surface lead and can produce false‑high results unless strict wipe/collection procedures are followed; any elevated capillary result should be confirmed with a venous draw. Urine tests without chelation, hair/nail analyses, and many commercial “heavy metal” panels are less reliable or poorly standardized for diagnosing lead poisoning and can be misleading. Bone lead measurement (via X‑ray fluorescence) is used in research to assess long-term stored lead but is not routine clinical practice.

Overall reliability depends on proper sample collection, use of a certified laboratory, and appropriate test selection; if results are unexpected or borderline, repeat testing or venous confirmation and clinical correlation by a qualified clinician are recommended.

How often should I test my lead levels?

Children should be tested at the ages recommended by your local public‑health program (commonly around 12 and 24 months) and any time you suspect exposure; at‑risk older children may need repeat testing until school age. Adults without known exposure do not need routine screening, but pregnant people or anyone who suspects recent exposure should be tested promptly.

If you work with lead or have a previously elevated result, follow workplace medical surveillance and your clinician’s advice — typically a baseline test, testing after any known exposure, and repeat testing at intervals until levels fall and remain stable. Ask your healthcare provider or local public health agency for the exact schedule tailored to your situation.

Can the amount of lead change quickly?

Yes — blood lead levels can change relatively quickly because the blood compartment reflects recent exposure. A significant new exposure can raise blood lead within days, and removal from the source or medical treatment (e.g., chelation) can lower measured blood lead over days to weeks. However, lead stored in bone and other tissues is released slowly, so overall body burden changes much more slowly and can cause levels to rebound over months to years.

Measured changes can also result from sample contamination, timing of the test, or laboratory variability, so unexpected or clinically important changes should be confirmed with repeat testing and discussed with a healthcare provider to identify exposure sources and decide on follow-up or treatment.

Are lead toxin test results diagnostic?

No — lead toxin test results highlight patterns of imbalance, exposure, or physiological resilience and are not medical diagnoses; they indicate possible areas of concern rather than a definitive clinical diagnosis.

These results must be interpreted alongside symptoms, medical history, physical exam findings and other laboratory or biomarker data, and a qualified clinician should integrate all that information to determine clinical significance and appropriate next steps.

How can I improve my lead levels after testing?

If your test shows elevated lead, first discuss the result with your healthcare provider so they can interpret the level, order any follow‑up testing, and recommend treatment if needed. Locate and remove ongoing sources of exposure—common culprits include old lead paint and dust, contaminated drinking water (especially from lead pipes or fixtures), leaded pottery or imported canned goods, occupational or “take‑home” exposures, and contaminated soil—and reduce household exposure by washing hands often (especially before eating), wiping surfaces with a damp cloth, mopping rather than dry‑dusting, and keeping children’s play areas free of dirt and peeling paint.

Supportive measures that help lower absorption include maintaining a healthy diet with adequate iron, calcium and vitamin C (talk to your clinician or dietitian for specific guidance). Never use unapproved home chelation remedies; chelation therapy is a medical treatment reserved for specific clinical situations and must be prescribed and monitored by a physician. Contact your clinician and local health or environmental agency for home inspection, remediation resources, and follow‑up testing recommendations.

How it works

1

Test your whole body

Get a comprehensive blood draw at one of our 3,000+ partner labs or from the comfort of your own home.

2

An Actionable Plan

Easy to understand results & a clear action plan with tailored recommendations on diet, lifestyle changes, supplements and pharmaceuticals.

3

A Connected Ecosystem

You can book additional diagnostics, buy curated supplements for 20% off & pharmaceuticals within your Superpower dashboard.

Superpower tests more than 
100+ biomarkers & common symptoms

Developed by world-class medical professionals

Supported by the world’s top longevity clinicians and MDs.

Dr Anant Vinjamoori

Superpower Chief Longevity Officer, Harvard MD & MBA

A smiling woman wearing a white coat and stethoscope poses for a portrait.

Dr Leigh Erin Connealy

Clinician & Founder of The Centre for New Medicine

Man in a black medical scrub top smiling at the camera.

Dr Abe Malkin

Founder & Medical Director of Concierge MD

Dr Robert Lufkin

UCLA Medical Professor, NYT Bestselling Author

membership

$17

/month
Billed annually at $199
A smartphone displays health app results, showing biomarker summary, superpower score, and biological age details.
A website displays a list of most ordered products including a ring, vitamin spray, and oil.
A smartphone displays health app results, showing biomarker summary, superpower score, and biological age details.A tablet screen shows a shopping website with three most ordered products: a ring, supplement, and skincare oil.
What could cost you $15,000 is $199

Superpower
Membership

Your membership includes one comprehensive blood draw each year, covering 100+ biomarkers in a single collection
One appointment, one draw for your annual panel.
100+ labs tested per year
A personalized plan that evolves with you
Get your biological age and track your health over a lifetime
$
17
/month
billed annually
Flexible payment options
Four credit card logos: HSA/FSA Eligible, American Express, Visa, and Mastercard.
Start testing
Cancel anytime
HSA/FSA eligible
Results in a week
Pricing may vary for members in New York and New Jersey **

Finally, healthcare that looks at the whole you