Community Health Centers: Finding Low-Cost Care Nationwide
Community health centers form a federally supported network of outpatient facilities that deliver primary and preventive care to patients regardless of their ability to pay. This page covers how these centers are defined under federal law, how their sliding-fee discount programs function, the types of patients and services they serve, and how they differ from other low-cost care options. Understanding this infrastructure is especially relevant for uninsured patients, Medicaid enrollees, and anyone navigating cost barriers to routine medical care.
Definition and Scope
Community health centers operating as Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs) are defined and governed under Section 330 of the Public Health Service Act (42 U.S.C. § 254b). The Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), a division of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), administers the Health Center Program that grants FQHC designation and associated federal funding. As of the federal fiscal year data published by HRSA, more than 1,400 FQHC organizations operate approximately 14,000 service delivery sites across all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and U.S. territories (HRSA Health Center Program).
FQHC designation is distinct from the broader label "community health center," which is a functional descriptor. Facilities must meet specific federal criteria to qualify:
- Serve a Medically Underserved Area (MUA) or Medically Underserved Population (MUP) as designated by HRSA.
- Offer a sliding-fee discount schedule based on patients' ability to pay.
- Provide comprehensive primary health services as defined under 42 U.S.C. § 254b(b)(1).
- Operate under a governing board with a patient majority of at least 51 percent.
- Meet federal performance and accountability requirements.
FQHC Look-Alike (FQHC LA) centers meet all clinical and governance requirements but do not receive Section 330 grant funds. They retain certain Medicare and Medicaid cost-based reimbursement benefits without direct federal grant support.
Community health centers are structurally different from free clinic services, which typically operate on volunteer labor and charitable funding without FQHC status or federally mandated sliding-fee schedules.
How It Works
The core access mechanism is the sliding-fee discount program, which HRSA requires of all Section 330 grantees (Policy Information Notice 2014-02). Patients who present income documentation are assessed on a scale tied to the Federal Poverty Level (FPL). Those at or below 100 percent FPL must receive services at minimal or no charge. Patients between 101 and 200 percent FPL receive discounted fees on a graduated schedule. Patients above 200 percent FPL may pay full charges, though centers retain discretion.
Payment and coverage processing at FQHCs follows standard insurance billing when applicable. Centers accept Medicaid, Medicare, CHIP, and private insurance. Medicaid reimbursement uses the FQHC Prospective Payment System (PPS), established under the Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP Benefits Improvement and Protection Act of 2000 (BIPA), which provides a per-visit rate rather than fee-for-service billing. This rate structure protects center revenue regardless of service complexity per visit.
For uninsured patients, the sliding-fee schedule operates independently of any insurance product. FQHCs also participate in the 340B Drug Pricing Program, administered by the Health Resources and Services Administration's Office of Pharmacy Affairs, which allows centers to purchase outpatient drugs at significantly reduced costs and extend those savings to eligible patients.
The National Health Service Corps (NHSC), also administered by HRSA, places clinicians at FQHCs through loan repayment and scholarship programs. This pipeline sustains primary care capacity at sites that would otherwise face workforce shortages. More detail on this program is available on the National Health Service Corps reference page.
Common Scenarios
FQHCs serve a heterogeneous patient population. The most frequently encountered scenarios include:
- Uninsured adults who do not qualify for Medicaid and lack employer coverage seek preventive visits, chronic disease monitoring, and prescription management under the sliding-fee schedule. Information on the broader range of options for this group appears on the uninsured patient options reference page.
- Medicaid-enrolled patients in areas with limited participating providers use FQHCs as their primary care home, since centers are required to accept Medicaid as a condition of federal funding.
- Migrant and seasonal farmworkers are served under a specialized Section 330(g) Migrant Health Center program, which HRSA funds separately to address mobile population health access.
- Homeless individuals are served through the Section 330(h) Health Care for the Homeless program, which integrates behavioral health and substance use services with primary care. This intersects with mental health services access and substance use disorder treatment services covered elsewhere in this resource.
- Residents of rural or frontier areas lacking hospital-based primary care access the Section 330(i) Public Housing Primary Care program or rural-specific FQHC sites. The structural gaps in rural access are described further on the rural health services access reference page.
Decision Boundaries
Distinguishing FQHCs from adjacent care models requires attention to regulatory classification and funding structure:
| Feature | FQHC | FQHC Look-Alike | Free Clinic |
|---|---|---|---|
| Section 330 Grant Funding | Yes | No | No |
| Sliding-Fee Requirement | Federal mandate | Federal standard | Voluntary policy |
| Medicaid PPS Rate | Yes | Yes | No |
| 340B Eligibility | Yes | Yes | No |
| Patient Majority Board | Required | Required | Not required |
Patients seeking specialist care, hospital-based procedures, or services not listed under 42 U.S.C. § 254b(b)(1) as required services will not find those within scope at most FQHCs. The specialist referral process and care coordination and case management resources address how referrals from primary FQHC care proceed.
Language access and disability accommodations are governed by separate federal mandates at FQHCs: Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 requires meaningful access for patients with limited English proficiency, and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 prohibits disability-based discrimination for federally funded entities. These requirements apply to all Section 330 grantees without exception.
Patients seeking to locate a specific site can use the HRSA Health Center Finder, available at findahealthcenter.hrsa.gov, which searches by zip code, city, or state. The community health centers directory on this site provides supplemental navigation.
References
- Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) — Health Center Program
- 42 U.S.C. § 254b — Public Health Service Act, Section 330
- HRSA Policy Information Notice 2014-02: Sliding Fee Discount Program
- HRSA Health Center Finder
- HRSA Office of Pharmacy Affairs — 340B Drug Pricing Program
- National Health Service Corps — HRSA
- U.S. Department of Health and Human Services — FQHC Prospective Payment System (CMS)