Thousands of UK residents will soon have 15-minute, at-home coronavirus tests at their fingertips, according to a new report.

The tests will be delivered by Amazon to people isolating at home with symptoms, and will go on sale at pharmacies within days, Public Health England announced Wednesday, according to the Guardian.

Professor Sharon Peacock, director of the national infection service at the health agency, told members of Parliament that mass testing in the country would be available by next week, according to the report.

Health Secretary Matt Hancock said Tuesday the government bought 3.5 million tests and is ordering millions more — but never indicated that they would be available so quickly, the paper reported.

They look similar to pregnancy tests, according to the report. Users must prick a finger to produce a drop of blood, which is then analyzed by the device, according to the report.

The tests will prove especially useful for doctors and nurses, who will know right away whether a patient has — or has recovered from — the rampant infection, allowing them to return to work sooner.

The test will be validated in Oxford this week before it becomes available to health care workers and the general public, Peacock said.

“Several million tests have been purchased for use. These are brand new products. We have to be clear they work as they are claimed to do,” she told the paper. “Once they have been tested this week and the bulk of tests arrive, they will be distributed into the community.”

Currently in the UK, only patients admitted to the hospital are being routinely tested for the deadly bug, according to the Independent.

Between 5,000 and 6,000 people are tested each day, but within four weeks, the government is hoping to raise that to 25,000 tests a day, the outlet reported.

As of Wednesday afternoon, 8,328 coronavirus cases and 433 deaths had been reported in the country, according to Johns Hopkins University data.