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If you have been advised to undergo testing for suspected sleep apnea, you may come across two common options: a home sleep test and an in-lab sleep study. Understanding the differences between a home sleep study is important to understand the purpose of each.
Home sleep vs sleep study both serve a distinct purpose in diagnosing sleep-related breathing disorders and other sleep conditions.
While home sleep tests offer a convenient way to evaluate certain patients from the comfort of their homes, in-lab sleep studies provide a more thorough assessment under the supervision of sleep specialists. The most appropriate option depends on several factors, including your symptoms, medical history, and the complexity of your condition.
Understanding the difference between these two options helps you have a more informed conversation with your doctor. In this guide, we’ll compare a home sleep test vs sleep study and help you understand which diagnostic approach may be right for your sleep health needs.
A home sleep apnea test is a portable, outpatient diagnostic test. Your doctor orders it, a device is arranged for you, and you wear it at home for one night while you sleep. The device records data, airflow, blood oxygen levels, heart rate, breathing effort, and body position, which is then analyzed by a physician.
It’s specifically designed to detect obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), the most common type, in which the throat muscles relax too much during sleep and block the airway.
A polysomnogram is an overnight sleep study conducted at a sleep clinic. A technician monitors you throughout the night while equipment records a much larger dataset, including brain wave activity (EEG), eye movements, leg and arm muscle activity, heart rhythm, oxygen levels, airflow, and more.
It can diagnose a wide range of sleep disorders, not just obstructive sleep apnea.
| Home Sleep Test (HSAT) | In-Lab Polysomnography (PSG) | |
| Where | Your own house | Sleep center or hospital lab |
| Who monitors you | No one (data reviewed later) | Technician present all night |
| What it measures | Airflow, oxygen, heart rate, breathing effort, position | All of the above + brain waves, eye movement, limb movement, CO2, more |
| What it diagnoses | Obstructive sleep apnea | OSA plus central apnea, narcolepsy, parasomnias, REM disorders, and more |
| Cost (without insurance) | $150-$500 | $1,000-$3,000+ |
| Insurance coverage | Covered by most plans when indicated | Covered when medically indicated |
| Who orders it | Primary care physician or specialist | Often requires referral to a sleep specialist |
This is the first thing people want to know, and it’s a fair question.
Modern home sleep test devices are Type 3 cardiorespiratory monitors, meaning they track airflow, oxygen saturation, heart rate, respiratory effort, and body position.
They don’t capture brain wave activity or sleep staging, so they technically measure breathing events over the total recording time rather than confirmed sleep time. This can slightly underestimate the Apnea-Hypopnea Index (AHI) if you were awake for parts of the recording.
Research shows that home sleep tests can accurately identify sleep apnea approximately 90% of the time in patients with typical symptoms and no major complicating conditions.
A review published in the Journal of Sleep Research confirmed that newer peripheral arterial tonometry-based devices demonstrate high diagnostic accuracy for obstructive sleep apnea compared to in-lab PSG, with sensitivity and specificity figures that support their use as a first-line diagnostic tool.
According to the American Academy of Sleep Medicine guidelines, for adults with a high likelihood of moderate-to-severe obstructive sleep apnea and no significant comorbidities, home testing produces outcomes equivalent to in-lab testing and should be offered as the default starting option.
The practical implication: for most people reading this, a home test will give you a reliable answer. The cases where that isn’t true are specific and discussed below.
Clinical guidelines recommend home sleep testing as the appropriate first-line tool for adults who:
Home sleep tests have real limitations. There are specific clinical scenarios where in-lab polysomnography is the appropriate test, either as the first step or as a follow-up.
Home tests can produce false negatives. This happens when:
If your test comes back normal but you’re still exhausted, still gasping, still struggling, a follow-up PSG at a sleep lab may capture a more complete picture.
Central sleep apnea (CSA) is different from obstructive sleep. In CSA, the airway is physically open but the brain doesn’t send the right signals to the muscles that control breathing. Home tests measure airflow and oxygen; they’re not designed to reliably detect central events or distinguish them from obstructive ones.
Patients with severe heart failure, advanced COPD, pulmonary hypertension, or other complex cardiopulmonary conditions may have complicated breathing patterns that home tests can’t fully characterize.
If your symptoms suggest something beyond apnea, sleepwalking, REM sleep behavior disorder (acting out dreams), narcolepsy, periodic limb movement disorder, a PSG is the diagnostic tool. Home tests don’t capture brain activity, eye movement, or limb movement. They won’t detect these conditions.
Home sleep tests are generally not validated for use in children. Sleep apnea in children typically requires a full in-lab polysomnography, usually arranged through a pediatric sleep specialist or ENT.
Knowing the boundaries of what the device tracks helps you interpret your results more clearly.
What it measures:
What it does not measure:
Because home tests don’t confirm actual sleep stages, the calculated AHI is technically based on recording time rather than verified sleep time. Physicians who interpret these results understand this and account for it. But it’s why the test works best for patients with a clear clinical picture of OSA; the data it captures is sufficient to make the call when symptoms and risk factors align.
Cost is a real factor for most families.
A home sleep test without insurance typically runs $150 to $500. An in-lab polysomnography without insurance typically costs $1,000 to $3,000 or more.
With insurance, both tests are typically covered when medically necessary. But home sleep testing is covered by Medicare, Medicaid in most states, and virtually all major commercial insurers as the standard first-line diagnostic option for suspected uncomplicated OSA.
Windermere Medical Group primary care providers across Cumming, Alpharetta, Canton, Gainesville, Lawrenceville, and Baldwin evaluate sleep apnea symptoms and determine the appropriate starting point for testing at the same visit.
For most patients, that starting point is a home sleep test. WMG providers order the test directly and coordinate the portable monitoring device for you to use at home; no overnight clinic stay is involved.
Same-day appointments are available at all locations. Virtual visits are also an option for the initial evaluation.
Home sleep tests and in-lab polysomnography serve different patient populations and address different clinical questions.
For most adults with symptoms pointing to obstructive sleep apnea and no complicating conditions, a home sleep test is the right first step. It’s accurate, accessible, far less expensive, and can be ordered by your regular doctor.
In-lab studies remain the appropriate tool for complex cases: suspected central apnea, failed home tests, other sleep disorders, and patients with significant comorbidities.
Most people are in the first group. Knowing which one applies to you is a conversation worth having at your next doctor’s visit, and it doesn’t have to take long.
Yes. For uncomplicated obstructive sleep apnea in otherwise healthy adults, research shows that home tests correctly identify the condition around 90% of the time, comparable to in-lab results for appropriate patients.
Yes, in most cases. Home sleep apnea tests are generally covered by major insurance plans.
Your doctor may recommend an in-lab sleep study for more comprehensive data or evaluate for other possible causes of your symptoms. A negative test with persistent symptoms is never just ignored.
Often, yes, many insurers require a home sleep test attempt before authorizing in-lab polysomnography for uncomplicated OSA. Check your plan for specifics.
A primary care doctor can directly order a home sleep test. In-lab studies typically require a referral to a sleep medicine specialist or a sleep center.
Dr. Priya Bayyapureddy, MD is a board certified Internal Medicine doctor with over 20 years of experience in primary care Internal Medicine. Dr. Bayyapureddy completed her Internal Medicine residency at Emory University School of Medicine and internship at University of Tennessee College of Medicine at Chattanooga.
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