How to Check Pregnancy at Home: Complete Guide to All Methods (Salt, Toothpaste, Kit & More)

How to Check Pregnancy at Home

The most accurate way to check pregnancy at home is with a home pregnancy test kit (HPT) – available at any pharmacy in India for Rs 30–150. These kits detect the hCG hormone in urine and are 99% accurate when used correctly from the first day of a missed period. Methods using salt, toothpaste, soap, sugar, or baking soda have no scientific basis and should not be used to confirm pregnancy. Always confirm any home test result with a blood test (beta-hCG) from a laboratory.

A missed period. Tender breasts. A strange feeling you can’t quite name. If you’re wondering whether you might be pregnant, you’re not alone and you’re looking for answers quickly.

This guide covers every method women in India and around the world use to check for pregnancy at home from the medically accurate home pregnancy test kit to traditional home remedies (salt, toothpaste, sugar, soap, and more). We’ll tell you honestly which ones work, which ones don’t, and what you should do next regardless of the result.

Whether you’re hoping for a positive, hoping for a negative, or simply trying to understand your body this guide is written for you.

Understanding Pregnancy Detection: The Role of hCG

Before we dive into methods, one piece of biology matters enormously here: pregnancy is detected by a hormone called human chorionic gonadotropin hCG.

hCG is produced by the developing placenta within days of a fertilised egg implanting in the uterine lining. It appears first in the blood (from about 8–10 days after fertilisation), then in the urine (from about 10–14 days, detectable by sensitive home tests from around the time of a missed period).

The key point: any home test that claims to detect pregnancy must scientifically be detecting hCG in some way. Methods that cannot chemically react with hCG (such as salt, toothpaste, or soap mixed with urine) have no scientific mechanism to detect pregnancy. They are not pregnancy tests.

The Science in One Sentence Home pregnancy test kits use antibodies that bind specifically to hCG in urine triggering a visible line. No kitchen ingredient (salt, toothpaste, sugar, soap, or vinegar) has any ability to do this. The results of DIY methods are random not diagnostic.

1. How to Check Pregnancy at Home With a Kit (The Only Reliable Method)

A home pregnancy test (HPT) kit is the gold standard for at-home pregnancy detection. These tests are inexpensive (Rs 30–150), widely available, and 99% accurate when used correctly.

How a Home Pregnancy Test Kit Works

The test strip or midstream device contains monoclonal antibodies that react specifically with hCG in your urine. When hCG is present above a certain threshold (typically 20–25 mIU/mL), the antibodies trigger a chemical reaction that produces a visible coloured line on the test.

Step-by-Step: How to Use a Home Pregnancy Test Kit Correctly

Step 1: Choose the Right Time
Use your first morning urine (FMU) -i t contains the highest concentration of hCG
Test from the first day of a missed period for best accuracy
Some sensitive kits (e.g. Clearblue Early) can detect pregnancy 4–5 days before a missed period
Avoid testing after drinking large amounts of fluid this dilutes the urine and hCG concentration
Step 2: Collect Your Urine
Collect midstream urine in a clean, dry container (if using a strip test)
Or hold a midstream device in your urine stream for 5 seconds
Do not use a container that has been washed with soap residue can affect results
Step 3: Perform the Test
Dip the strip to the marked line for exactly the time stated (usually 3–5 seconds)
OR hold the midstream stick in the urine stream as directed
Lay the test on a flat, clean surface
Step 4: Read the Result
Read the result within the time window stated (usually 3–5 minutes)
Two lines (any shade) = PREGNANT even a faint second line indicates hCG is present
One line (control line only) = NOT PREGNANT (or tested too early)
No lines = Invalid test repeat with a new kit
Do NOT read results after the stated window; evaporation lines can cause false positives
Step 5: Confirm With a Blood Test
Any positive home pregnancy test should be confirmed with a beta-hCG blood test
Blood tests detect lower levels of hCG and can estimate how far along the pregnancy is
Book an appointment with your doctor within 48–72 hours of a positive result

Popular Home Pregnancy Test Kits Available in India

BrandKey Features
Prega NewsIndia’s most widely used kit. Rs 50–80. Strip format. Detects hCG from day of missed period.
i-CanMidstream format. Rs 80–100. Easy to use without a collection cup.
ClearblueDigital display (Pregnant / Not Pregnant). Rs 150–200. Reduces result interpretation errors.
Mankind PreganewsEconomy strip test. Rs 30–50. Available at most Indian pharmacies.
PregacolorStrip test. Low cost. Widely available in tier-2 and rural pharmacies.

