First Med Urgent Care is a privately operated walk-in clinic serving uninsured and insured patients across Oklahoma City with no appointment required and typical visit times under an hour. It handles acute injuries, respiratory infections, minor fractures, and routine diagnostic work but does not offer emergency surgery, trauma care, or admission, making it appropriate for conditions that need medical attention today but not the full resources of an emergency department.
First Med treats sprains and strains, cuts requiring stitches, ear and throat infections, urinary tract infections, minor burns, and acute joint pain. The clinic also provides strep and flu testing, X-rays, and blood work on-site. A typical visit costs between $80 and $150 without insurance; the final bill depends on what services are delivered during the appointment (test, imaging, sutures). Many patients with employer plans or individual policies pay a standard urgent-care copay of $25 to $50, though in-network status varies by plan. First Med accepts most major insurance networks but does not file claims for uninsured patients; you pay at discharge. Verify current pricing and insurance acceptance directly with the clinic, as copay agreements shift annually.
Oklahoma City has several urgent-care chains, including MedExpress (multiple locations) and Community Care (part of Integris, the city's largest hospital system). MedExpress typically mirrors First Med's scope and walk-in model. Community Care clinics operate under Integris oversight, which can be an advantage if you need rapid escalation to a hospital bed, but the clinics themselves are otherwise similar in treatment speed and cost. Choose First Med if you prefer a non-system-affiliated provider or live closer to its location; choose Community Care if you are already seeing Integris physicians and want one electronic health record, or if you anticipate the possibility that you might need urgent hospital admission (Integris can transfer you directly to an affiliated bed). All three handle the same conditions at comparable speeds. Do not go to any urgent care if you are experiencing chest pain, difficulty breathing, uncontrolled bleeding, or suspected broken bones causing deformity; use 911 or go to an emergency department instead.
First Med suits adults and children with acute injuries or mild to moderate infections who can describe their symptoms and tolerate a brief evaluation. Parents bringing infants or very young children should expect a standard pediatric wait, as urgent cares have no priority system. If you lack insurance or have a high deductible, First Med's transparent cash pricing ($80–$150) often costs less than an emergency room visit ($500–$2,000 for the same condition). If you need ongoing care or a referral to a specialist, the clinic can provide one, but urgent-care records are not automatically forwarded; you will need to request them for your primary doctor. Do not use First Med for psychiatric emergencies, substance withdrawal, or conditions requiring admission or continuous monitoring.
Walk in during operating hours with a photo ID and insurance card (if you have one). A check-in clerk will take your name and reason for the visit; wait time is usually 15 to 45 minutes depending on patient volume. A provider (nurse practitioner or physician) will examine you in a private room, order tests if needed, and discuss treatment or referral options. If you need sutures, antibiotics, or pain relief, the clinic provides them on-site. At checkout, you will receive a receipt and a basic summary; ask for printed records if you want them sent to your doctor. The entire process typically takes 45 to 90 minutes from entry to discharge.
First Med Urgent Care locations in Oklahoma City maintain extended hours, typically 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. daily, though hours vary by site. Verify exact hours and the closest location to you before visiting. Parking is available on-site or nearby at all Oklahoma City locations; no parking fee is charged. The clinics are wheelchair accessible.
First Med fills a practical gap in Oklahoma City's urgent care landscape for patients who need rapid, affordable evaluation outside business hours and want to avoid the emergency room.
