Genetic Testing Market Size & Forecast Report 2034

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This versatile research report is presenting crucial details on market relevant information, harping on ample minute details encompassing a multi-dimensional market that collectively maneuver growth in the global Genetic Testing market.

Nice — here’s a compact, research-ready market reference for the Genetic Testing market with company names + values where available, and concise sections for Recent Development, Drivers, Restraints, Regional segmentation, Emerging Trends, Top Use Cases, Major Challenges, Attractive Opportunities, and Key factors to watch. I pulled figures from market reports, company filings and recent press — I’ve placed the most important citations after each load-bearing paragraph.

This versatile research report is presenting crucial details on market relevant information, harping on ample minute details encompassing a multi-dimensional market that collectively maneuver growth in the global Genetic Testing market.

This holistic report presented by the report is also determined to cater to all the market specific information and a take on business analysis and key growth steering best industry practices that optimize million-dollar opportunities amidst staggering competition in Genetic Testing market.

Read complete report at: https://www.thebrainyinsights.com/report/genetic-testing-market-13864


1) Major companies (players + values where available)

  • Illumina, Inc. — leading sequencing platform provider; market leader for NGS instruments & consumables (ILLUMINA revenue ≈ billions annually; flagship sequencing installed base powers clinical & research testing). 

  • Roche / Roche Diagnostics — major presence in oncology companion diagnostics and molecular oncology testing (Roche diagnostics scale / revenue in diagnostics business = multi-billion). 

  • Thermo Fisher Scientific — large supplier of instruments, reagents and lab services used across genetic testing labs (company diagnostics segment = multi-billion revenue).

  • Quest Diagnostics & Labcorp — two of the largest clinical labs providing genetic testing services; Labcorp completed a strategic purchase of select Invitae assets (adds ~$275–300M of annual revenue potential). 

  • Exact Sciences / Guardant Health / Grail (Grail via Illumina) — leaders in oncology screening and multi-cancer early detection (tests priced in hundreds of USD; rapidly evolving reimbursement discussions). 

  • Natera, Myriad Genetics, QIAGEN, PerkinElmer, Eurofins, BGI Genomics, 23andMe, Ancestry — sizable revenues or market presence in specialty segments (prenatal, oncology, reproductive genetic testing, DTC ancestry).

  • Invitae — large clinical genetics company (assets acquired by Labcorp in 2024 after Invitae bankruptcy; acquisition expanded Labcorp’s specialty testing). 

Use: cite specific company annual reports / investor presentations if you need an exact revenue number for a slide — I included press links above for the largest load-bearing items. 


2) Market size & growth (numbers from multiple recent sources — pick one source as canonical)

  • Representative estimates: USD ~19.5B (2024, IMARC)USD ~21.8B (2025, Mordor); many vendors forecast strong growth with CAGRs commonly in the ~8–15% range depending on scope (clinical + DTC + companion diagnostics vs. narrower definitions).

  • Segment note: DTC ancestry/wellness is smaller (USD ~1–2B in some reports) but growing faster; oncology (liquid biopsy, companion) and prenatal/rare-disease testing are large/high-value clinical segments. 


3) Recent developments (2023–2025 — highlights you should cite)

  • M&A & consolidation: Labcorp finalized asset acquisition of Invitae assets (2024) — strengthens lab-scale clinical genetics capability and adds an estimated $275–300M in revenue potential. 

  • Multi-cancer early detection (MCED) commercialization push: multiple players (Exact Sciences, Guardant, Grail) advancing tests, pricing and reimbursement debates continue — this is reshaping oncology screening.

  • Push toward newborn / population screening pilots: companies and health systems exploring whole-genome/whole-exome newborn pilots (GeneDx and others campaigning for broader newborn sequencing). 


4) Key drivers

  • Precision medicine & oncology demand (companion diagnostics, targeted therapies).

  • Falling sequencing costs & improved bioinformatics/AI — enables more clinical use (larger panels, WES/WGS). 

