A growing field in gene therapy is Ultrasound-Mediated Gene Delivery (UMGD). In UMGD, ultrasound is used to cavitate microbubbles near target cells, causing punctures in the cell membrane by which exogenous plasmids can enter. UMGD’s advantages over traditional viral vectors include reduced probability of autoimmune response, improved targeting, and modularity with various genes. Its efficiency is dependent on a variety of ultrasound parameters, but past work has identified pulse duration and pressure as particularly significant. Studies have historically used distinct conditions between cellular and animal models. Most in vivo treatments have favored microsecond pulse durations and high pressure, while in vitro experiments have favored millisecond pulse durations at lower pressure. We tested a wide matrix of pulse durations and pressure conditions in 293T cells in order to determine if there is commonality between UMGD parameters. Our results showed up to an 800-fold increase in expression relative to sham at millisecond pulse durations and low pressure values, but a maximum of 30-fold elevation at pulse durations below 1ms at pressures greater than in vivo. We next tested these short conditions in varying microbubble concentrations to ensure it was not a limiting factor on gene expression. We found that increasing microbubble concentration caused only an additional 3-fold increase in gene expression at a local maximum of 6% microbubble by volume, above which expression decreased. Our results showed no discernible microsecond condition with appreciable expression compared to millisecond pulse conditions. We are now investigating microbubble mechanistic discrepancies in order to explain the discrepancy observed between in vivo and in vitro ultrasound conditions. Further research will explore increased pulse durations, which may permit lower pressure transfection, a key challenge in large animal models. Understanding the correlation between different models will help us scale up experiments, and work towards developing safe and reliable clinical methods.