420 N 6th St
Gadsden, AL 35901-3244
Community Health Centers in Alabama
189 federally funded community health centers and sliding-scale clinics across Alabama. All accept patients regardless of insurance status or ability to pay.
Cities in Alabama
All clinics (189)
1411 Piedmont Cutoff
Gadsden, AL 35903-2708
5422 State Highway 94
Ramer, AL 36069-5008
1845 Cherry St
Montgomery, AL 36107-2613
1020 Tuscaloosa Ave
Gadsden, AL 35901-3005
228 Selma Ave
Selma, AL 36701-5825
1502 US Highway 80 E
Demopolis, AL 36732-3921
1310 Washington St
Marion, AL 36756
3040 S Alabama Ave
Monroeville, AL 36460-5600
867 County Road 59
Pine Apple, AL 36768-3525
101 Park Pl
Selma, AL 36701-6764
111 Main St
Thomaston, AL 36783-3137
411 Wilson Ave W
Thomasville, AL 36784-2015
2210 Highway 221
Camden, AL 36726-4233
1989 Sardis Dr
Boaz, AL 35956-2344
Sarha Doctors Center
FQHC1412 Elba Hwy
Troy, AL 36079-6020
1414 Elba Hwy
Troy, AL 36079-6020
Semmes Health Center
FQHC3810 Wulff Rd E
Semmes, AL 36575-5256
162 S Dalton St
Slocomb, AL 36375-5669
1628 N McKenzie St
Foley, AL 36535-2273
Community Health Centers in Alabama
Alabama's community health centers are part of the national network of roughly 1,400 HRSA-funded Section 330 grantees that served more than 30 million patients in 2023. Every center on this page is legally required to accept patients regardless of insurance status or ability to pay, and to offer a sliding-fee discount based on household income.
For Black patients in Alabama, FQHCs fill a critical gap left by commercial primary care: they staff Medicaid navigators, run in-house 340B pharmacies, provide on-site dental and behavioral health care, and offer enabling services like transportation and translation. Many Alabama centers specialize in serving historically underserved Black communities and have Black-majority clinical staff.
Not seeing what you need? Check nearby states via the national directory, or verify hours and current services directly with the center before you visit — FQHC schedules can shift with grant cycles.