Also analyzed in: 4 other industries
Analyzed: 2026-04-23
Model: OpenAI GPT-5
Prompts run:
Total responses:
Overall AI Visibility?
65
/ 100
Strong

Geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM. Penalises any single weak metric.

Latent Brand Association?
80
/ 100
Product-Strong

What the model believes about Teladoc Health without web search.

LLM Authority?
33
/ 100
Marginal · Recall-Led

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts.

Top of Mind?
100
/ 100
Category Ruler

Unprompted recall on high-volume discovery prompts.

Metric 1 of 3 Latent Brand Association?

Measures what GPT-5 believes about Teladoc Health from training alone, before any web search. We probe the model 5 times across 5 different angles and score 5 sub-signals.

LBA Score
80/100
Product-Strong
Quality?
0.67
Meta-factor?
1.00
Familiarity?
0.78
Top associations for Teladoc Health
mental health support 5 convenient virtual care 3 long wait times 3 routine follow-up visits 3 not for emergencies 3 chronic care and mental health 2 telehealth services 2 broad telehealth platform 2 minor illness treatment 2 strong brand recognition in virtual care 2 mental health care 2 integration and execution risk 2 heavy competition 2 inconsistent doctor quality 2 technical app glitches 2
Control prompt (category baseline)
non-emergency care 2 cold and flu treatment 2 minor infection support 1 prescription refill access 1 quick on-demand virtual visits 1 prescription refills 1 common urgent care issues 1 shorter wait times 1 video or phone visits 1 non-emergency treatment 1

High overlap with brand prompts shows Teladoc Health is firmly in the model's "urgent care telemedicine service" category.

Sample model responses
Prompt: What is Teladoc Health known for?

Teladoc Health is known for telehealth and virtual healthcare services, including virtual doctor visits, mental health support, chronic condition management, and other remote care programs.

Iteration: 1 of 5
Prompt: What is Teladoc Health known for?

Teladoc Health is known for telehealth and virtual care services—especially online doctor visits, remote medical consultations, and managing care through digital health tools.

Iteration: 2 of 5

Metric 2 of 3 LLM Authority?

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts where users ask category questions and AI recommends brands. Measured both with and without web search, then averaged 50/50.

Authority Score
33/100
Marginal · Recall-Led
Recall mode (no web)?
54

What the model recalls from training without searching the web.

Retrieval mode (with web)?
13

What the model returns when it can search live web sources.

IntentPromptRecall pos.Retrieval pos.
discovery What are the best urgent care telemedicine services for adults? #1 #1
discovery What are the best urgent care telemedicine services for kids? #3 not mentioned
discovery What are the best urgent care telemedicine services for a sinus infection? #1 not mentioned
discovery What are the best virtual urgent care options for a UTI? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best telemedicine urgent care services for pink eye? #2 not mentioned
discovery What are the best urgent care telemedicine services for a rash? #1 not mentioned
discovery What are the best online urgent care services for allergies? #2 not mentioned
discovery What are the best virtual urgent care services for flu symptoms? #1 not mentioned
discovery What are the best urgent care telemedicine services for sore throat? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best urgent care telemedicine services for after-hours care? #1 #1
discovery What are the best urgent care telemedicine services with prescriptions? #1 not mentioned
discovery What are the best urgent care telemedicine services with video visits? #1 #2
discovery What are the best urgent care telemedicine services with chat visits? #1 not mentioned
discovery What are the best urgent care telemedicine services for same-day care? #3 #5
discovery What are the best urgent care telemedicine services for travelers? #2 #4
discovery What are the best low-cost urgent care telemedicine services? #3 not mentioned
discovery What are the best urgent care telemedicine services with licensed doctors? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best urgent care telemedicine services for women’s health issues? not mentioned #5
discovery What are the best urgent care telemedicine services for respiratory infections? #1 #3
discovery What are the best urgent care telemedicine services available 24/7? #1 #1
comparison What are the best alternatives to a national virtual urgent care network? #1 not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to a telemedicine urgent care app? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which urgent care telemedicine services are better than a hospital virtual visit? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to video-only urgent care services? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which is better: chat-based urgent care or video-based urgent care? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to a subscription-based urgent care telemedicine service? #3 not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to employer-sponsored virtual urgent care? #1 not mentioned
comparison Which urgent care telemedicine services are better for prescriptions than walk-in clinics? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to an app-based urgent care provider? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to a 24/7 virtual urgent care service? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I get treated for a UTI without going to urgent care? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How can I see a doctor quickly for a sinus infection? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I get a prescription for a minor infection today? not mentioned not mentioned
problem What should I do for a rash if I can't get to a clinic? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How can I get help for a sore throat after hours? not mentioned not mentioned
problem What is the fastest way to get medical advice for flu symptoms? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I get urgent care for pink eye without waiting in person? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How can I get care for allergies on the weekend? not mentioned not mentioned
problem What do I use for a quick medical visit for a child with a fever? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I get immediate medical attention for a non-emergency issue? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional How much does urgent care telemedicine cost? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Is urgent care telemedicine free? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What is the cheapest virtual urgent care service? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional How much is a video visit for urgent care? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Do urgent care telemedicine services accept insurance? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What are the out-of-pocket prices for online urgent care? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Are there low-cost urgent care telemedicine options? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional How much do virtual urgent care prescriptions cost? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Can I use urgent care telemedicine without a subscription? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What is the price for 24/7 urgent care telemedicine? not mentioned not mentioned
Sample responses
Prompt: What are the best urgent care telemedicine services for adults? · discovery · recall mode

Some of the best urgent-care telemedicine services for adults are:

  • Teladoc Health — very broad availability, fast access, good for colds/flu, UTIs, rashes, allergies.
  • MDLive — strong “urgent care” focus, often easy to use through employers/insurance.
  • Amwell — solid nationwide option, good clinician availability, works well for common acute issues.
  • Doctor On Demand (now included under Included Health in some plans) — strong reputation, convenient for mental health + urgent care.
  • PlushCare — good if you want higher-touch primary/urgent care, prescriptions, and follow-up.
  • K Health — affordable, app-first, useful for quick symptom-based care.
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — good if you already use CVS and want straightforward same-day care.
Best picks by need
  • Best overall: Teladoc Health
  • Best for insured users: MDLive
  • Best for easy app-based care: K Health
  • Best for follow-up / ongoing primary care: PlushCare
  • Best retail-clinic option: CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care
Good for
  • Cold/flu
  • Sinus infections
  • Pink eye
  • UTIs
  • Rashes
  • Allergies
  • Minor nausea/diarrhea
Not for
  • Chest pain
  • Trouble breathing
  • Stroke symptoms
  • Severe allergic reactions
  • Heavy bleeding
  • Major injuries

If you want, I can also rank these by price, speed, insurance coverage, or prescription support.

Prompt: What are the best urgent care telemedicine services for adults? · discovery · retrieval mode

Here are the strongest adult urgent-care telemedicine options in the U.S. right now:

  • Best overall / most established: Teladoc Health — 24/7 virtual urgent care for non-emergency needs, with expanded 2026 features and broad condition coverage. (ir.teladoc.com)
  • Best if you want broad, fast access: Doctor On Demand (Included Health) — 24/7 online urgent care, no membership required, and visits may be as low as $0 if covered by your insurance/employer. (doctorondemand.com)
  • Best for CVS users / easy retail pharmacy tie-in: MinuteClinic Virtual Care — 24/7 across the U.S. for common illnesses, with prescriptions when appropriate and many insurance plans accepted. (cvs.com)
  • Best if you want a big condition list and accessibility features: MDLIVE — board-certified, state-licensed doctors for 80+ non-emergency conditions; it also supports ASL and live captioning. (mdlive.com)
  • Best if you’re already in Kaiser: Kaiser Permanente virtual urgent care — integrated with your record, often very fast, and available by phone/video with e-visits too. (myhealth.kaiserpermanente.org)
  • Best integrated health-system option in Colorado/UCHealth areas: UCHealth Virtual Urgent Care — they screen the request and route you to in-person care if virtual isn’t appropriate. (uchealth.org)

Quick pick:

  • Have insurance/employer coverage? Start with Doctor On Demand or Teladoc. (doctorondemand.com)
  • Want pharmacy convenience? Use CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care. (cvs.com)
  • Already a member of a health system? Use their own virtual urgent care first. (myhealth.kaiserpermanente.org)

Do not use telemedicine for emergencies like chest pain or trouble breathing—call 911 or go in person. (cvs.com)

If you want, I can narrow this to the best 3 for your insurance/cost needs.

