Once your blood is drawn, what actually happens to it? And why does a basic panel come back the same afternoon while a thyroid antibody test takes a week? The answer is workflow, and it varies more than most patients realize.
Routine bloodwork: same day to 24 hours
Common panels — CBC, BMP, CMP, lipids, A1C — are run on automated analyzers and finished in a few hours. If you draw before noon, your provider usually sees the result by end of business day. The patient portal posts shortly after.
Microbiology and cultures: 2–5 days
Cultures need time to grow. A standard urine culture takes 48 hours; a wound or throat culture often runs 72. Sensitivity testing — figuring out which antibiotic the bug responds to — adds another day on top.
Pathology and specialty: 5–10 days
Tissue biopsies, complex hormone panels, autoimmune workups, and most genetic testing route through a specialty lab. The waiting feels long, but the work is real: a pathologist is reading slides, a chemist is running a multi-step assay, or a sequencer is doing what it does.
Why some results 'pend'
Sometimes a result is held briefly while a tech repeats it for accuracy or while a pathologist reviews a borderline finding. That's a feature, not a delay — it means the lab is doing its job before the number lands in your chart.