What a Faint Line on a Pregnancy Test Means

A faint second line no matter how pale indicates that hCG is present in your urine. This means the test is positive. A faint line is most common when testing early (before or around the day of a missed period), when urine is diluted, or when hCG levels are just beginning to rise. Repeat the test in 48 hours with first morning urine if you are unsure.

2. Home Pregnancy Tests Without a Kit: Salt, Toothpaste, Sugar, Soap & More

Important Notice Before Reading This Section None of the methods in this section are scientifically validated pregnancy tests. They cannot detect hCG. Their results are random and unreliable. We cover them here because millions of women search for them — and deserve honest, accurate information about what these methods can and cannot do. Do not make pregnancy decisions based on these tests.

Why Do These Home Remedies Exist?

Before home pregnancy test kits became affordable and widely available, women passed down traditional methods for detecting pregnancy. Many of these were based on the (reasonable) idea that pregnancy changes the composition of urine. While this is true hCG, progesterone, and other compounds do appear in pregnant urine none of the kitchen ingredients used in these tests can react specifically with hCG. Any reaction observed is caused by acid-base chemistry, physical interactions with urine proteins, or random variation — not pregnancy detection.

A) How to Check Pregnancy at Home With Salt

Salt Pregnancy Test – At a Glance
Scientific Accuracy: NONE
Recommended: NO
What it can tell you: Nothing reliable
Risk: High chance of incorrect result

The salt pregnancy test is one of the most-searched home pregnancy methods in India. Here is everything you need to know about it including why it does not work.

What People Claim

The claim is that mixing salt with a pregnant woman’s urine produces a white, milky, or cheesy reaction while non-pregnant urine remains unchanged or simply dissolves the salt.

Step-by-Step: How the Salt Pregnancy Test Is Performed (As Commonly Described)

  1. Collect the first morning urine in a clean, dry container
  2. Add a tablespoon of plain table salt (not iodised, according to some versions)
  3. Wait 3–5 minutes and observe for any reaction
  4. A white, milky, or curd-like reaction is interpreted as ‘pregnant’; dissolved salt = ‘not pregnant’

Does the Salt Pregnancy Test Work?

No. There is no scientific evidence that salt reacts differently with pregnant urine versus non-pregnant urine. Any visible reaction you see is caused by:

  • The natural protein and mineral content of urine (which varies by hydration, diet, and health status not pregnancy)
  • The physical properties of salt dissolving in any liquid
  • Random variation in urine concentration on any given day
What Science Says About the Salt Test No peer-reviewed clinical study has validated the salt test as a pregnancy detection method. Urine composition varies enormously between individuals and even in the same person across different times of day making any salt-based observation completely non-diagnostic. The white/milky reaction people report seeing occurs equally in non-pregnant urine.

B) Pregnancy Test at Home With Toothpaste

Toothpaste Pregnancy Test – At a Glance
Scientific Accuracy: NONE
Recommended: NO
What it can tell you: Nothing reliable
Risk: Frequently produces false positives

The toothpaste pregnancy test instructs women to mix white toothpaste with urine. A blue frothy reaction is claimed to indicate pregnancy.

How It Is Performed

  1. Collect first morning urine in a clean container
  2. Add a small amount of plain white toothpaste (not gel or coloured)
  3. Mix and wait 2–3 minutes
  4. Blue or frothy reaction = ‘pregnant’; no change = ‘not pregnant’ (according to the claim)

Does the Toothpaste Pregnancy Test Work?

No. Toothpaste contains carbonate compounds that react with the naturally acidic pH of urine producing a fizzing or colour change in virtually any urine sample. This is basic chemistry, not pregnancy detection. The same reaction will occur with non-pregnant urine.

  • The fizzing is caused by: carbonate in toothpaste + acid in urine = CO2 gas (bubbles) the same reaction as vinegar and baking soda
  • This reaction has absolutely no relationship to hCG levels or pregnancy
  • The toothpaste test frequently produces false positives, which can cause significant emotional distress

C) How to Check Pregnancy at Home With Soap

Soap Pregnancy Test — At a Glance
Scientific Accuracy: NONE
Recommended: NO
What it can tell you: Nothing reliable

The soap test claims that adding urine to a small piece of soap or liquid soap and observing foaming or bubbling indicates pregnancy.

