Direct Primary Care of Oklahoma is a membership-based family practice in Oklahoma City where patients pay a flat monthly fee to a doctor instead of using insurance for routine visits, and insurance coverage applies only to major medical events and emergencies.
Direct Primary Care (DPC) strips away the insurance billing layer for primary care. You pay the practice directly; the doctor spends more time per patient because overhead is lower; and you keep your insurance for hospitalizations and serious illness. Direct Primary Care of Oklahoma operates this model for families, individuals, and small businesses across the Oklahoma City area. The practice is neither an urgent-care clinic nor a replacement for comprehensive health insurance; it is a primary-care foundation that sits between you and specialists, with patients responsible for their own major-medical coverage.
Direct Primary Care of Oklahoma charges one flat rate per person per month; current pricing ranges from approximately $50 to $100 per month depending on age and enrollment size, though these figures shift and should be confirmed directly with the practice. The membership covers unlimited office visits, same-day or next-day appointments, email and phone consultations, routine labs drawn in the office, minor procedures (wound closures, skin lesion removal), and prescriptions written at a discount. You do not pay per visit. The practice also typically coordinates specialist referrals and prior authorizations without billing delays. Families choosing this model often pair it with a high-deductible health insurance plan tied to a Health Savings Account, cutting monthly premiums substantially while preserving coverage for hospital stays and major procedures.
Oklahoma City's primary-care landscape splits into three tiers: traditional insurance-dependent practices (where the doctor's overhead is tied to billing codes and insurance verification), urgent-care chains (fast, walk-in, but designed for acute problems, not continuity), and DPC practices like Direct Primary Care of Oklahoma. A patient at a traditional family-medicine office in Oklahoma City may wait two to three weeks for a routine appointment, see the doctor for 10 to 15 minutes, and then wait for billing reconciliation. Direct Primary Care of Oklahoma promises a 24-hour appointment window and 30-minute visits because the practice does not manage insurance claims. Urgent-care centers like those operated by Urgent Care of Oklahoma or MedExpress in Oklahoma City handle strep tests and sprains well but do not provide long-term medication management or preventive-care coordination. Choose Direct Primary Care of Oklahoma if you see your doctor regularly for chronic-disease management, want appointment speed, and are comfortable buying your own major-medical insurance; choose a traditional office if you depend on employer insurance and want the doctor to handle all billing; choose urgent care for acute, one-off problems on nights or weekends.
Direct Primary Care of Oklahoma works well for individuals and families who visit their doctor three or more times per year, manage a chronic condition (diabetes, hypertension, asthma), value quick access over low per-visit cost, and either have employer health plans they can afford to skip or are self-employed and want to control healthcare costs. Small-business owners sometimes enroll all employees in a DPC practice as part of a benefits package alongside catastrophic insurance. It is less suited to people who rarely see a doctor (the monthly fee becomes a sunk cost), those receiving Medicaid or Medicare (DPC membership often overlaps awkwardly with government programs; confirm eligibility first), or patients who expect the practice to manage all insurance claims. Families with very young children should confirm the practice accepts pediatric patients, as some DPC models focus on adults.
You will likely fill out a detailed health history form and undergo a thorough physical exam, often 45 minutes to an hour, because the doctor has time to listen. Expect blood pressure, weight, and basic labs (blood draw for cholesterol, glucose, or other markers) unless you have had recent results from another provider. The doctor will discuss your current medications, family history, lifestyle, and health goals in depth. You will pay your first month's membership fee at this visit; some practices offer a trial period or reduced first-month rate. Bring a photo ID and insurance card (even though DPC is not primary, you need major-medical coverage). If you take chronic medications, ask about the practice's prescription-discount program; most DPC practices affiliate with GoodRx or similar services to keep pill prices low.
Direct Primary Care of Oklahoma operates during standard business hours; exact hours should be verified directly, as DPC practices sometimes shift to accommodate members' schedules. The practice is centrally located in Oklahoma City and offers on-site parking. Same-day or next-day appointments are a defining feature; if you call in the morning with a sore throat, you are likely to be seen that afternoon.
Direct Primary Care of Oklahoma fills a real gap in Oklahoma City's healthcare for patients who want continuity, speed, and transparent costs without insurance billing friction. It is not a solution for everyone, but for those who use primary care regularly and are willing to buy their own catastrophic coverage, the monthly membership cost and appointment availability often pay for themselves within a few visits.
