Free & Low-Cost Clinics in Missoula, MT

This page lists 11 free and low-cost health clinics in Missoula, MT — with verified addresses, hours, accepted insurance, and links to dedicated pages for the most-searched services in town.

All clinics in Missoula

  1. Missoula All Nations Health Center

    830 W Central Ave, Missoula, MT 59801

  2. Missoula County Health Department

    301 W Alder St, Missoula, MT 59802

  3. Open Aid Alliance

    1500 W Broadway Ste A, Missoula, MT 59802

  4. Partnership Health Center - Missoula Creamer Clinic Medical

    401 Railroad St W, Missoula, MT 59802

  5. Partnership Health Center - Poverello Clinic

    1110 W Broadway St, Missoula, MT 59802

  6. Partnership Health Center - West Adler Building

    323 W Adler St, Missoula, MT 59801

  7. Planned Parenthood - Missoula

    219 E Main St, Missoula, MT 59802

  8. Providence Broadway Internal Medicine

    500 W Broadway St 4th Flr, Missoula, MT 59802

  9. Providence Grant Creek Family Medicine

    3075 N Reserve St Ste Q, Missoula, MT 59808

  10. Providence Infectious Disease Clinic

    902 N Orange St, Missoula, MT 59802

  11. VA Montana Health Care - David J. Thatcher VA Clinic

    3885 W Broadway St Ste C, Missoula, MT 59808

Other ways to find care

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.

If none of the clinics above fit your situation, two other places to try are 211 (dial 2-1-1 from any phone in the US for a referral to local social services, including health clinics) and your county health department, which often runs its own low-cost or sliding-scale clinics in addition to the ones listed here.