Why It Does Not Work

Soap is a surfactant it reduces surface tension and produces foam when agitated or mixed with any liquid. This reaction occurs with any urine sample regardless of pregnancy status. The degree of foaming depends on the soap’s surfactant concentration, your urine’s pH and dilution, and how vigorously the mixture is agitated none of which are related to hCG or pregnancy.

D) How to Check Pregnancy at Home With Sugar

Sugar Pregnancy Test – At a Glance
Scientific Accuracy: NONE
Recommended: NO
What it can tell you: Nothing reliable

The sugar pregnancy test claims that pregnant urine causes sugar clumps to form rather than dissolve, due to the presence of hCG.

This is incorrect. Sugar dissolves based on temperature, concentration, and the physical chemistry of water — not on the presence of hCG or any pregnancy-specific compound. Any clumping observed is caused by undissolved sugar crystals, which can occur in any urine sample. This test has no diagnostic value.

E) How to Check Pregnancy at Home With Baking Soda

Baking Soda Pregnancy Test – At a Glance
Scientific Accuracy: NONE
Recommended: NO
Note: Also claimed as a baby gender test – equally unscientific

The baking soda test instructs women to mix urine with baking soda (sodium bicarbonate). Fizzing supposedly indicates pregnancy (or, in another version, a boy); no fizzing indicates not pregnant (or a girl).

Baking soda reacts with acid. The fizzing depends entirely on the pH of your urine which varies based on your diet, hydration, medications, and time of day. Acidic urine (from a meat-heavy diet, dehydration, or naturally) will always fizz. Alkaline urine (from a vegetable-heavy diet) will fizz less. This has no relationship to pregnancy or foetal sex.

F) How to Check Pregnancy at Home With Vinegar

The vinegar test mixes urine with white vinegar and claims a colour change indicates pregnancy. Vinegar (acetic acid) can interact with urine compounds, producing colour variations based on urine pH and mineral content but not based on hCG. Results are completely unreliable as a pregnancy indicator.

3. How to Check Pregnancy at Home With Fingers (Cervical Position Check)

Cervical Check – At a Glance
Accuracy: Low for home use
Requires significant experience to interpret
Not recommended for self-diagnosis of pregnancy

‘Checking for pregnancy with fingers’ refers to assessing the position and feel of the cervix a skill used in fertility awareness methods and by healthcare professionals, not a reliable self-pregnancy test.

What Changes in the Cervix During Pregnancy?

After ovulation (and especially if pregnancy has occurred), the cervix typically:

  • Feels softer (sometimes described as feeling like a lip rather than the tip of a nose)
  • Moves higher in the vaginal canal (may be harder to reach)
  • The cervical opening (os) remains closed in pregnancy
  • May feel slightly more moist due to increased cervical mucus

However, these changes are extremely subtle, vary significantly between women, and are nearly impossible to assess reliably without extensive training and experience. Professional midwives and OB-GYNs use internal examination for clinical purposes — not as a home pregnancy confirmation method.

Important Safety Note : Do not perform frequent cervical self-checks during early pregnancy. Repeated internal examination in early pregnancy is not recommended and is unlikely to provide useful information. For pregnancy confirmation, use a home test kit.

4. How to Check Pregnancy at Home by Touching Your Stomach

In the very early weeks of pregnancy (4–8 weeks), it is not possible to feel any physical changes in the abdomen by touch. The uterus is located inside the pelvis in early pregnancy and cannot be felt from the outside.

Some women notice:

  • Bloating – which can make the lower abdomen feel more full or firm, but this is not the uterus
  • Cramping or mild pelvic heaviness – which is a symptom of early pregnancy but cannot confirm it
  • Uterine growth becomes palpable (felt from outside) only from about 12–16 weeks – when your doctor can feel the fundus (top of the uterus) above the pubic bone

You cannot confirm pregnancy by touching your stomach in the first trimester. Physical symptoms of pregnancy are highly variable and overlap with PMS, digestive issues, and other conditions.

5. How to Check Pregnancy at Home With Your Phone

‘Checking pregnancy with a phone’ typically refers to one of the following:

  • Using a period tracking or fertility app (Flo, Clue, Ovia) that predicts whether you might be pregnant based on your cycle data, symptoms, and missed period
  • Online pregnancy calculators or symptom checkers
  • Teleconsultation with a doctor via a health app

Can an App Detect Pregnancy?