Metric 3 of 3 Top of Mind?

Unprompted recall on 15 high-volume discovery prompts, run 5 times each in pure recall mode (no web). Brands that surface here are baked into the model's training, not borrowed from live search.

TOM Score
100/100
Category Ruler
Discovery promptVolumeAppearedPositions (5 runs)
What are the best urgent care telemedicine services? 0 5/5 1, 1, 1, 1, 1
Which urgent care telemedicine service is most recommended? 0 5/5 1, 1, 1, 1, 1
What are the top urgent care telemedicine options? 0 5/5 1, 1, 1, 1, 1
What are the most popular urgent care telemedicine services? 0 5/5 1, 1, 1, 1, 1
What is the best virtual urgent care service? 40 4/5 1, 1, 2, 1
Which telemedicine urgent care service should I use? 0 5/5 2, 1, 2, 2, 1
What are the best on-demand urgent care telemedicine platforms? 0 5/5 1, 1, 2, 1, 1
What are the top-rated virtual urgent care services? 0 5/5 1, 1, 1, 1, 1
What urgent care telemedicine services are worth trying? 0 4/5 1, 1, 1, 1
What are the best urgent care video visit options? 0 3/5 1, 1, 2
Which online urgent care services are the best? 70 5/5 1, 1, 1, 1, 1
What are the leading urgent care telehealth services? 0 4/5 1, 1, 1, 1
What are the best immediate care telemedicine services? 0 5/5 1, 1, 1, 1, 1
What are the most trusted urgent care virtual visit services? 0 4/5 1, 1, 1, 1
What are the best urgent care chat or video services? 0 3/5 1, 1, 1
Sample recall responses
Prompt: What are the best urgent care telemedicine services? (no web search)

Here are some of the best urgent-care telemedicine options:

  • Teladoc Health — one of the biggest names; 24/7 general urgent care, broad availability, easy app use.
  • Amwell — strong video visits, often covered by insurance, good for common urgent issues.
  • MDLIVE — good urgent care + mental health; usually fast access and solid user ratings.
  • Doctor On Demand (by Included Health) — polished app, reliable video quality, good for adults and kids in many states.
  • K Health — useful if you want AI-guided symptom intake before seeing a clinician; often competitively priced.
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — convenient if you already use CVS; good for straightforward urgent issues.
  • Walmart Virtual Care — low-cost option in some areas, though availability can be more limited.
  • Oscar Virtual Urgent Care / Amazon Clinic — can be convenient depending on your location and symptoms.

Best overall: Teladoc, Amwell, or Doctor On Demand Best for low cost: K Health or Walmart Virtual Care Best if already using a pharmacy chain: CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care

Good for: sore throat, sinus infection, UTI symptoms, pink eye, rash, minor cold/flu symptoms, medication refills, and simple infections.

Not for: chest pain, trouble breathing, stroke symptoms, severe allergic reaction, major injuries, or anything life-threatening — go to the ER or call emergency services.

If you want, I can also rank these by price, speed, or insurance coverage.

Iteration: 1 of 5
Prompt: What are the best urgent care telemedicine services? (no web search)

Some of the best urgent care telemedicine services are:

  • Teladoc Health — broad availability, good for common urgent issues, prescription refills, rashes, sinus infections, UTIs, etc.
  • Amwell — strong video-visit experience and solid access to board-certified doctors.
  • MDLIVE — good urgent care option with fast scheduling, often covered by insurance.
  • Doctor On Demand (by Included Health) — very polished app, good for same-day urgent care and mental health.
  • Sesame — often the cheapest cash-pay option; useful if you want upfront pricing.
  • Amazon One Medical — excellent if you already use Amazon/One Medical; good for virtual urgent care and follow-up.

Best overall: Teladoc or Doctor On Demand Best for low price: Sesame Best if insured: MDLIVE or Amwell

If you want, I can also rank them by price, wait time, insurance coverage, or state availability.

Iteration: 2 of 5

What to do next Recommendations for Teladoc Health

Generated automatically from gaps and weaknesses in the analysis above, ranked by potential impact on the AI Visibility Score.

Defend retrieval position

You score 54 on recall but only 13 on retrieval (gap of +41.2). Training-data authority is outpacing your current web footprint. Publish fresh, well-cited content to keep search-augmented responses including your brand.

Close the fragility gap

Protect and reinforce your LBA

Your LBA is strong. Focus on maintaining authoritative coverage and ensuring new product launches get independent reviews within 12 months of release.

Maintain current LBA

Identify and shore up oscillating differentiators

Core TOM is strong. Watch for specific differentiators (slogans, signature products) that appear in only some iterations. Push those into training-data-crawled headlines.

Maintain / refine TOM

How is this calculated? Methodology

Every score on this page is reproducible. Below is exactly what we ran and how we computed each number.

Overall AI Visibility Score
Smoothed geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM. Authority and TOM are floored at LBA × 0.1 before the geometric mean (the same floor used in the per-metric cards above, so brand cards and the composite tell the same story). Formula: composite = ((LBA + 5)(Authority + 5)(TOM + 5))^(1/3) - 5. The floor keeps brands the model clearly recognises but doesn't yet recommend from collapsing to zero, while a single genuinely weak metric still pulls the composite down. Full methodology.
Latent Brand Association (LBA)
5 brand probes + 1 control prompt, each run 5 times in recall mode (no web search). LBA = quality × meta × stability × share × recognition × 100. Each sub-signal is on a 0-1 scale. Read the full LBA methodology →
LLM Authority
50 organic category prompts (discovery, comparison, problem and transactional intents), each run once in recall mode and once in retrieval mode. Score = frequency × log-decayed prominence × intent weight, then 50/50 averaged across the two modes. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full Authority methodology →
Top of Mind (TOM)
15 high-volume discovery prompts (sourced from Keywords Everywhere search-volume data), each run 5 times in pure recall mode (no web). Score = frequency × (0.5 + 0.5 × log-prominence), volume-weighted. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full TOM methodology →

Analysis run on April 23, 2026 at 2:11 AM

All 210 AI responses for Teladoc Health

Click a prompt to expand its responses. 210 total responses across 72 prompts.

LBA — Latent Brand Association (6 prompts)

What is Teladoc Health known for?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Teladoc Health is known for telehealth and virtual healthcare services, including virtual doctor visits, mental health support, chronic condition management, and other remote care programs.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Teladoc Health is known for telehealth and virtual care services—especially online doctor visits, remote medical consultations, and managing care through digital health tools.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Teladoc Health is known for telemedicine and virtual healthcare services—connecting patients with doctors and other clinicians remotely for urgent care, primary care, mental health, and chronic condition support.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Teladoc Health is known for telehealth and virtual care services, especially online doctor visits and remote access to medical support.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Teladoc Health is best known for providing virtual healthcare and telemedicine services, including remote doctor visits, mental health care, chronic condition management, and other digital health solutions.

What are Teladoc Health's main strengths and weaknesses?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Teladoc Health’s main strengths are its strong brand recognition in telehealth, broad service offering (general medical, mental health, chronic care, and specialty care), large payer/employer partnerships, and scalable virtual-care platform with significant data and care-management capabilities. It also has a large member base and a well-known presence in the U.S. telemedicine market.

Its main weaknesses are ongoing profitability pressure, reliance on insurance/employer contracts, intense competition from other telehealth and integrated healthcare players, and challenges with slowing growth after the pandemic surge. It has also faced execution issues around integration, member engagement, and proving clear long-term economics for some services.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Teladoc Health’s main strengths are its strong brand in virtual care, broad telehealth offerings (general medical, chronic care, mental health, and specialty services), large scale and payer/employer relationships, and a long operating history that gives it credibility in digital health. It also benefits from convenience, 24/7 access, and the ability to integrate with health plans and providers.