  • Rising chronic disease detection & preventive screening initiatives (e.g., interest in MCED and newborn genomics pilots). 


5) Main restraints

  • Reimbursement & payer acceptance — many genetic tests (esp. screening tests) lack broad coverage, limiting patient adoption.

  • Regulatory uncertainty & evidence requirements (clinical utility evidence demanded by payers and regulators). 

  • Data privacy and ethical concerns (DTC data use, secondary use of genomic data). 


6) Regional segmentation (who dominates / fastest growth)

  • North America (largest market) — single largest regional market driven by US diagnostics spending, clinical adoption, and DTC testing. (US genetic testing market revenue example: Grand View/region pages show multi-billion USD in 2024). 

  • Europe — strong clinical adoption, public healthcare pilots, oncology diagnostics uptake.

  • Asia-Pacific — fastest growth potential (large population, expanding genomics capabilities, BGI and regional labs scaling).

  • Latin America & MEA — smaller today but growing adoption for oncology and prenatal testing. 


7) Emerging trends

  • Multi-cancer early detection (MCED) tests moving from R&D into commercial launches and policy debate. 

  • Newborn whole-genome/targeted sequencing pilots with companies advocating for routine genomic newborn screening for actionable conditions. 

  • AI and automated variant interpretation reducing turnaround time and scaling reporting.

  • Bundling & vertical integration — big labs (Labcorp, Quest) acquiring or partnering with genetics specialists to offer end-to-end services.


8) Top use cases (highest revenue / fastest growth)

  1. Oncology / companion diagnostics / liquid biopsy (early detection & minimal residual disease)

  2. Prenatal & newborn screening (NIPT, WES/WGS pilots)

  3. Rare-disease diagnostics & pediatric genetics (diagnostic odyssey shortening). 

  4. Pharmacogenomics (PGx) — dosing and drug selection support. 

  5. DTC ancestry & wellness (consumer genomics). 


9) Major challenges

  • Demonstrating clinical utility & cost-effectiveness to payers (especially for screening tests). 

  • Regulation & approval pathways (FDA/CE/other regional regulators have different requirements). 

  • Scalability of high-quality variant interpretation and workforce shortages in clinical genomics. 


10) Attractive opportunities

  • Commercialization of validated MCED tests (if reimbursement follows).

  • Newborn genomic screening for actionable conditions (public health pilots → potential scale). 

  • AI-driven variant interpretation & reporting platforms sold to labs and health systems. 

  • Vertical plays by big labs (acquisitions/partnerships to own testing + data + clinical routing). 


11) Key factors to monitor (for modelling / GTM)

  • FDA and payer decisions on MCED tests and Medicare/insurer coverage — will materially change addressable market.

  • Sequencing costs and turnaround times (WGS <$1000 / affordable clinical WGS becomes routine). 

  • Large M&A or asset purchases by Labcorp / Quest / Eurofins — consolidation changes capacity and pricing. 

  • Newborn screening pilots & public health adoption (evidence on clinical utility & cost). 


Quick recommended citation set (use these for slides / a report)

  • Market size & forecasts: IMARC (global market value 2024), Mordor Intelligence (2025 value & CAGR), Grand View / Fortune Business Insights — pick one for consistency. 

  • M&A / company moves: Labcorp press release & WSJ/Reuters coverage of Invitae asset purchase. 

  • MCED & oncology screening developments: recent media coverage and Barron’s / industry press summarizing MCED launches and reimbursement debate. 

  • Newborn sequencing pilots / advocacy: AP / company interviews (GeneDx example). 


If you’d like, I can immediately produce one (pick one) and include the cited sources inline:

  • 2–4 slide PowerPoint summarizing companies + values and market numbers, or

  • spreadsheet (CSV) with rows for each named company, HQ, latest public revenue/market cap (where available), and the source link.

Which one should I create now — slide, spreadsheet, or both?

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