No app or phone can detect pregnancy directly. What period and fertility tracking apps can do:

  • Identify a missed period based on your logged cycle data
  • Prompt you to take a pregnancy test if your period is late
  • Log early pregnancy symptoms and track their pattern
  • Connect you with a healthcare professional via teleconsultation for guidance
How to Use Your Phone for Pregnancy Checking – The Right Way
1. Log your symptoms and missed period in a cycle tracking app (Flo, Clue)
2. Use the app’s pregnancy test reminder when your period is late
3. Perform a home pregnancy test kit – the only reliable at-home method
4. Book a teleconsultation with a doctor for guided next steps

6. Early Signs of Pregnancy to Watch For

While only a pregnancy test can confirm pregnancy, these early signs may indicate you should take a test:

Sign / SymptomWhen It Typically Appears & Notes
Missed periodMost reliable early sign. Test from Day 1 of a missed period.
Tender or swollen breastsDays 1–2 weeks after conception. Caused by rising oestrogen and progesterone.
Nausea / morning sicknessWeeks 4–9. Can occur at any time of day. Caused by rising hCG.
Implantation bleedingDays 6–12 after fertilisation. Light spotting (pink or brown). Shorter and lighter than a period.
FatigueFrom week 1–2 of pregnancy. Caused by progesterone rise.
Frequent urinationFrom week 6–8. Caused by increased blood flow to kidneys and growing uterus pressure.
Food aversions or cravingsFrom week 5–6. Caused by hCG and hormonal changes.
Mild cramping / bloatingFrom week 1–4. Can mimic PMS. Does not confirm pregnancy.
Mood changesFrom week 4–8. Hormonal fluctuations affect serotonin.
Heightened sense of smellEarly sign in some women — one of the first changes before a missed period.
Important: Symptoms Alone Cannot Confirm Pregnancy

Every symptom listed above can also be caused by PMS, stress, hormonal changes, thyroid issues, or other conditions. The only way to confirm pregnancy is a pregnancy test either a home kit or a blood test. Never assume pregnancy (or rule it out) based on symptoms alone.

7. Accuracy Comparison: All Home Pregnancy Test Methods

MethodAccuracyScientific BasisRecommended?
Home Pregnancy Test Kit (HPT)99%✅ Detects hCG antibody reaction✅ YES — Gold Standard
Blood Test (beta-hCG)99.9%✅ Quantitative hCG measurement✅ YES — Best for confirmation
Salt TestNo better than chance (~50%)❌ No hCG mechanism❌ NO
Toothpaste TestNo better than chance (~50%)❌ Acid-base reaction only❌ NO
Soap TestNo better than chance (~50%)❌ Surfactant reaction only❌ NO
Sugar TestNo better than chance (~50%)❌ No hCG mechanism❌ NO
Baking Soda TestNo better than chance (~50%)❌ pH reaction only❌ NO
Vinegar TestNo better than chance (~50%)❌ Acid-base reaction only❌ NO
Cervical Position CheckVery low — requires training⚠️ Cervical changes present but subtle❌ NO for home use
Cycle Tracking AppPrediction only — not diagnostic⚠️ Pattern-based estimation⚠️ As a PROMPT to test — not a test itself

8. When Is the Best Time to Take a Pregnancy Test?

Timing is the most common reason for inaccurate home pregnancy test results. Here is when to test for the most reliable result:

TiminghCG LevelTest Accuracy
4–5 days before missed periodVery low (5–10 mIU/mL)~60–75% (only with ultra-sensitive early tests)
1–2 days before missed periodLow-moderate (10–20 mIU/mL)~80–90%
Day 1 of missed periodDetectable (20+ mIU/mL)~99% with standard kits
1 week after missed periodRising rapidly~99%+ with any kit
2+ weeks after missed periodHigh~99%+ — some kits may show Hook Effect (very high hCG overwhelms test — dilute urine 1:1 with water if negative despite strong symptoms)
Pro Tip: Best Practices for Accurate HPT Results
• Always use first morning urine (highest hCG concentration)
• Read results within the stated time window (typically 3–5 minutes)
• A faint line is still a POSITIVE result
• If negative but period hasn’t arrived, repeat in 48–72 hours
• Confirm any positive with a blood test at a laboratory

