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HbA1c Test: Why It Matters and How to Read It

Learn what HbA1c measures, who should test, preparation tips, and how doctors interpret results.

Last reviewed: 07 February 2026

Key Takeaways

What you need to know at a glance

HbA1c does not need fasting in most cases.
One number is not a diagnosis by itself.
Trends over time are more useful than isolated values.
Full Article

What It Measures#

HbA1c estimates average blood glucose over the previous 2 to 3 months by measuring glycated hemoglobin.

Who Should Take It#

People with diabetes, people at high risk for diabetes, and those on treatment monitoring plans are common candidates.

Preparation#

Fasting is usually not required for HbA1c. Bring prior reports and current medicine list for interpretation.

Normal Range Disclaimer#

Reference ranges can vary by laboratory method and patient context. Clinical interpretation should always include symptoms and history.

Interpretation#

Doctors interpret HbA1c with fasting/post-prandial glucose, symptoms, and comorbid risk to make treatment decisions.

Related Tests#

Fasting glucose, post-prandial glucose, kidney profile, lipid profile, and urine albumin are frequently paired tests.

Frequently Asked Questions

2 questions answered by our medical team

1
Is HbA1c enough for diagnosis?

HbA1c is important but often interpreted alongside other glucose tests and clinical context.

2
How often should I repeat HbA1c?

Commonly every 3 months until control is stable, then as advised by your clinician.

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Medically Reviewed Content

Verified by licensed healthcare professionals

P

Written By

PingMeDoc Editorial Team

Clinical Content Desk

D

Medical Reviewer

Dr Balaji Krishnan

MBBS, MBA

Medical Reviewer

Last Reviewed

07 February 2026

Following our clinical review workflow

All content is reviewed by licensed healthcare professionals before publication and updated regularly for accuracy.

References & Sources

1 cited source

  1. 1

    CDC: A1C test

    CDC2025View source

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