Anthony L. Jordan Health Center
Anthony L. Jordan Health Center is a free or low-cost health clinic in Rochester, New York. This page covers the services it offers, who is eligible, what it costs, and how to visit.
Visit & contact
- Address
- 82 Holland St, Rochester, NY 14605 — Get directions
- Phone
- 585-423-5800
- Website
- https://jordanhealth.org/locations/
- Hours
- Monday - Friday
Services offered
- Podiatry
- Pharmacy
- Pediatric
- OB/GYN
- Counseling/Mental Health
- Medical
- Dental
- HIV/AIDS Testing
- Lab
- WIC
- Hepatitis C Treatment
- HIV/AIDS Treatment
- Immunizations
- Hepatitis C Testing
- Blood Pressure Screening
- Diabetes - Treatment/Management
- Primary Care
- Social Services
- Urgent Care
- Mammograms
- X-Ray
- Vision
- COVID-19 Vaccination
- Medication Assisted Treatment
- Substance Abuse/Addiction
- Telemedicine
- Adults
- Community Health Worker Services
- Cholesterol Screening/Lipid Panel Test
- Diabetes Screening
- Sexually Transmitted Diseases (STD) Treatment
- Sexually Transmitted Diseases (STD) Testing
- Pregnancy
- Family Planning
- Health Education/Nutrition
- Women's Health
Eligibility & cost
- Fee structure
- Sliding scale of fees based on income
- Income eligibility
- All income levels accepted
How free and low-cost care works
A "sliding-scale fee" means the clinic adjusts what you pay based on your household income and family size. If you make very little, many visits and basic services are free. If you earn more, you might pay $20–$60 for a visit instead of the $200–$400 a private clinic would charge. You will be asked to fill out a short form so the clinic can place you on the right tier.
The phrase "free clinic" can be misleading. Most "free" clinics are actually sliding-scale clinics — completely free for the lowest income tier, and very low cost for everyone else. A handful of clinics, usually volunteer-run, are truly free for all patients regardless of income. Both kinds are listed here.
To get the lowest fee, bring three things to your first visit: a photo ID (any government-issued ID), proof of income (a recent pay stub, an unemployment award letter, or a clinic-provided self-attestation form if you are paid in cash), and proof of address (a utility bill or any piece of mail). If you do not have these, most clinics will still see you — they just may charge you their standard sliding-scale rate until you can verify income.
Languages spoken
English, Spanish
Insurance accepted
Uninsured; Underinsured; Insurance; Medicare; Medicaid
Service area
Rochester Area