9. What to Do After a Home Pregnancy Test

If Your Result Is Positive (Pregnant)

  • Stay calm a positive test is a significant moment, allow yourself time to process
  • Book a blood test (beta-hCG) at a diagnostic lab within 48–72 hours to confirm
  • Schedule your first pregnancy consultation with a gynaecologist (ideally within 6–8 weeks)
  • Start folic acid immediately (400–800 mcg daily) critical in the first weeks of pregnancy
  • Avoid alcohol, smoking, and unprescribed medications from the moment you suspect pregnancy
  • Inform your partner and seek support

If Your Result Is Negative (Not Pregnant)

  • If your period is late but the test is negative wait 48–72 hours and test again with first morning urine
  • A negative result is most reliable when taken on or after the first day of a missed period
  • If you have missed your period and tests are consistently negative, see a doctor late or absent periods have many causes (PCOS, thyroid, stress, dramatic weight change)
  • If you are not trying to conceive, consider contraception options

If Your Result Is Invalid (No Lines)

  • The test is faulty or was performed incorrectly
  • Repeat with a new test kit, following the instructions carefully

10. Myth vs. Fact – Home Pregnancy Testing

Myth: The salt test can accurately tell you if you’re pregnant.

Fact: The salt test has no scientific mechanism for detecting pregnancy. Results are random. Use a home pregnancy test kit.

Myth: A faint line on a pregnancy test means you’re ‘barely pregnant’ or the result is uncertain.

Fact: Any second line however faint means hCG is present and the test is POSITIVE. Pregnancy is not measured in degrees you either have detectable hCG or you don’t.

Myth: You need to wait a week after a missed period to get an accurate result.

Fact: Most standard home pregnancy test kits are 99% accurate from the first day of a missed period. Waiting longer is not necessary though a retest after 48 hours can confirm an early faint result.

Myth: If you test negative, you are definitely not pregnant.

Fact: A negative result on or after the first day of a missed period is highly reliable. However, testing very early (before a missed period) can produce false negatives. If your period doesn’t arrive, test again.

Myth: Urine colour can tell you if you’re pregnant.

Fact: Urine colour is affected by hydration, diet, vitamins, and health conditions not by pregnancy. It cannot be used as a pregnancy indicator.

Myth: Home pregnancy tests are difficult to use and often wrong.

Fact: When used correctly with first morning urine, at the right time (on or after missed period), and read within the stated window home pregnancy test kits are 99% accurate.

Myth: You can check pregnancy at home with a needle blood doesn’t clot if you’re pregnant.

Fact: This is completely false. Blood clotting is a complex process not affected by pregnancy hCG. Never use a sharp object for any self-pregnancy test.

11. When to See a Doctor

A home pregnancy test is your first step – not your last. See a doctor if:

  • You receive a positive home pregnancy test to confirm with a blood test and begin antenatal care
  • You have a positive test accompanied by severe pain or heavy bleeding this could indicate an ectopic pregnancy (a medical emergency)
  • You have two or more consecutive negative results but your period still hasn’t arrived
  • Your period has been irregular for several cycles PCOS, thyroid, or other conditions may need investigation
  • You are trying to conceive and have been unsuccessful for 12 months (under 35) or 6 months (over 35)
  • You suspect you may be pregnant but are taking medications that may affect the pregnancy
Emergency – When to Seek Immediate Medical Care If you have a positive pregnancy test AND severe one-sided abdominal pain, shoulder pain, dizziness, or heavy vaginal bleeding seek emergency medical care immediately. These may be signs of an ectopic pregnancy, which is a life-threatening condition requiring urgent treatment.