Its main weaknesses are pressure on profitability, reliance on reimbursement and employer/health-plan demand, and intense competition from other telehealth, retail health, and traditional healthcare players. It has also faced challenges proving long-term growth after the pandemic surge, along with integration and execution risks from acquisitions and the need to keep members engaged enough to justify the cost.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Teladoc Health’s main strengths are its broad telehealth platform, strong brand recognition, large enterprise and health-plan relationships, wide range of services (general medical, mental health, chronic care), and scale/data advantages. Its weaknesses include ongoing profitability pressure, dependence on employer and payer contracts, intense competition, reimbursement and regulatory sensitivity, and some investor skepticism after growth slowed post-pandemic. It also faces integration and execution challenges across its many service lines.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Teladoc Health’s main strengths are:

  • Strong brand recognition in virtual care
  • Large, broad telehealth platform across general medical, mental health, chronic care, and specialist services
  • Scale and established payer/employer relationships
  • Convenience and accessibility for patients
  • Data-driven, integrated care capabilities

Main weaknesses are:

  • Profitability has been challenged; the business has struggled with margins and losses
  • High competition in telehealth and digital health
  • Growth can be uneven as pandemic-era demand normalized
  • Dependence on large clients and reimbursement dynamics
  • Integration and execution risk across multiple service lines and acquisitions
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Teladoc Health’s main strengths are its strong brand recognition in virtual care, broad product portfolio (general medical, mental health, chronic care, specialty care), large enterprise and health-plan relationships, and scale/data from being an early telehealth leader. Its weaknesses include persistent profitability challenges, pressure on growth after the pandemic spike, heavy competition, dependence on payer/employer contracts, and exposure to regulatory/reimbursement changes. It also faces integration and execution risk across multiple services, and some customers still view telehealth as less personal than in-person care.

Who should use Teladoc Health? Who should avoid it?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Teladoc Health is best for people who want convenient virtual care for non-emergency issues like colds, flu, minor infections, skin problems, mental health support, or ongoing management of some chronic conditions.

Who should use it:

  • People who want quick access to a doctor without an in-person visit
  • Busy adults, travelers, or people with limited local access to care
  • People needing routine follow-up or basic medical advice
  • Some people seeking therapy, psychiatry, or chronic care support through their plan

Who should avoid relying on it:

  • Anyone with a medical emergency (chest pain, trouble breathing, stroke symptoms, severe bleeding, etc.)
  • People who need a physical exam, labs, imaging, or hands-on treatment
  • Serious or rapidly worsening symptoms
  • People whose condition requires immediate in-person evaluation

If you’re unsure, Teladoc can be a good first step for minor concerns, but urgent or severe symptoms should go to emergency or in-person care.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Teladoc Health is best for people who want convenient non-emergency care by phone or video, such as for colds, flu, allergies, skin issues, prescription questions, mental health support, or routine follow-ups. It can also help people who have trouble getting to a clinic or want faster access to a doctor.

People should avoid using Teladoc for emergencies or anything that needs an in-person exam right away, such as chest pain, trouble breathing, stroke symptoms, severe bleeding, broken bones, or major injuries. It’s also not ideal if you need a hands-on physical exam, lab tests, imaging, or immediate emergency treatment.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Teladoc Health is best for people who want convenient virtual care for non-emergency issues, including primary care follow-ups, minor illnesses, mental health support, dermatology, and chronic-condition guidance. It can be a good fit if you need fast access to a doctor, live in a remote area, or want to avoid in-person visits.

People should avoid relying on it for emergencies, severe symptoms, or anything needing hands-on care or immediate testing—like chest pain, trouble breathing, stroke symptoms, major injuries, or serious abdominal pain. It may also be a poor fit if you need a physical exam, lab work, imaging, or a specialist procedure right away.

If you think it could be an emergency, call local emergency services instead.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Teladoc Health is generally best for people who want convenient virtual care for non-emergency issues, such as:

  • Minor illnesses (cold/flu, rashes, allergies)
  • Routine primary care or follow-ups
  • Mental health support
  • Chronic condition check-ins
  • People who have trouble getting to a doctor quickly

People should avoid using Teladoc as their only option if they have:

  • A medical emergency (chest pain, trouble breathing, stroke symptoms, severe bleeding)
  • Serious injuries or rapidly worsening symptoms
  • Conditions that need an in-person exam, tests, or procedures
  • Complex diagnoses that require hands-on evaluation

It may also be a poor fit for someone who prefers face-to-face care or whose insurance/plan doesn’t cover telehealth well.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Teladoc Health is generally best for people who want convenient virtual care for non-emergency issues like common illnesses, minor skin problems, mental health support, or routine follow-ups, and for people who live far from clinics or have limited time to visit one.

It may not be a good fit for people who need immediate emergency care, in-person exams, imaging, lab tests, procedures, or complex conditions that require hands-on evaluation. Also, anyone with severe symptoms (like chest pain, trouble breathing, signs of stroke, severe bleeding, or suicidal thoughts) should avoid relying on Teladoc and seek urgent in-person help instead.

How does Teladoc Health compare to its main competitors?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Teladoc Health is generally seen as the broadest pure-play virtual care company, with strengths in scale, brand recognition, and a wide suite of services (general medical, mental health, chronic care, and employer/payer solutions).

Compared with key competitors:

  • Amwell: Teladoc is usually considered larger and more diversified. Amwell has been strong in platform/enterprise telehealth, but Teladoc has had broader consumer reach and more integrated care offerings.
  • Included Health / SteadyMD-style models: These often focus more on navigation, advocacy, and specialized care coordination. Teladoc is broader in direct virtual care delivery.
  • Optum/UnitedHealth and other payer-owned solutions: These benefit from deep insurance integration and distribution. Teladoc competes by being more independent and cross-payer, but it can lack the same built-in payer channel advantage.
  • MDLIVE, Doctor on Demand, and similar telehealth providers: Teladoc is typically stronger in scale and portfolio breadth, though competitors may compete well in specific niches like mental health or employer-focused care.

Overall: Teladoc’s edge is scale and breadth; its main challenges are profitability, intense competition, and pressure from integrated health insurers and health systems that can bundle virtual care with existing relationships.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Teladoc Health is generally the best-known pure-play telehealth company, but it competes in a crowded market where its strengths and weaknesses are clearer than its dominance.

  • Versus Amwell: Teladoc is usually viewed as the stronger consumer brand and broader virtual-care platform. Amwell has been more infrastructure/enterprise focused, while Teladoc has had more scale and recognition.
  • Versus Doctor on Demand/Included Health: Teladoc has broader reach and a larger integrated offering, but Included Health can be stronger in navigation, care coordination, and employer/health-plan relationships.
  • Versus health systems and payers offering virtual care: Teladoc often has better dedicated telehealth technology and scale, but those competitors can win on lower churn, tighter member integration, and access to in-network care.
  • Versus retail/tech players (CVS, Amazon, etc.): Teladoc is more specialized in virtual care and chronic-condition management, while those players can bundle care into larger ecosystems.

Overall, Teladoc’s key advantages are scale, brand, and breadth of services; its main challenges are pricing pressure, heavy competition, and proving better outcomes and profitability than alternative virtual-care options.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Teladoc Health is generally viewed as the largest, most established pure-play virtual care company, with broader scale and a more diversified offering than many rivals. Compared with:

  • Amwell: Teladoc is usually stronger in scale, brand recognition, and direct-to-consumer plus employer/health-plan reach. Amwell has been more focused on platform/infrastructure and health-system relationships.
  • Doctor on Demand / Included Health: Teladoc tends to have broader standalone telehealth access and a larger global footprint; these competitors are often stronger in integrated care navigation and employer-focused models.
  • MDLIVE (now part of Evernorth/Cigna): Teladoc competes head-to-head in virtual urgent care, behavioral health, and primary care, but MDLIVE benefits from being embedded in a large payer ecosystem.
  • Microsoft/Big Tech-enabled point solutions: Teladoc has deeper healthcare-specific operations and clinical services, while tech firms may have stronger software/AI capabilities but less end-to-end care delivery.

Overall: Teladoc’s strengths are scale, brand, service breadth, and enterprise distribution. Its weaknesses versus competitors are pressure on growth, profitability, and more intense competition from payer-owned or care-management-integrated platforms.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Teladoc Health is generally viewed as a broad, integrated virtual care leader, but it competes in a crowded market and is not always the strongest in any single niche.

