How to find a free clinic near you
Every state has a network of volunteer-staffed community clinics serving uninsured and low-income patients. They're rarely well-advertised — here's how to find yours and what to expect when you walk in.
If you're uninsured, underinsured, or simply unable to afford the deductibles on the insurance you do have, free and charitable clinics are one of the most underused resources in American healthcare. Roughly 1,400 of them exist across the United States, staffed largely by volunteer physicians, nurse practitioners, dentists, and behavioral health providers. They served about 2 million patients last year alone, delivering care that would otherwise have shown up in emergency rooms or simply not happened.
This guide walks through how to find them, what to bring, what they can and cannot do, and the prescription assistance programs that work in parallel.
What "free clinic" actually means
The term is broader than people assume. Three categories exist:
- Free clinics — Patients pay nothing. Funded by donations, grants, and volunteer labor. About 1,200 of these exist nationwide.
- Charitable clinics — Sliding scale based on income. A visit may cost $5 to $30. About 200 of these exist.
- Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs) — Federally funded community health centers. Always offer sliding scale; never turn away based on inability to pay. Roughly 1,400 main sites with 14,000 satellite locations.
For most uninsured Americans, the FQHC network is the workhorse — there's likely one within driving distance of your home. The pure "free clinics" are concentrated in dense urban areas and rural pockets with strong volunteer networks.
Three ways to find one
1. The HRSA Find a Health Center tool
The federal Health Resources and Services Administration maintains a real-time directory of all FQHCs and look-alike clinics. Go to findahealthcenter.hrsa.gov, enter your ZIP code, and it returns every federally qualified center within a radius you specify. Each listing includes hours, languages spoken, and the services offered (medical, dental, behavioral health, pharmacy).
This is the most authoritative source, updated quarterly by the federal government. If you're uninsured and looking for primary care, start here.
2. NAFC clinic finder
The National Association of Free and Charitable Clinics (nafcclinics.org) lists about 1,400 free and charitable clinics that aren't necessarily federally funded. Their state-by-state finder will show you the volunteer-run clinics in your county. These often have more limited hours but offer truly free care.
3. Your state's 2-1-1 social services hotline
Dialing 2-1-1 from any phone in the United States connects you to a regional United Way social services navigator. They maintain locally-updated lists of free clinics, sliding-scale providers, and prescription assistance resources for your specific area. The hotline is free and operates in most languages.
What to bring on your first visit
- Proof of income — Pay stubs from the last 30 days, last year's tax return, or a benefits letter (SNAP, TANF, unemployment). Many clinics confirm eligibility through this.
- Photo ID — Driver's license, state ID, passport, or consular ID. Most clinics accept all of these and a few accept none — they don't refuse care for lack of ID.
- Proof of residence — A utility bill, lease, or piece of mail with your address. Many clinics serve a specific county or city.
- Medical history — Any current medications (bring the bottles), known allergies, and prior surgeries or chronic conditions. Lab results from previous providers help.
- List of questions — Bring written questions. Volunteer providers move quickly; the patients who get the most out of a visit are the ones who arrive prepared.
What free clinics can and can't do
The capability range is wider than most people assume. A typical FQHC delivers:
- Primary care visits, including chronic disease management (diabetes, hypertension, asthma)
- Routine screenings — blood pressure, cholesterol, A1c, cancer screenings
- Immunizations for children and adults
- Women's health (pap smears, contraception, prenatal care)
- Mental health and addiction services at most sites
- Dental cleanings and basic restorative work at about 60% of sites
- On-site pharmacy with sliding-scale prescriptions at most sites
- Lab work (often partnered with Quest or LabCorp at reduced rates)
What they generally cannot do: complex specialty care, surgery, advanced imaging, and most emergency services. For those, the clinic will refer you to a partner hospital or charity care program.
The prescription side of the equation
The clinic visit is only half the battle. The other half is the prescriptions you may leave with. Free clinics partner with sliding-scale pharmacies, but many medications still cost real money. Our prescription assistance guide walks through the manufacturer programs, GoodRx-style discount tools, and 340B pharmacy networks that fill this gap.
One subset of medications worth flagging: ED, hormonal, and chronic men's-health prescriptions are often not covered by free-clinic formularies because they're considered "lifestyle" medications. Our men's health guide covers what to do when this is your situation — including the verified international and generic-equivalent options that have become standard practice for cash-pay patients seeking treatments like generic sildenafil.
State-by-state quick links
| State | Primary directory | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| California | CPCA Find a Clinic | Largest FQHC network in the country, ~1,400 sites |
| Texas | TACHC.org | Strong rural FQHC coverage |
| Florida | FACHC.org | Dense Spanish-speaking provider network |
| New York | CHCANYS.org | Heavy concentration in NYC and Buffalo |
| Pennsylvania | PACHC.org | Includes many rural Commonwealth sites |
| Ohio | OACHC.org | Strong dental coverage |
| Virginia | VACHC.org | Charitable clinics dense in Richmond/NoVA |
| All others | findahealthcenter.hrsa.gov | Federal directory covers every state |
The honest limitations
Free clinics are imperfect. Wait times can be long. Specialists are scarce. Hours are limited. Some sites only see new patients once a month. And the medications they can dispense are constrained by their formularies and 340B contracts.
But for an estimated 28 million uninsured Americans, they are the only access point to non-emergency healthcare that exists. Knowing how to use them — and where to look when they can't help — is the foundation for everything else in this guide.