What Are Your Chances of Getting HIV?

Medically Reviewed by Jonathan E. Kaplan, MD on May 21, 2023
3 min read

The human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) can affect anyone, no matter your age, race, ethnicity, or sexual orientation. But certain things make your risk go up.

You can get HIV if the blood, semen, vaginal or rectal fluid, or breast milk of someone with HIV gets into your body. You put yourself at the highest risk of this when you:

  • Have unprotected sex with an HIV-positive person.
  • Share a needle with someone with HIV.
  • Have sex with an HIV-positive person when you have a sexually transmitted infection (STI).

Unprotected sex. Risky sexual behavior is one of the most common ways HIV spreads from person to person. When you have sex, you exchange body fluids with your partner. You’re at a higher HIV risk if you have:

  • A partner who is high-risk or already has HIV
  • Many sex partners
  • Sex with someone who has many sex partners
  • An uncircumcised penis
  • If you have another STD

The kind of sex you have makes a difference in your risk, too:

  • Anal sex is the form of sex most likely to spread HIV. You’re especially at risk when you are the receiver (penis put into your rectum).
  • Vaginal sex is the next riskiest form of sex, especially for the person with the vagina.

While there are only a few studies that have looked at it, it appears there’s little risk of getting HIV from oral sex. It’s even safer if you use a dental dam (latex or polyurethane sheets between the mouth and vagina/anus/penis) or a male or female condom.

Needle sharing. This is the second-riskiest behavior when it comes to HIV, after anal sex. You expose yourself to infection from the blood or fluid left in the syringe. If the needle you’re sharing is for illegal drug use, you’re also putting yourself at risk by impairing your judgment. That makes you more likely to do other risky things, like having unprotected sex when you’re under the influence of drugs.

You should never use a needle that someone else has used first.

Sexually transmitted infections. When you have an STI such as chlamydia, gonorrhea, genital herpes, genital warts, or syphilis, you’re at a higher risk of an HIV infection. This is because:

  • Open sores or inflammation caused by STIs let the virus enter your body when you have sex with someone who is HIV-positive.
  • The partner you get an STI from may be having risky sex, raising your chances of getting HIV.
  • The behaviors that lead to an STI infection, such as sex with many partners, unprotected sex, or sex with partners you don’t know, are the same behaviors that increase your risk of HIV.

If you work in certain professions, your risk of coming into contact with body fluids from a person with HIV goes up. These include:

  • Health care (doctors, nurses, technicians)
  • Prisons
  • Labs that handle blood or semen

Women can pass on HIV to their babies during pregnancy, delivery, or breastfeeding. These are the most common ways that children become HIV-positive. But chances of such mother-to-child transmissions can fall to as low as 1% if both the women and the infant are given HIV medicine throughout the pregnancy and the first several weeks of the newborn’s life.

You’re also at a higher risk if you live in a state that has a higher rate of HIV. The areas in the U.S. with the highest rates of HIV transmission are:

  1. Washington, DC (district)
  2. Georgia
  3. Louisiana
  4. Florida
  5. Nevada
  6. Maryland
  7. Mississippi
  8. Texas
  9. South Carolina
  10. Puerto Rico (territory)

It’s possible, but very unlikely, to get HIV from:

  • Food pre-chewed by someone with HIV (in infants)
  • A blood transfusion
  • Organ or tissue transplant
  • Artificial insemination
  • Getting tattoos or body piercings. There are no documented cases in the U.S.

Before 1985, blood banks didn’t have a way to test for HIV. Today, blood banks screen donations. You can still get it from a transfusion from a person who contracted HIV right before they donated blood, but this is very rare.

You can’t get HIV from:

Show Sources

SOURCES:

HIV.gov: “Who is at Risk for HIV?”

CDC: “About HIV/AIDS,” “Oral Sex and HIV Risk,” “Dental Dam Use,” “Injection Drug Use and HIV Risk,” “STDs and HIV -- CDC Fact Sheet,” “National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention: “Atlas Plus,” “Ways HIV Can Be Transmitted.”

Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development: “Who is at risk of HIV/AIDS?”

Winchester Hospital: “Risk Factors for AIDS.”

Stanford Health Care: “Risk of Exposure to HIV/AIDS.”

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