  • vs. Amwell: Teladoc is usually considered bigger and more diversified, with stronger consumer reach and a wider set of services. Amwell has been more focused on provider/health-system partnerships and enterprise workflows.
  • vs. MDLive/Included Health/others: Teladoc typically has greater scale and brand recognition, while some rivals can be more specialized or have tighter health-plan integration.
  • vs. direct-to-consumer telehealth apps (like Hims & Hers or Ro): Teladoc is less of a niche consumer brand and more of a full virtual-care platform spanning urgent care, primary care, mental health, chronic care, and benefits solutions.
  • vs. emerging AI-enabled care platforms: Teladoc’s advantage is its established network, data, and payer/employer relationships; its challenge is that newer entrants may be faster, cheaper, or more focused.

Overall: Teladoc’s strengths are scale, breadth, and enterprise relationships. Its main weaknesses are heavy competition, pricing pressure, and the challenge of differentiating beyond basic virtual visits.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Teladoc Health is one of the largest virtual-care companies, and it’s strongest in broad, integrated telehealth offerings: general medical visits, chronic care, mental health, specialty care, and employer/health-plan partnerships. Compared with main competitors:

  • Amwell: Often more focused on enterprise and health-system video visit infrastructure. Teladoc generally has a larger consumer reach and broader service mix.
  • Included Health (Doctor On Demand / Grand Rounds): Strong in navigation and care coordination; Teladoc has a wider direct virtual-care platform and more global scale.
  • MDLive: Similar in virtual urgent care and behavioral health, but Teladoc is typically viewed as the larger, more diversified platform.
  • Hims & Hers: Stronger in direct-to-consumer convenience and subscription wellness/primary-care style services; Teladoc is more established with payers and employers.
  • CVS/Aetna, UnitedHealth/Optum, Amazon Clinic: These have powerful distribution and ecosystem advantages. Teladoc’s edge is being more specialized and platform-agnostic, while those competitors can bundle care with insurance, pharmacy, or retail access.

Overall, Teladoc is usually seen as the scale leader in pure-play virtual care, but competitors can outperform it in specific niches like health-system integration, consumer subscription, or payer-owned distribution.

What do people typically complain about with Teladoc Health?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

People commonly complain about Teladoc Health for: long wait times to get an appointment, issues reaching support, prescription/referral limitations, billing and refund problems, inconsistent provider quality, and technical/app glitches. Some also say the service can feel impersonal and less useful for complex or urgent medical issues.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

People commonly complain about Teladoc Health around a few themes: long wait times, difficulty reaching support or getting follow-up, inconsistent quality of doctors or visits, billing/coverage confusion, and prescriptions or referrals not being handled as expected. Some users also mention app/tech issues and frustration that telehealth can’t solve problems that need in-person care.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

People typically complain about Teladoc Health for long wait times, difficulty getting prescriptions or referrals, inconsistent doctor quality, app/technical issues, billing or insurance confusion, and weak follow-up after the visit.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

People commonly complain about Teladoc Health’s long wait times, difficulty getting quick access to a clinician, billing/insurance surprises, and occasional issues with prescription follow-through. Some also mention app/technology glitches and inconsistent care quality depending on the provider.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

People commonly complain about Teladoc Health’s long wait times, difficulty getting timely appointments, inconsistent doctor quality, technical/app glitches, prescription or refill issues, billing disputes, and slow or unhelpful customer support. Some also say the service feels too limited for anything beyond minor issues.

What is a typical urgent care telemedicine service known for? control
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

Typical urgent care telemedicine services are known for quick, convenient same-day medical care via video or phone for non-emergency issues like colds, flu, UTIs, rashes, and minor injuries.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

A typical urgent care telemedicine service is known for quick virtual visits for non-emergency issues like colds, flu, rashes, minor infections, allergies, and simple prescription needs, usually with same-day access to a clinician.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

Typical urgent care telemedicine services are known for fast, convenient access to clinicians for non-emergency issues like colds, flu, infections, rashes, minor injuries, and prescription refills—usually via video or phone, often with shorter wait times than in-person care.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

A typical urgent care telemedicine service is known for quick, on-demand virtual visits for non-emergency issues—like colds, flu, infections, rashes, minor injuries, and prescription refills—without needing an in-person clinic visit.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

Quick, on-demand virtual medical visits for non-emergency issues like colds, flu, infections, rashes, minor injuries, and prescription refills.

Authority — LLM Authority (50 prompts)

What are the best urgent care telemedicine services for adults? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Some of the best urgent-care telemedicine services for adults are:

  • Teladoc Health — very broad availability, fast access, good for colds/flu, UTIs, rashes, allergies.
  • MDLive — strong “urgent care” focus, often easy to use through employers/insurance.
  • Amwell — solid nationwide option, good clinician availability, works well for common acute issues.
  • Doctor On Demand (now included under Included Health in some plans) — strong reputation, convenient for mental health + urgent care.
  • PlushCare — good if you want higher-touch primary/urgent care, prescriptions, and follow-up.
  • K Health — affordable, app-first, useful for quick symptom-based care.
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — good if you already use CVS and want straightforward same-day care.
Best picks by need
  • Best overall: Teladoc Health
  • Best for insured users: MDLive
  • Best for easy app-based care: K Health
  • Best for follow-up / ongoing primary care: PlushCare
  • Best retail-clinic option: CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care
Good for
  • Cold/flu
  • Sinus infections
  • Pink eye
  • UTIs
  • Rashes
  • Allergies
  • Minor nausea/diarrhea
Not for
  • Chest pain
  • Trouble breathing
  • Stroke symptoms
  • Severe allergic reactions
  • Heavy bleeding
  • Major injuries

If you want, I can also rank these by price, speed, insurance coverage, or prescription support.

retrieval Mentioned

Here are the strongest adult urgent-care telemedicine options in the U.S. right now:

  • Best overall / most established: Teladoc Health — 24/7 virtual urgent care for non-emergency needs, with expanded 2026 features and broad condition coverage. (ir.teladoc.com)
  • Best if you want broad, fast access: Doctor On Demand (Included Health) — 24/7 online urgent care, no membership required, and visits may be as low as $0 if covered by your insurance/employer. (doctorondemand.com)
  • Best for CVS users / easy retail pharmacy tie-in: MinuteClinic Virtual Care — 24/7 across the U.S. for common illnesses, with prescriptions when appropriate and many insurance plans accepted. (cvs.com)
  • Best if you want a big condition list and accessibility features: MDLIVE — board-certified, state-licensed doctors for 80+ non-emergency conditions; it also supports ASL and live captioning. (mdlive.com)
  • Best if you’re already in Kaiser: Kaiser Permanente virtual urgent care — integrated with your record, often very fast, and available by phone/video with e-visits too. (myhealth.kaiserpermanente.org)
  • Best integrated health-system option in Colorado/UCHealth areas: UCHealth Virtual Urgent Care — they screen the request and route you to in-person care if virtual isn’t appropriate. (uchealth.org)

Quick pick:

  • Have insurance/employer coverage? Start with Doctor On Demand or Teladoc. (doctorondemand.com)
  • Want pharmacy convenience? Use CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care. (cvs.com)
  • Already a member of a health system? Use their own virtual urgent care first. (myhealth.kaiserpermanente.org)

Do not use telemedicine for emergencies like chest pain or trouble breathing—call 911 or go in person. (cvs.com)

If you want, I can narrow this to the best 3 for your insurance/cost needs.

What are the best urgent care telemedicine services for kids? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For kids’ urgent care telemedicine, the best options are usually:

  1. PM Pediatrics Anywhere
    • Best overall for pediatric urgent care
    • Run by pediatric clinicians; good for common issues like fever, cough, pink eye, rashes, ear pain, minor injuries
  2. Blueberry Pediatrics
    • Best for 24/7 pediatric access
    • Subscription model; strong for parents who want ongoing access to pediatricians
  3. Teladoc Health Pediatrics
    • Best if you already have Teladoc through insurance/employer
    • Convenient and widely available
  4. Amwell
    • Good general telemedicine option with pediatric visits in many plans
    • Useful if you want one app for the whole family
  5. MDLIVE Pediatrics
    • Good insurance-based option
    • Often easy to use for same-day virtual visits

My top pick:

  • PM Pediatrics Anywhere if you want the most kid-focused urgent care experience.
  • Blueberry Pediatrics if you want ongoing 24/7 pediatric support.

Important: Telemedicine is great for mild/moderate issues, but go to in-person urgent care/ER for trouble breathing, dehydration, severe pain, blue lips, confusion, or anything rapidly worsening.

