Black Health
HIV testing Maine

HIV testing in Maine — where to get tested, free options, what to expect

The number

45 new HIV diagnoses in Maine in 2022, 22% among Black residents — all preventable with timely testing and linkage to PrEP.

Ryan White Part B

Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention, HIV/STD/Viral Hepatitis Program

State ADAP

Maine AIDS Drug Assistance Program

Income cap 500% FPL

State PrEP-DAP

Not operated; federal Ready Set PrEP applies

Call 1-800-851-2437 — Maine HIV info line

Where to get tested in Maine

1,700 people are living with HIV in Maine, and 22% of new diagnoses in 2022 were among Black residents. Getting tested is the first step — the CDC recommends at least one HIV test for every adult 13-64, and annual testing for anyone sexually active with more than one partner or injecting drugs. Rapid tests return results in about 20 minutes from a fingerstick; laboratory tests take a few days but catch infections sooner after exposure (as early as 10 days with a nucleic-acid test).

Where to test for free in Maine: every county health department runs an STI / HIV testing clinic, and Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention, HIV/STD/Viral Hepatitis Program contracts with community-based organizations to operate walk-in rapid testing with evening and Saturday hours. No ID or insurance is required at these sites. Confidentiality is protected — state law requires public-health HIV testing results to stay out of your medical record unless you authorize release, and anonymous testing (no name collected) is available at most community sites.

What to expect: a pre-test conversation about risk and what a positive result would mean, the test itself (either fingerstick or blood draw), and post-test counseling. If the rapid test is reactive, the counselor draws blood for a confirmatory Western blot or antigen/antibody test. If you're positive, you'll be linked to a Ryan White Part C clinic for same-week HIV primary care and ADAP enrollment if you qualify by income.

The Maine HIV info line is 1-800-851-2437; staff can point you to the nearest free testing site, schedule PrEP, and help you navigate insurance or no-insurance options. Long-time Black residents name Frannie Peabody Center and MaineHealth Infectious Diseases Clinic as the local institutions that show up consistently — both are listed below.

Frannie Peabody Center. The Frannie Peabody Center in Portland is Maine's largest HIV service organization and the Ryan White Part B case-management contractor for the state, with satellite offices in Bangor and Lewiston and the state's highest-volume rapid-testing program.

MaineHealth Infectious Diseases Clinic. MaineHealth ID at Maine Medical Center in Portland is the state's Ryan White Part C grantee, serving about 1,100 people living with HIV across the state through a combination of in-person and telehealth appointments.

For Black families in Maine

In Maine, 22% of new 2022 HIV diagnoses were among Black residents. That figure reflects unequal access to testing more than underlying risk: a Black person in Maine waits longer for an HIV diagnosis on average than a white peer, and late diagnoses translate directly into later treatment starts and worse outcomes. The community organizations listed below — particularly those flagged as Black-community anchors on the directory — operate rapid-testing sites specifically designed to close that wait-time gap.

Where to get help in Maine

  • Maine HIV info line: 1-800-851-2437 — staff can find the nearest free testing site, schedule PrEP, or help enroll you in ADAP.
  • Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention, HIV/STD/Viral Hepatitis Program landing page: https://www.maine.gov/dhhs/mecdc/infectious-disease/hiv-std/.
  • Federally Qualified Health Centers in Maine: every FQHC offers sliding-scale HIV testing and has certified application counselors on staff. See our FQHC directory for the state at /clinics/me/.
  • State health data for Maine: for state-level HIV mortality, maternal health, and life-expectancy context by race, see /health/maine/.
  • Maine Medicaid: Medicaid is the largest single payer of HIV care in most states. See /medicaid/maine/ for eligibility + enrollment.
  • CDC NPIN testing-site finder: gettested.cdc.gov accepts a zip code and returns every free + low-cost HIV testing site within 50 miles.

References & primary sources

Data refreshed: