Adding water to evaporation line on pregnancy test

Pregnancy Test Evaporation Lines: What Are They?

Adding water to evaporation line on pregnancy test

  • How the test works
  • What is an evaporation line?
  • How to identify evaporation line
  • How to avoid evaporation line
  • Next steps

You might suspect you’re pregnant if you’ve missed a period or are experiencing morning sickness. Even if your instinct says you’re expecting, you’ll still have to confirm it with a pregnancy test.

You can pick up a home pregnancy test at your local drugstore or online. These tests are 97 to 99 percent accurate. But sometimes, the results are confusing.

Some pregnancy tests involve two lines: a control line and a test line. The control line appears on every test, but the test line only appears if there are levels of the pregnancy hormone in your urine.

If you take a pregnancy test and see two lines, you may think you’re pregnant. But the appearance of two lines when using a home test doesn’t necessarily mean you’re pregnant. The second line could be an evaporation line.

Here’s why you might get an evaporation line on a pregnancy test.

An at-home pregnancy test is a simple way to find out if you’re pregnant before seeing a doctor. When you schedule an appointment with your doctor to confirm a pregnancy, your doctor may take a urine or blood sample.

A lab checks these samples for a hormone the body produces during a pregnancy, called human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG).

This hormone is released into the bloodstream once a fertilized egg implants in the uterus. The body produces a low level of hCG during early pregnancy. The level increases as a pregnancy progresses. At-home pregnancy tests are designed to detect this hormone.

Typically, an at-home pregnancy test involves urinating on a test stick and checking the results minutes later. If your pregnancy test result only reveals one line (the control line), it often means you’re not pregnant.

If your test results reveal the control line and the test line, this can indicate a pregnancy. Always check the test instructions for an evaporation line.

Evaporation lines are common and can occur with any pregnancy test. An evaporation line is a line that appears in the results window of a pregnancy test as the urine dries. It can leave a faint, colorless line.

If you’re not familiar with evaporation lines, you might see this line and think you’re pregnant. This can result in disappointment when a doctor confirms a pregnancy hasn’t occurred.

You can’t control whether an evaporation line appears in your results window. But you can learn how to distinguish a positive test line from an evaporation line.

Evaporation lines are common on pregnancy tests, but they don’t appear every time. It depends on the chemical makeup of each woman’s urine.

One of the best ways to avoid any confusion when using a home pregnancy test is to check your results within the reaction time. This is the window to receive an accurate result, and it varies by brand.

Every home pregnancy test comes with instructions. Pregnancy tests are easy to use, so you might open a pregnancy test kit and take the test without reading the instructions.

But if you want to avoid mistaking an evaporation line for a positive test line, you have to follow the instructions and check your results before the urine completely evaporates.

Some pregnancy tests have instructions to check results after two minutes. Others have instructions to check results after five minutes. The risk of a false positive is higher when you read your results after the reaction time.

An evaporation line on a pregnancy test appears after the reaction time. Unfortunately, if you let the test sit for a long period, it’s hard to know whether a faint test line is an evaporation line or a positive result.

You’ll have to retake the test if you’re unable to check your results within the recommended time frame.

It’s also important to note that while an evaporation line appears faint, a faint test line on a pregnancy test doesn’t automatically suggest an evaporation line.

A faint positive test line can also appear if you take a pregnancy test shortly after implantation when your hCG level is low, or if your urine is diluted. This can happen when taking a pregnancy test later in the day after consuming a lot of liquids.

An at-home pregnancy test can detect a pregnancy, but there’s also the risk of a false negative or a false positive. A false negative can occur if you take a pregnancy test too early, including before a missed period when your hCG levels aren’t high enough.

False positives are less common, but can happen with a chemical pregnancy. This is when an egg implants in the uterus and a miscarriage occurs shortly after.

If you think you’re pregnant, or if you’re confused by the results of an at-home pregnancy test, make an appointment with your doctor to have an in-office test.

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Last medically reviewed on December 6, 2018

  • Parenthood
  • Pregnancy
  • Getting Pregnant

How we reviewed this article:

Our experts continually monitor the health and wellness space, and we update our articles when new information becomes available.

Dec 6, 2018

Written By

Valencia Higuera

Edited By

Nizam Khan (TechSpace)

Medically Reviewed By

Deborah Weatherspoon, Ph.D., MSN

Will an evaporation line disappear with water?

Unfortunately, evaporation lines will not disappear, even when you try to remove them with water. If you are not confident with the pregnancy test result, it's highly recommended that you take another test, taking care to follow the instructions properly, to avoid a false positive pregnancy test result.

What happens if you put water on a pregnancy test?

Presumably, water will give a negative result (we hope!), but you still can't then add your urine to the strip as well. If you reuse a strip that has gotten wet — either with water or urine and even if it's dried — you may get a false positive. That's because as an HPT dries, an evaporation line can appear.

Can it be an EVAP line if the test is still wet?

Evaporation lines are colorless streaks, not faint lines. They typically appear if a person waits for longer than the suggested time to read the test result. An evaporation line can also appear if the test gets wet. An evaporation line does not indicate pregnancy.

Do evaporation lines get darker as they dry?

As the test dries and the urine evaporates, this caught ink is pulled to the surface and becomes darker. This is why the most important rule for getting a true positive pregnancy test is: do not read them after the allotted time! The results are only accurate in the time frame specified in the instructions.