If you want, I can also rank these by cost, insurance, or best for toddlers vs. teens.

retrieval Not mentioned

Here are some of the stronger urgent-care telemedicine options for kids right now, mostly from pediatric hospitals/health systems:

  • Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) Virtual Urgent Care — for kids in Pennsylvania with an active MyCHOP account; aimed at same-day, non-emergency care from home. (chop.edu)
  • Seattle Children’s Virtual Urgent Care — online video visits for minor illnesses and injuries for eligible patients in Washington state. (seattlechildrens.org)
  • NewYork-Presbyterian Pediatric Telehealth — virtual urgent care in New York, with hours from 8 am to midnight and physicians board-certified in pediatric emergency medicine. (nyp.org)
  • NYU Langone Virtual Urgent Care for Children — treats children ages 5 to 17 for non-emergency conditions. (nyulangone.org)
  • Children’s Hospital Los Angeles Virtual Urgent Care — for children and young adults up to age 21 in California. (chla.org)
  • MUSC Children’s Virtual Care — offers same-day attention through Urgent Chat or Urgent Video in South Carolina. (children.muschealth.org)
  • Telepeds — pediatric telehealth with 24/7 urgent care scheduling and board-certified pediatricians. (telepeds.com)

My quick picks:

  • Best if you want a children’s-hospital system: CHOP or Seattle Children’s. (chop.edu)
  • Best for late-night access: NewYork-Presbyterian. (nyp.org)
  • Best for broader direct pediatric telehealth availability: Telepeds. (telepeds.com)

If you want, I can narrow this to the best options in your state.

What are the best urgent care telemedicine services for a sinus infection? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Good telemedicine options for a suspected sinus infection:

  • Teladoc Health — broad 24/7 urgent care, easy app access
  • Amwell — good for same-day video visits
  • MDLIVE — strong for urgent care and prescription support
  • Doctor On Demand by Included Health — fast video visits, good availability
  • PlushCare — often praised for more thorough primary/urgent care-style visits
  • Sesame Care — good if you want transparent self-pay pricing

Best picks overall:

  • Fastest/easiest: Teladoc or MDLIVE
  • Best “real doctor” follow-up feel: PlushCare
  • Best transparent pricing: Sesame Care

Important: sinus infections often improve without antibiotics. Telemedicine is best if you have:

  • congestion/pressure >10 days
  • symptoms that got better then worse again
  • fever, facial pain, thick nasal discharge

Go in person/ER now if you have:

  • swelling around the eyes
  • severe headache, confusion
  • trouble breathing
  • vision changes
  • very high fever

If you want, I can also compare these by price, insurance, and prescription quality.

retrieval Not mentioned

For a sinus infection, these are the strongest telemedicine options:

  • Best overall: Teladoc — 24/7 virtual urgent care, nationwide, and it treats non-emergency issues like sinus infections. (ir.teladoc.com)
  • Best for insurance + full-service care: Circle Medical — board-certified providers, virtual urgent care, and they explicitly treat sinus infections; available in 32 states. (circlemedical.com)
  • Best for integrated health-system care: Cleveland Clinic Virtual Visits — U.S. patients only, can handle acute sinusitis, and can prescribe when appropriate. (my.clevelandclinic.org)
  • Best for easy same-day booking: Carbon Health — same-day virtual appointments, most insurance accepted, and sinus infection is a listed condition. (carbonhealth.com)
  • Best cash-pay option: Sesame — upfront pricing, online sinus infection visits, and same-day prescriptions if appropriate. (sesamecare.com)
  • Best if you want a broad, familiar urgent-care telehealth brand: Amwell — 24/7 access, U.S.-only, and it supports prescriptions; sinus infection is among common treated issues. (patients.amwell.com)

Important: if you have facial swelling, trouble breathing, severe one-sided pain, high fever, confusion, or symptoms lasting >10 days with worsening, get in-person care. If you want, I can also rank these by lowest cost, fastest appointment, or best for insurance.

What are the best virtual urgent care options for a UTI? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Good virtual urgent care options for a suspected UTI:

  • Amazon One Medical — great if you want fast messaging/video and easy prescription handling.
  • PlushCare — good for same-day doctor visits and follow-up care.
  • Teladoc — widely available, easy to use, often covered by insurance.
  • Amwell — solid video-visit option with many insurers.
  • MDLIVE — another strong, insurance-friendly urgent care choice.
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — convenient if you like pharmacy integration.
  • K Health — cheaper app-based option for symptom checks and treatment.

Best overall: Amazon One Medical or PlushCare Best if insurance-driven: Teladoc, Amwell, or MDLIVE Best budget option: K Health

Go in person / ER instead if you have:

  • fever
  • back/flank pain
  • vomiting
  • pregnancy
  • blood in urine
  • symptoms of a kidney infection
  • severe pain or are very ill

If you want, I can also rank these by price, speed, or insurance coverage.

retrieval Not mentioned

For a simple UTI, my top virtual options are:

  1. Walgreens Virtual Healthcare — best for a straightforward, uncomplicated UTI. It’s designed for symptoms under 2 weeks, first UTI in 3 months, and female sex assigned at birth; they also say they’ll route you to in-person care for fever, flank/back pain, vomiting, pregnancy, etc. (walgreens.com)
  2. CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — good general pick if you want a big-chain option that can often see you within minutes and can send prescriptions to your pharmacy. (cvs.com)
  3. One Medical — best if you already have membership/Prime access and want 24/7 on-demand virtual care nationwide, including urgent issues. (onemedical.com)
  4. PlushCare — solid if you want broad telehealth availability and insurance/self-pay options; they can diagnose non-emergency infections and send prescriptions electronically. (plushcare.com)
  5. WellNow Virtual Care — a good urgent-care-style option; they explicitly include UTIs, and self-pay is a flat $75. (wellnow.com)

Go in person / urgent care now if you have fever, chills, nausea/vomiting, flank/back/abdominal pain, unusual vaginal discharge, or are pregnant; pregnancy-related UTIs should be evaluated right away. (walgreens.com)

If you want, I can narrow this to the cheapest, fastest, or best for your insurance.

What are the best telemedicine urgent care services for pink eye? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For pink eye (conjunctivitis), the best telemedicine urgent care options are usually:

  1. Amazon Clinic
    • Fast, simple intake for conjunctivitis
    • Can prescribe treatment if appropriate
    • Good if you want an affordable, no-video option
  2. Teladoc Health
    • Broad availability, often same-day
    • Real-time video visits
    • Good for straightforward urgent care
  3. Amwell
    • Strong for video-based urgent care
    • Can handle eye irritation, discharge, and redness
    • Often covered by insurance
  4. Doctor On Demand (Included Health)
    • Easy same-day video visits
    • Good if you want a polished app experience
    • Commonly used for minor infections and rashes too
  5. Zocdoc Virtual Care / local urgent care telehealth
    • Good for finding a nearby clinician quickly
    • Useful if you want follow-up with a local provider
Best overall
  • Best for speed: Amazon Clinic
  • Best for video visit: Teladoc or Doctor On Demand
  • Best if insurance matters: Amwell or your local urgent care’s telehealth
Important

Telemedicine is fine for mild pink eye, but get in-person care urgently if you have:

  • Eye pain
  • Vision changes
  • Light sensitivity
  • Contact lens use
  • One eye very swollen
  • Fever
  • Recent eye injury
  • Thick green discharge with worsening symptoms

If you want, I can also give you the best option by price, insurance, or fastest same-day prescription.

retrieval Not mentioned

Best telemedicine urgent-care options for pink eye (conjunctivitis):

  1. MDLIVE — strong pick for convenience. It offers 24/7 urgent care and explicitly lists pink eye; it also has E-Treatment (asynchronous, no live call/video) for eligible members. (mdlive.com)
  2. Teladoc — solid mainstream option. Teladoc lists pink eye among conditions treated through 24/7 doctor visits, with phone/video care and prescriptions if medically necessary. (member.teladoc.com)
  3. Sesame — good for lower out-of-pocket cash pricing. Sesame’s telehealth/urgent care pages explicitly include pink eye. (sesamecare.com)
  4. GoodRx Care — useful if you want a straightforward online visit. GoodRx Care offers quick telehealth visits and online treatment services; it’s a reasonable option for common urgent issues, though its pink-eye-specific page wasn’t as explicit as the others I found. (goodrx.com)

**When telemedicine is not enough: if you wear contacts, have severe pain, light sensitivity, or vision changes, get in-person urgent eye care** instead; contact lens wearers are a higher-risk group for corneal infection. (eyewiki.aao.org)

If you want, I can also rank these by cheapest, best for kids, or best if you have insurance.

What are the best urgent care telemedicine services for a rash? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Good urgent-care telemedicine options for a rash:

  • Teladoc Health — broad access, good for quick video visits and basic skin issues.
  • Amwell — solid telehealth network; often has dermatology-capable clinicians.
  • Doctor On Demand by Included Health — easy same-day video visits, good for rash triage.
  • MDLive — convenient urgent-care style visits, good for common rashes and eczema flare-ups.
  • PlushCare — strong option if you want follow-up care and prescription help.
  • Sesame — often cheaper cash-pay visits; good if you want a low-cost one-off consult.
  • SkinIO / First Derm — better if you want more skin-focused evaluation; some cases are photo-based.

Best pick by need:

  • Fastest general urgent care: Teladoc or Doctor On Demand
  • Lowest cost: Sesame
  • Most skin-focused: First Derm
  • Best for follow-up: PlushCare

Go in person ASAP if the rash has:

  • trouble breathing or facial swelling
  • fever, severe pain, blisters, purple spots, or rapid spreading
  • signs of infection (pus, warmth, red streaks)
  • rash on eyes, mouth, or genitals
  • is after a new medication and seems severe

If you want, I can also rank these by price, insurance acceptance, or best for adults vs kids.

retrieval Not mentioned

For a rash, my top urgent-care telemedicine picks are:

  1. Amwell — best all-around for rash care. It explicitly offers rash treatment online with doctors and dermatologists, plus online diagnosis and prescriptions when appropriate. (patients.amwell.com)
  2. MDLIVE — strong choice if you want 24/7 urgent care with rash included, and it also has a separate dermatology option for skin issues. (mdlive.com)
  3. Teladoc — best if you already get it through insurance/employer benefits; it covers skin rash and dermatology, and it’s available by phone or video in all U.S. states. (teladoc.com)
  4. Kaiser Permanente virtual care — best for Kaiser members because it has 24/7 virtual urgent care and specifically lists rash among conditions it handles. (insider.kaiserpermanente.org)
  5. CityMD virtual care — good if you’re in its service area and want a straightforward urgent-care-style visit; it lists rash among conditions treated. (citymd.com)

Quick rule: if the rash comes with trouble breathing, swallowing, or swelling of the lips/eyes, don’t use telemedicine—get emergency care now. (aad.org)

If you want, I can also narrow this to the cheapest options, best for no insurance, or best for a child’s rash.

What are the best online urgent care services for allergies? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For allergy symptoms (seasonal allergies, hives, mild asthma flare, sinus symptoms, rash), these are some of the best online urgent care/telehealth options in the U.S.:

  1. Sesame Care
    • Often the best value for quick visits.
    • Good for allergies, rashes, sinus pressure, and prescription refills.
    • Usually self-pay, transparent pricing.
  2. Teladoc Health
    • Strong all-around urgent care platform.
    • Good if you want fast access and insurance coverage may apply.
    • Can help with allergy meds and non-emergency symptoms.
  3. PlushCare
    • Best if you want a more “primary care” feel.
    • Good for recurring allergies and follow-up care.
    • Can prescribe common allergy treatments when appropriate.
  4. Amwell
    • Solid urgent care option with many insurance plans.
    • Useful for allergies, sinus issues, and skin reactions.
  5. CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care
    • Good if you already use CVS/MinuteClinic.
    • Convenient for common allergy complaints and medication guidance.
  6. Doctor on Demand (now part of Included Health in many plans)
    • Reliable for quick visits and allergy-related concerns.
    • Good coverage through employer/health plans.
Best picks by need
  • Cheapest/self-pay: Sesame Care
  • Best insurance-based option: Teladoc or Amwell
  • Best for ongoing allergy care: PlushCare
  • Best retail/pharmacy convenience: CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care
Important

Online urgent care is good for mild to moderate allergy symptoms. Get in-person emergency help now if you have:

  • trouble breathing
  • throat/tongue swelling
  • fainting
  • severe wheezing

If you want, I can also give you the best options for your state/insurance or help pick one based on price vs speed.

retrieval Not mentioned

For online urgent care for allergies, my top picks are:

  1. Amwell — strong allergy-specific coverage, 24/7 urgent care, and clear upfront pricing (listed at $69 on its public urgent-care page). (patients.amwell.com)
  2. MDLIVE — also treats allergies, runs 24/7/365, and shows upfront pricing of $0–$89 depending on coverage. (mdlive.com)
  3. LiveHealth Online — has a dedicated Allergy service plus urgent care, which is useful if you want one platform for both. (livehealthonline.com)
  4. Doctor On Demand (Included Health) — offers 24/7 urgent care and explicitly includes common allergies; self-pay urgent care starts at $99. (doctorondemand.com)
  5. K Health — good if you want app-based text care and low-cost urgent visits; it treats allergies and says it can prescribe allergy medications. (khealth.com)

Best overall for allergies: Amwell. Best if you have insurance and want potentially lower copays: MDLIVE. Best if you already use an employer/health-plan telehealth benefit: LiveHealth Online or Doctor On Demand. (patients.amwell.com)

If you have trouble breathing, swelling of the lips/tongue/throat, or signs of a severe allergic reaction, use 911/ER instead of telehealth. (doctorondemand.com)

If you want, I can also rank these by cheapest, best for insurance, or best for same-day prescriptions.

What are the best virtual urgent care services for flu symptoms? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For flu symptoms, the best virtual urgent care services are usually:

  1. Teladoc Health – strong 24/7 access, easy for fever/cough/body aches, can prescribe antivirals if appropriate.
  2. MDLIVE – good same-day urgent care and often covered by many employers/insurers.
  3. Amwell – solid for video visits and prescription support.
  4. CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care – convenient if you want to pair telehealth with in-person testing or pharmacy pickup.
  5. Included Health (Doctor on Demand) – good quality, especially if your health plan includes it.
Best pick by situation
  • Fastest 24/7 access: Teladoc
  • Often cheapest through insurance: MDLIVE
  • Best if you use CVS already: CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care
  • Best all-around video visit: Amwell or Included Health
What they can do for flu
  • assess symptoms
  • check if you might need Tamiflu (oseltamivir) or another antiviral
  • advise on home care
  • tell you if you need flu/COVID testing or in-person care
Go in person / ER now if you have:
  • trouble breathing
  • chest pain
  • confusion
  • blue lips
  • severe dehydration
  • symptoms getting rapidly worse

If you want, I can also give you the best options by insurance plan, price, or whether you need a same-day prescription.

retrieval Not mentioned

For flu-like symptoms, the best virtual urgent care options are usually:

  • Amwell — strong for 24/7 urgent care and flu-specific visits; board-certified doctors, prescriptions if needed. (patients.amwell.com)
  • Teladoc — good if you want broad 24/7 access and your employer/health plan includes it; Teladoc says it treats flu and other non-emergency conditions by phone or video. (teladoc.com)
  • Doctor On Demand / Included Health — solid for fast urgent care visits for colds and flu, with 24/7 telehealth. (doctorondemand.com)
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — good if you want a retail-clinic-backed option; it treats flu and offers seven-days-a-week virtual care. (cvs.com)
  • LiveHealth Online — best if your insurance includes it, especially some Anthem/BCBS plans. It offers urgent care 24/7 and includes flu. (livehealthonline.com)

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: Amwell
  • Best if you have Teladoc through work: Teladoc
  • Best retail-clinic option: CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care (patients.amwell.com)

Don’t use virtual urgent care if you have trouble breathing, chest pain, confusion, severe weakness, or worsening symptoms after improving—CDC says to seek urgent/emergency care right away. (cdc.gov)

If you want, I can also narrow this to the cheapest option, best for kids, or best with no insurance.

What are the best urgent care telemedicine services for sore throat? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For a sore throat, the best urgent-care telemedicine options are usually:

  • Teladoc Health — fast access, broad availability, good for common infections.
  • Amwell — solid on-demand urgent care visits.
  • MDLIVE — often quick and easy for sore throat/URI triage.
  • PlushCare — good if you want a more primary-care style visit and follow-up.
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — convenient if you already use CVS.
  • Walgreens Find Care / Virtual Care — another easy retail-clinic option.