12. Q&A

QuestionAnswer
How to check pregnancy at home with salt?The salt test mixes urine with table salt. It has NO scientific basis and cannot detect pregnancy. Results are random. Use a home pregnancy test kit (available at Indian pharmacies for Rs 30–150) instead it is 99% accurate.
Does the salt pregnancy test really work?No. Salt has no ability to detect hCG (the pregnancy hormone). Any reaction you see is caused by normal urine chemistry, not pregnancy. The salt test should not be used to confirm or rule out pregnancy.
How to check pregnancy at home naturally?The only reliable natural at-home method is a home pregnancy test kit (HPT), which detects hCG in urine. Observe early symptoms (missed period, nausea, breast tenderness) as prompts to test but always confirm with an HPT.
How to check pregnancy at home with a phone?Use a period tracking app (Flo, Clue) to log a missed period and symptoms. Apps cannot detect pregnancy but will prompt you to test. Perform a home pregnancy test kit for confirmation. Teleconsultation apps connect you with a doctor for guidance.
How to check pregnancy at home with fingers?Cervical position checking involves feeling whether the cervix is soft, high, and closed changes that can occur in early pregnancy. However, this method requires significant training and experience to interpret correctly and is not a reliable home pregnancy confirmation method. Use an HPT.
How to confirm pregnancy at home with a kit?Use first morning urine. Dip the test strip to the marked line for 3–5 seconds. Read result in 3–5 minutes. Two lines = pregnant (any shade counts). One line = not pregnant. Confirm a positive result with a blood test. Best used from Day 1 of a missed period.
How to check pregnancy at home by touching stomach?You cannot confirm pregnancy by touching your stomach in the first trimester. The uterus is too small and deep to feel from outside. Physical changes become palpable only from 12–16 weeks. Use a home pregnancy test kit to confirm pregnancy.
Pregnancy test at home with toothpaste — does it work?No. The toothpaste test causes a fizzing reaction due to carbonate in toothpaste reacting with acidic urine a basic chemistry reaction that occurs with any urine, pregnant or not. It has no ability to detect hCG and frequently gives false positives.
What is the most accurate home pregnancy test in India?All standard home pregnancy test kits (Prega News, i-Can, Clearblue, Mankind) are 99% accurate when used correctly from the first day of a missed period with first morning urine. Blood tests (beta-hCG) at a laboratory are the most definitive confirmation.
Can I test pregnancy at home with soap?No. Soap is a surfactant that produces foam when mixed with any liquid. The foaming reaction occurs regardless of pregnancy status. It cannot detect hCG and is not a valid pregnancy test.
How early can I take a home pregnancy test?Standard kits are most accurate from Day 1 of a missed period. Some sensitive kits (Clearblue Early) can detect pregnancy 4–5 days before a missed period, but early testing reduces accuracy. First morning urine gives the best results.
What does a faint line on a pregnancy test mean?A faint line means hCG is detected the test is POSITIVE. Even the faintest second line indicates pregnancy. This is most common when testing early or with diluted urine. Repeat with first morning urine in 48 hours if unsure.
Is the sugar pregnancy test accurate?No. Sugar dissolves based on water chemistry, not hCG. Any clumping you observe depends on sugar concentration, urine temperature, and how you stir not on whether you are pregnant. Do not rely on the sugar test.
How to use Prega News at home?Collect first morning urine in a clean cup. Dip the Prega News strip to the marked line for 5 seconds. Lay flat and read in 5 minutes. Two lines (any shade) = pregnant. One line = not pregnant. One line is the control; both lines appearing confirms pregnancy.
Can baking soda tell if I’m pregnant?No. Baking soda (sodium bicarbonate) reacts with the natural acidity of urine regardless of pregnancy. Fizzing depends on your urine pH, which is influenced by diet and hydration — not pregnancy. It has no diagnostic value as a pregnancy test.

Key Takeaways

  • The ONLY reliable home pregnancy test is a home pregnancy test kit (HPT) – available at all Indian pharmacies for Rs 30–150
  • HPT kits detect hCG (pregnancy hormone) in urine and are 99% accurate when used correctly from Day 1 of a missed period
  • Salt, toothpaste, soap, sugar, baking soda, and vinegar tests have no scientific basis and cannot detect pregnancy
  • A faint second line on an HPT is still a POSITIVE result
  • Checking cervical position or touching the stomach cannot confirm pregnancy in early stages
  • A positive home test should always be confirmed with a blood test (beta-hCG) and a doctor’s consultation
  • Start folic acid (400–800 mcg) immediately upon a positive result – it is critical in the earliest weeks of pregnancy

Final Words

Whether you are hoping for a positive or a negative result, you deserve accurate, honest information. Home pregnancy test kits are safe, private, affordable, and almost as accurate as a blood test when used correctly. They are available at every chemist shop and medical store across India — urban or rural.

Please do not spend anxious hours over a salt or toothpaste reaction. Get a kit, use it correctly, and take the next step with confidence — whatever that next step looks like for you.

At Motherly.ONline, we are here to support you through every question, every test, and every stage of your journey from the first two lines to the last day of your fourth trimester.

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