Crossings Community Clinic is a federally qualified health center (FQHC) operating as a walk-in provider in Oklahoma City that treats uninsured, underinsured, and insured patients on a sliding fee scale tied to household income. It functions as a safety-net clinic, handling acute medical issues, basic chronic disease management, and preventive services without requiring insurance or advance appointments.
Crossings operates from its location in Oklahoma City as a nonprofit walk-in clinic affiliated with the broader federally qualified health center network. This designation means it receives federal funding in exchange for serving patients regardless of ability to pay, and it must offer a range of primary care services on site. Unlike urgent care chains, which prioritize speed and profitability, FQHCs like Crossings anchor their revenue model to a sliding fee scale indexed to the federal poverty level. Patients at or below 100% of poverty pay little to nothing; those above 200% pay standard fees. This structure makes Crossings distinct from commercial urgent care competitors in the region, which typically do not adjust fees based on income.
Crossings provides acute visit care (cough, sore throat, minor injury evaluation), management of chronic conditions including hypertension and diabetes, preventive services such as blood pressure screening, immunizations, and basic lab work. Pricing is income-based; the clinic does not charge a flat per-visit fee. Instead, patients complete a brief financial form that determines their fee tier. A patient at 150% of the federal poverty line will pay less than one earning 300%; both pay less than a commercial urgent care walk-in would charge without insurance. The clinic accepts Medicare, Medicaid (SoonerCare in Oklahoma), and commercial insurance, crediting payments against the sliding scale as applicable. Verify current poverty-level thresholds and exact fee bands by calling ahead, as federal poverty guidelines adjust annually, which affects fee calculations.
Commercial urgent care chains such as those operating Medexpress or OneClinic locations in Oklahoma City charge a standard facility fee (typically $100 to $150 for an acute visit) plus provider and diagnostic fees, and they expect insurance or cash payment at the time of service. They do not adjust fees based on income. Crossings charges nothing to low-income uninsured patients and applies a transparent sliding scale to others. In return, Crossings typically has longer wait times than high-volume chain urgent cares; it is not designed for speed. OU Health and Integris operate large emergency departments and urgent care clinics around Oklahoma City and generally do not reduce fees for uninsured patients at the point of service. Choose Crossings if you are uninsured, low-income, or in need of ongoing care coordination; choose a commercial urgent care if you have insurance, need fast turnaround, and are comfortable paying standard rates. Choose an ED if the issue is genuinely emergent (chest pain, severe injury, difficulty breathing).
Crossings is built for uninsured and low-income Oklahomans navigating acute illness or ongoing management of common chronic conditions. It works well for those without transportation-intensive needs, because wait times can extend beyond those at commercial competitors. Crossings is not suited to patients who need imaging beyond basic X-ray or require specialist referral urgently; such patients should go to an ED. It is also not the choice for patients with comprehensive insurance who value speed and do not need fee adjustment.
Upon arrival, you will complete a health history form and a financial form used to determine your fee tier. Clinical staff will perform basic vital signs and triage. You will then wait for an available provider (typically a nurse practitioner or physician assistant). The visit itself is similar to any primary care visit: symptom review, exam, and treatment plan or prescription. If lab work or X-ray is indicated, it is often done on-site. Expect the entire process to take one to two hours depending on volume and complexity.
Crossings Community Clinic is located in Oklahoma City and operates as a walk-in facility, meaning no appointment is necessary. Verify hours before visiting, as they may vary seasonally or by staffing. Parking is typically available on-site or nearby. As a walk-in clinic without appointment management, Crossings fills on a first-come, first-served basis; arriving early in the day usually means shorter waits.
Crossings fills a genuine gap in Oklahoma City's care landscape: it absorbs patients unable or unwilling to use the ED for non-emergency problems, and it does not penalize low income through pricing. Its sliding-scale model and federal FQHC status make it the primary uninsured-friendly walk-in option in the city.