Best overall picks:

  • Teladoc for speed and availability
  • PlushCare if you want a more thorough visit
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care if you want easy pharmacy integration

Important: Telemedicine can help decide if it’s likely viral vs. strep, but you’ll usually need an in-person throat swab for a strep test.

Get in-person care urgently if you have:

  • trouble breathing
  • drooling or can’t swallow liquids
  • one-sided throat swelling
  • severe neck swelling
  • high fever with worsening symptoms
  • dehydration or muffled “hot potato” voice

If you want, I can also rank these by price, speed, or insurance coverage.

retrieval Not mentioned

For a sore throat, the best telemedicine urgent care options are usually:

  1. CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — good all-around choice, with virtual visits and prescriptions sent to your pharmacy when appropriate. CVS says it treats cough, cold, flu, and strep throat. (cvs.com)
  2. Solv Telemedicine — good if you want fast booking; it specifically lists sore throat or strep as a virtual-care use case. (solvhealth.com)
  3. Amwell Online Urgent Care — strong general tele-urgent-care option for non-emergency, low-acuity issues. (patients.amwell.com)
  4. K Health Urgent Care — convenient and broad, but it notes that strep throat often needs an in-person consultation for diagnosis. (khealth.com)

My pick:

  • Best overall: CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care. (cvs.com)
  • Best for fast access: Solv. (solvhealth.com)
  • Best if you suspect strep: in-person urgent care may be better, because strep often needs testing. (cdc.gov)

Go in person / seek urgent help now if you have trouble breathing, can’t swallow fluids, drooling, severe swelling, or a very high fever. (cdc.gov)

If you want, I can also rank these by price, insurance friendliness, or speed.

What are the best urgent care telemedicine services for after-hours care? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Some of the best after-hours urgent care telemedicine options are:

  1. Teladoc Health
    • Best all-around national option
    • 24/7 video visits for common urgent issues like colds, UTIs, rashes, sinus infections
  2. Amwell
    • Good if you want a broad network and insurance-friendly access
    • Often available through employer/health plan portals
  3. MDLIVE
    • Strong for quick urgent care and behavioral health
    • Usually easy to use at night and on weekends
  4. Doctor On Demand by Included Health
    • Good quality video visits with board-certified clinicians
    • Often well-regarded for clear follow-up care
  5. Hims & Hers
    • Best for specific non-emergency needs like cold sores, UTIs, anxiety, and skin issues
    • Not a full urgent care replacement, but convenient
  6. Amazon Clinic
    • Good for straightforward conditions and asynchronous care in some states
    • Useful if you want simple, often lower-friction care

Best pick overall: Teladoc or MDLIVE Best if you already have insurance/employer access: Amwell or Doctor On Demand Best for simple, specific issues: Amazon Clinic or Hims & Hers

Important: If you have chest pain, trouble breathing, severe bleeding, stroke symptoms, or severe allergic reaction, go to the ER or call emergency services.

If you want, I can also give you the best options by cost, insurance, or fastest availability.

retrieval Mentioned

Here are some of the best after-hours urgent care telemedicine options in the U.S., depending on what you need:

  • Best overall / broadest access: Teladoc Health 24/7 Care — 24/7 non-emergency urgent care via web, phone, or app, with average wait times under 15 minutes and availability in all 50 states plus several territories. (teladochealth.com)
  • Best for membership-based personal care: One Medical — 24/7 on-demand virtual care by message or video, with a pay-per-visit option if you’re not a member. (onemedical.com)
  • Best employer benefit / family use: First Stop Health Urgent Care — 24/7 phone/video urgent care, weekends and holidays included, with no age minimum. (firststophealth.com)
  • Best if you want a simple virtual urgent care visit: WellNow Virtual Care — immediate remote visits by video, phone, or messaging for non-emergency issues, available 24/7. (wellnow.com)
  • Best for pay-as-you-go access: Maimonides MaimoCare — on-demand virtual urgent care for adults and children, with a stated $49 self-pay on-demand visit. (maimo.org)

My quick pick:

If you want, I can narrow this to lowest cost, best for kids, or best without insurance.

What are the best urgent care telemedicine services with prescriptions? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Here are some of the best urgent care telemedicine services that can prescribe meds (when appropriate):

  1. Teladoc Health
    • Good for: colds, flu, rashes, sinus infections, UTIs, allergies
    • Pros: widely available, 24/7 in many areas, easy prescription routing to local pharmacies
    • Best for: fast, mainstream urgent-care visits
  2. MDLIVE
    • Good for: urgent care, skin issues, infections, pink eye
    • Pros: often covered by insurance, quick appointments, can send prescriptions
    • Best for: people wanting insurance-friendly telehealth
  3. Amwell
    • Good for: general urgent care and some specialty care
    • Pros: large network of doctors, can prescribe non-controlled meds
    • Best for: reliable video visits with good access
  4. Doctor On Demand (now part of Included Health)
    • Good for: urgent care + primary care-style visits
    • Pros: strong clinician availability, prescriptions sent to pharmacy
    • Best for: a more polished app/experience
  5. Sesame Care
    • Good for: low-cost pay-as-you-go urgent care
    • Pros: transparent pricing, often cheaper without insurance
    • Best for: saving money if you’re paying out of pocket
  6. Push Health
    • Good for: specific treatment requests and follow-up care
    • Pros: can be very convenient for prescription-based visits
    • Best for: straightforward medication needs

Important: Most telemedicine urgent care services can prescribe common, non-controlled medications like antibiotics, antivirals, inhalers, and allergy meds. They usually won’t prescribe controlled substances.

If you want, I can also give you:

  • the best option for no insurance
  • the best for same-day prescriptions
  • the best for cheapest visit
retrieval Not mentioned

Here are strong U.S. options for urgent care telemedicine with prescriptions:

  • MDLIVE — good all-around pick for urgent care; doctors can send prescriptions to your pharmacy, provide short-term refills, and see many insurance plans. (mdlive.com)
  • Teladoc 24/7 Care — solid for broad urgent-care coverage; Teladoc says providers diagnose, treat, and prescribe when medically necessary. (teladoc.com)
  • Amwell — reliable urgent care platform; its urgent-care service says you can get prescriptions online, though controlled substances generally aren’t prescribed. (patients.amwell.com)
  • Doctor On Demand — convenient 24/7 urgent care with prescriptions sent to your pharmacy if needed. (doctorondemand.com)
  • Sesame — best if you want transparent self-pay pricing; it advertises same-day urgent-care prescriptions and online pharmacy delivery/pickup. (sesamecare.com)
  • PlushCare — good for prescription-heavy care; it says online doctors can write prescriptions and refills and send them electronically to your pharmacy. (plushcare.com)
  • K Health — useful for texting-based care and refills; it offers online prescriptions and says providers can send them to a pharmacy depending on your state and medical needs. (khealth.com)

Best overall: MDLIVE or Teladoc. Best self-pay: Sesame. Best for straightforward prescription/refill needs: PlushCare or K Health. (mdlive.com)

Important: these services are for non-emergencies; many also say controlled substances aren’t prescribed online, and a prescription is never guaranteed. (mdlive.com)

If you want, I can narrow this to the cheapest, best for no insurance, or best for a specific condition like UTI, sinus infection, or pink eye.

