Court-Ordered 90-Day Hair Follicle Testing

Amarillo, TX


Court-Ready

10 – 20 Panel Options

Confidential & Professional

Who This Is For

This testing is commonly required for:

  • Child custody cases

  • Family court proceedings

  • CPS cases

  • Probation compliance

  • Attorney-requested testing

  • Personal documentation purposes

Why Hair Testing

  • Detects up to 90 days

  • Harder to manipulate than urine

  • Lab-certified results

  • MRO-reviewed (if applicable)

  • Documentation suitable for court


What to Expect

  • We use a small hair sample from crown of head, and remove from multiple zones

    so there’s no bald spot

  • Non-invasive

  • Results typically within 5 Business Days

  • ID required

  • Bring court paperwork if applicable


For cases involving child safety, we also offer ChildGuard® hair drug testing, a specialized panel designed to detect exposure and usage patterns in legal and family court matters.

ChildGuard testing is commonly requested in:

• Child custody disputes

• CPS investigations

• Family court proceedings

• Court-ordered safety evaluations

This test provides a detailed analysis with court-ready documentation and professional collection procedures.

If you are unsure whether ChildGuard is required for your case, call us and we will help determine the appropriate panel.

ChildGuard® Hair Drug Testing for Custody & CPS Cases

Court Standard 10 Panel Hair Follicle - $270

Court Standard 15 Panel Hair Follicle - $320

Court Standard 20 Panel Hair Follicle - $360

More panel sizes and add ons available

Hair Follicle Drug Test Pricing


Flexible Payment Options Available

We understand that court-ordered testing can be unexpected. Lucky Labs offers Afterpay for hair follicle drug testing, allowing you to split your payment into manageable installments.

Ask us about using Afterpay when scheduling your appointment.

Fast, discreet, and court-ready hair testing. Same-week appointments available.

Get clear answers about hair collection, detection windows, dye concerns, and what to expect during court-ordered testing.