24 Fairfield Ave
Schroon Lake, NY 12870
Community Health Centers in New York
731 federally funded community health centers and sliding-scale clinics across New York. All accept patients regardless of insurance status or ability to pay.
Cities in New York
All clinics (731)
Sch - West
FQHC603 Oswego St
Syracuse, NY 13204-3127
545 E 142nd St
Bronx, NY 10454-2199
104 E 107th St
New York, NY 10029-3930
212 E 106th St
New York, NY 10029-4007
2082 1st Ave
New York, NY 10029-4307
345 E 102nd St
New York, NY 10029-5611
5008 7th Ave
Brooklyn, NY 11220-2167
36-44 13th St
Astoria, NY 11106
Shero Housing Plus 2
FQHC297 Essex St
Brooklyn, NY 11208-2059
396 Lincoln Rd
Brooklyn, NY 11225-4306
701 Lexington Ave
Brooklyn, NY 11221-2206
9000 Shore Rd
Brooklyn, NY 11209-5401
6341 Ridge Rd
Sodus, NY 14551-9743
1002 Westchester Ave
Bronx, NY 10459-3309
140 W Main St
Cuba, NY 14727-1398
132 W Main St
Cuba, NY 14727-1317
9864 Luckey Dr
Houghton, NY 14744-8706
135 N Union St
Olean, NY 14760-2736
445 Broad St
Salamanca, NY 14779-1424
Community Health Centers in New York
New York'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 New York, 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 New York 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.