Today Clinic is a walk-in urgent care center operating in Oklahoma City that handles acute injuries, minor illnesses, and basic diagnostic needs without requiring an appointment. It occupies a niche between your primary care doctor (who typically schedules weeks out) and the emergency room (where wait times exceed two hours and costs spike sharply), treating sprains, infections, rashes, minor burns, and similar conditions that need attention but not hospitalization.
Today Clinic functions as a freestanding urgent care facility, meaning it is not hospital-based and operates independently to serve patients seeking immediate care outside regular doctor office hours. The center accepts walk-in patients and does not require prior scheduling, making it suited to situations where you cannot wait for a primary care appointment but do not believe you need an ER. It is staffed by nurse practitioners and physician assistants rather than physicians in many urgent care settings; confirm the specific clinical staff mix by calling ahead, as this varies by location and shift.
Today Clinic addresses injuries and illnesses that are non-life-threatening and do not require hospitalization or advanced imaging like MRI. Common services include laceration repair and wound care, throat cultures and rapid strep tests, urinalysis for suspected urinary tract infections, basic X-rays (at some locations), influenza and COVID-19 testing, minor fracture evaluation, and burn treatment. Conditions it does not handle include chest pain, suspected stroke, severe allergic reactions, serious head injuries, or anything requiring sedation beyond topical numbing.
Pricing varies by service. A typical urgent care visit in Oklahoma City costs between $100 and $300 for the base visit fee, depending on the center and whether imaging is included. Strep testing runs roughly $30 to $50 additional. Laceration repair or wound closure may add $50 to $150 depending on complexity and location. These are rough ranges; call ahead or check the clinic's website for exact charges. Most urgent care centers, including Today Clinic, accept major commercial insurance, Medicaid, and Medicare, though you may owe a copay or coinsurance. If uninsured, ask about cash-pay pricing, which is often lower than the insurance-negotiated rate but should be confirmed before treatment begins.
Oklahoma City has multiple urgent care providers. MedExpress operates several locations across the metro and typically charges similar visit fees but often advertises shorter average wait times (12 to 15 minutes) based on their higher footprint. Urgent Team Clinics are spread throughout the city and tend to have extended hours into late evening and weekends, which may matter if you need care after 8 p.m. Walk-in clinics inside retail pharmacies like CVS MinuteClinic or Walgreens on high-traffic streets offer even lower visit fees (often $50 to $125) but handle a narrower range of conditions and do not perform X-rays; they are best for colds, flu, vaccinations, and basic infections rather than injuries. Choose Today Clinic over a retail clinic if you suspect a fracture, need an X-ray, or have a wound requiring stitches. Choose Today Clinic over the ER if you have a non-emergency condition and want to avoid the three-hour wait and $1,500-plus facility charge. If your injury is severe, chest pain exists, or breathing is labored, go to the ER or call 911 instead.
Today Clinic is suited to working adults and parents who need urgent care outside office hours and cannot wait days for a primary care appointment, to people without a regular doctor seeking evaluation of a minor acute problem, and to parents of children with sudden fevers or minor injuries. It does not suit patients with chronic disease flare-ups requiring specialist input, patients needing prescription drug monitoring or detailed medical history review, or anyone whose condition might be emergent. Do not use urgent care as a substitute for a primary care doctor; these centers do not manage ongoing conditions or preventive care and cannot issue refills of long-term medications.
Expect to arrive, check in at the front desk with photo ID and insurance card (if insured), and complete a brief intake form listing your chief complaint, current medications, and any allergies. Wait time typically ranges from 15 to 45 minutes depending on the time of day and number of patients ahead of you; afternoon and evening hours are often busier. Once called back, a nurse will take your vital signs (temperature, blood pressure, heart rate) and ask about your symptoms. You will then see a nurse practitioner or physician assistant who will examine the injury or illness, order any tests or X-rays if needed, and discuss treatment. Expect the entire visit to take 45 minutes to 90 minutes from arrival to discharge. Most visits result in a prescription or discharge instructions; some result in a referral to a specialist or the ER if a more serious condition is suspected.
Most urgent care centers in Oklahoma City, including independent Today Clinic locations, operate from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. or 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. on weekdays and 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. or later on weekends. Verify specific hours by location, as franchises and independent centers vary. Parking is usually free and ample at freestanding urgent care centers, unlike hospitals. Call ahead if you are unsure whether your location accepts your insurance or if you want an estimated wait time, as this can vary significantly by time of day.
Today Clinic fills a practical gap in Oklahoma City's care system for people needing treatment between primary care and emergency care, with transparent pricing and no-appointment access.
