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FutureKit vs. Cerascreen.

Cerascreen is a broad consumer self-test brand: dozens of at-home kits across vitamins, minerals, food sensitivities and a saliva-based testosterone test, with results and recommendations delivered through an app. FutureKit is narrow on purpose — one six-marker blood panel (Total + Free Testosterone, FSH, LH, SHBG, Prolactin, Estradiol) built to read the male reproductive-hormone axis, processed in a DIN EN ISO 15189 German lab and returned with a physician-reviewed plain-language report. If you want a single wellness data point cheaply, Cerascreen is convenient. If you want to understand your fertility-relevant hormones together, with clinical interpretation, that is what FutureKit is for.

Both let you test at home — but they answer different questions. Cerascreen is a broad wellness self-test catalogue. FutureKit is a focused male-fertility hormone panel with physician review. Here's how they actually differ.

TL;DR

If you only read one paragraph.

Cerascreen sells single-purpose wellness kits — including a saliva testosterone test — with app-based results across a huge catalogue. FutureKit sells one thing well: a six-marker blood panel that reads the whole male hormone axis (not testosterone alone), from a German ISO-certified lab, with a physician's plain-language interpretation. For a quick, cheap single reading, Cerascreen fits. For a fertility-relevant picture you can take to a doctor, FutureKit is the closer match.

FutureKitCerascreen
What it isFocused six-marker male-fertility hormone panelBroad catalogue of at-home wellness self-tests
Markers for male fertilityTotal + Free T, FSH, LH, SHBG, Prolactin, Estradiol — read togetherTypically a single analyte (e.g. saliva testosterone), not a hormone-axis panel
Sample typeFinger-prick bloodVaries by test; the testosterone kit is saliva-based
InterpretationPhysician-reviewed, plain-language reportApp result with automated recommendations
LabDIN EN ISO 15189 accredited (Germany)Accredited partner labs (varies by test)
Turnaround3–5 working daysTypically ~1–2 weeks after the lab receives the sample
Pricing model€89 one-off panelPer-kit single tests across a large catalogue
Best forA fertility-relevant hormone read with clinical contextGeneral wellness self-testing across many categories
Where each product wins

Different jobs, different fits.

FutureKit wins for fertility depth

Male fertility isn't a one-number question. FutureKit reads six markers together — because a 'normal' testosterone can still hide a high SHBG, a raised prolactin, or an off-range estradiol. One blood draw, one physician interpreting the whole picture, one report you can hand to a clinician.

Cerascreen wins for breadth + price-per-test

If you want to check vitamin D, a food sensitivity and a single hormone marker cheaply, Cerascreen's catalogue is hard to beat for variety. It's a familiar German brand with a slick app, built for broad consumer wellness rather than reproductive-hormone depth.

Saliva vs. blood matters here

Cerascreen's testosterone test is saliva-based; FutureKit measures blood. For the reproductive-hormone axis (FSH, LH, SHBG, prolactin, estradiol), blood with accredited assays is the reference standard — which is why FutureKit uses it for a fertility-relevant read.

FAQ

Honest answers before you decide.

Make the move

Read the whole hormone picture, not one number.

Six markers, one finger-prick, ISO-certified German lab, physician review in 3–5 working days. €89, one-off, no subscription.

Information is current as of writing and reflects publicly available product details; test menus, sample methods and pricing can change — verify on cerascreen.de. We are not affiliated with Cerascreen. For medical decisions, consult a licensed physician.