Quick highlights
- Identifies bacterial causes of sore throat via culture growth
- Can guide antibiotic choice with sensitivity testing when indicated
- Best collected before antibiotics for highest accuracy
- Avoid antiseptic gargles immediately before sampling
- Results take time due to organism growth
- Does not detect viruses; negative culture may still occur in viral illness
- Useful in persistent or recurrent throat symptoms under clinician care
- Sample collection is quick and non-invasive
- Not typically home-collected; best done at clinic for proper swabbing
- SEO coverage: throat swab culture test, sore throat bacterial culture, throat culture and sensitivity
What’s included
Preparation
- Book throat swab collection at clinic/lab
- Avoid mouthwash/antiseptic gargles just before sampling
- Prefer sample collection before starting antibiotics if possible
- Open mouth wide; swab is taken from tonsillar area/posterior pharynx
- Try not to eat/drink immediately before swab if feasible
- Await culture incubation; preliminary updates may be provided
- Download report from <a href='/my-account/'>View reports</a>
- Review with clinician for antibiotic decision and symptom management
FAQs
A test that grows bacteria from a throat swab to identify bacterial causes of sore throat.
No.
If possible, collect before antibiotics because antibiotics can reduce culture positivity; follow clinician advice.
Antiseptic gargles/mouthwash before sampling can reduce organisms; avoid just before collection if possible.
Typically 2–4 days, depending on growth.
No; standard bacterial culture does not detect viruses.
It may indicate no significant bacterial growth or prior antibiotic effect; clinician interprets with symptoms.
If significant bacteria grow, susceptibility may be reported based on protocol.
It may cause brief gagging but is usually quick and tolerable.
Yes, with clinician/lab guidance.
Culture is useful for targeted identification, recurrent cases, or when rapid tests are unavailable/negative but suspicion remains.
Download from <a href='/my-account/'>View reports</a>.
Breathing difficulty, drooling, severe swelling, or very high fever needs urgent evaluation.
Typically no; proper swab technique is best done by trained staff.
Notes
Culture results depend on sample quality.