What are the best urgent care telemedicine services with video visits? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Here are some of the better urgent care telemedicine services with video visits:

  1. Teladoc Health
    • Broad availability, easy app-based video visits
    • Good for common urgent issues like colds, flu, rashes, UTIs, allergies
  2. Amwell
    • Strong video-visit platform
    • Often covered by major insurers and available through employer/health-plan benefits
  3. MDLive
    • Good urgent care and behavioral health options
    • Usually quick appointment times and straightforward app use
  4. Doctor On Demand
    • Polished video experience, easy to use
    • Good for everyday urgent care and follow-up visits
  5. PlushCare
    • Best if you want ongoing primary-care style support plus urgent visits
    • Can prescribe meds when appropriate
  6. K Health
    • Fast, app-based care with AI intake before the video visit
    • Often cheaper than traditional telehealth options
  7. Amazon Clinic / One Medical
    • Convenient if you already use Amazon/One Medical
    • Good for common conditions, prescription help, and quick access

Best overall picks:

  • Teladoc for widest availability
  • MDLive for solid all-around urgent care
  • Doctor On Demand for a smooth video visit experience

If you want, I can also narrow this down by price, insurance coverage, or fastest availability.

retrieval Mentioned

Here are the strongest urgent-care telemedicine services with video visits right now in the U.S.:

  • Best overall / easiest national option: CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — 24/7, video visits on phone/tablet/computer, accepts most insurance, and has transparent cash prices ($0–$55 for 24/7 care; other visit types vary). (cvs.com)
  • Best for broad plan-based coverage: Teladoc Health 24/7 Care — 24/7 doctor access by phone/video/app for non-emergency issues like cold/flu, allergies, and infections; good if your employer/health plan includes it. (teladochealth.com)
  • Best for a simple urgent-care-style visit: MDLIVE Urgent Care — video or phone, board-certified doctors, strong accessibility support (ASL/live captions), and a flat $55 example price on some plan pages. (mdlive.com)
  • Best for finding local urgent-care telemedicine slots: Solv Telemedicine — lets you book same-day virtual urgent care, usually with local urgent care centers, and join by video from any device without app downloads. (solvhealth.com)
  • Best if you’re already in a health system: Amwell-based virtual urgent care — secure face-to-face video visits, often 24/7, with pricing that can be lower than ER/urgent care; some systems use it for on-demand urgent care. (patients.amwell.com)

Quick pick:

  • Want best overall cash-pay convenienceCVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care.
  • Want employer/insurance benefitTeladoc or MDLIVE.
  • Want local clinic continuitySolv. (cvs.com)

If you want, I can narrow this to the cheapest, best without insurance, or best for your state/insurance plan.

What are the best urgent care telemedicine services with chat visits? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Here are some of the best urgent-care telemedicine services that offer chat/text-style visits:

  1. Teladoc Health
    • Best overall for broad availability
    • Offers message/chat-based visits in many cases, plus video/phone
    • Good for colds, UTIs, rashes, allergies, etc.
  2. MDLIVE
    • Strong urgent care option
    • Offers secure messaging/chat and video visits
    • Often covered by employer/insurance plans
  3. PlushCare
    • Best for getting ongoing care from the same doctor
    • Primarily video, but has messaging through the app for follow-up
    • Good if you want urgent care plus primary care continuity
  4. K Health
    • Best chat-first experience
    • AI-guided text chat triage, then clinician visit if needed
    • Good for quick symptom checks and lower-cost care
  5. Sesame
    • Best cash-pay option
    • Many clinicians offer message/chat-based follow-up and fast visits
    • Pricing is often transparent upfront
  6. Amwell
    • Solid mainstream telehealth service
    • Mostly video, but some plans/providers support messaging/chat
    • Good insurance coverage options
  7. Included Health (formerly Doctor on Demand)
    • Strong employer/health-plan option
    • Great for urgent care, behavioral health, and follow-up messaging
    • Chat availability depends on plan
Best picks by need
  • Best overall: Teladoc
  • Best chat-first: K Health
  • Best for cash pricing: Sesame
  • Best for follow-up with one doctor: PlushCare

If you want, I can also give you a ranked list by price, insurance acceptance, or 24/7 availability.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you specifically want urgent-care telemedicine with chat/message-style visits, these are the best bets:

  1. UrgentCare.com — best for true async chat-style urgent care. It advertises 24/7/365 provider communication, $35/visit, and an intake + medical review flow with prescription support when needed. (urgentcare.com)
  2. Sesame — best all-around budget option. It offers online urgent care 24/7, all 50 states, and lets you send messages to your clinician before and after the appointment; pricing starts around $34. (sesamecare.com)
  3. Kaiser Permanente (if you’re a member) — best for integrated care. It offers E-visits (online questionnaire with secure message or self-care), plus on-demand urgent care by video/phone, and a separate Chat with KP nurse chat. (insider.kaiserpermanente.org)
  4. Teladoc — best if your employer/plan includes it. It provides 24/7 urgent care via web/app/phone; it’s very strong for access, though it’s more video/phone-first than chat-first. (teladochealth.com)
  5. HealthTap — good if you want texting in general, but note that their help center says urgent care doctors are not available for messaging; urgent issues are handled by video chat. (support.healthtap.com)

My quick pick:

If you want, I can narrow this to the cheapest, best for no insurance, or best for prescription refills/UTIs/rashes.

What are the best urgent care telemedicine services for same-day care? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Here are some of the best same-day urgent care telemedicine options:

  1. Doctor On Demand (by Included Health)
    • Strong for quick video visits with board-certified doctors
    • Good for colds, flu, UTIs, rashes, allergies, pink eye, etc.
    • Often easy to book same-day
  2. Teladoc Health
    • One of the biggest names in virtual urgent care
    • 24/7 access in many plans
    • Good if you want broad insurance support
  3. MDLIVE
    • Fast access to urgent care, plus behavioral health and dermatology
    • Often covered by insurance and employer plans
    • Usually offers same-day appointments
  4. PlushCare
    • Good option if you want more continuity and primary-care-style follow-up
    • Same-day video visits are common
    • Can prescribe many medications when appropriate
  5. Amazon One Medical
    • Excellent if available in your area and you have membership access
    • Great app experience and fast scheduling
    • Best for people who want virtual + in-person care access

Best overall picks:

  • Doctor On Demand for easy same-day urgent care
  • Teladoc for broad insurance/network access
  • PlushCare for more follow-up-focused care

Important: Use urgent care telemedicine for minor to moderate issues. Go to the ER or call emergency services for chest pain, trouble breathing, severe bleeding, stroke symptoms, or major injury.

If you want, I can also rank these by cost, insurance acceptance, or fastest access.

retrieval Mentioned

Here are the strongest same-day urgent care telemedicine options in the U.S. right now:

  • Sesame — best for cash-pay value; virtual urgent care is available 24/7, in all 50 states, with prices as low as $34 and same-day prescription pickup available. (sesamecare.com)
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — best if you want a mainstream retail-clinic option; it’s available within minutes, 24/7, and accepts most insurance. Self-pay / plan pricing can be as low as $0–$55 for 24/7 care depending on plan. (cvs.com)
  • MD Live Urgent Care — best if you already have it through an employer/insurer; it offers on-demand care in minutes for non-emergency conditions and advertises same-day appointments for some services. (mdlive.com)
  • CareNow Virtual Visits — good if you’re near a CareNow network; self-pay is a set $75 telehealth urgent care visit. (carenow.com)
  • Teladoc Health 24/7 Care — best for broad coverage through plans/employers; Teladoc says its flagship virtual urgent care is available 24/7 for non-emergency needs. (ir.teladoc.com)

My quick pick:

  • Best overall for most people: Sesame
  • Best with insurance / employer coverage: CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care or MD Live
  • Best simple flat cash price: CareNow if available in your area. (sesamecare.com)

If you want, I can narrow this down by your insurance, state, or whether you need help with things like UTI, sinus infection, pink eye, rash, or flu symptoms.

What are the best urgent care telemedicine services for travelers? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Best options for travelers:

  1. Air Doctor — best for international travelers
    • Lets you find local doctors/urgent care-style visits in many countries
    • Good for quick appointments while abroad
  2. Teladoc Health — best all-around U.S. telemedicine
    • 24/7 general medical visits
    • Good for common urgent issues, prescriptions, and travel continuity
  3. MDLIVE — best for fast urgent-care-style video visits
    • Often quick to access
    • Good for colds, UTIs, rashes, allergies, etc.
  4. Doctor On Demand by Included Health — best for quality and ease of use
    • Strong app experience
    • Good for travelers needing reliable same-day care
  5. Amwell — best if your insurer already offers it
    • Widely covered through employer/health plans
    • Convenient if you’re already enrolled
  6. Global Rescue — best for remote/international travel support
    • Not just telemedicine; also travel medical assistance/evac support
    • Great for hiking, cruises, safari, or remote destinations

My quick pick:

  • U.S. travel: Teladoc or MDLIVE
  • International travel: Air Doctor + Global Rescue
  • If you have insurance benefits: use whichever your plan includes first

If you want, I can also give you the best options by destination (U.S., Europe, Asia, cruises, remote areas).

retrieval Mentioned

For travelers, the best urgent-care telemedicine options are usually:

  1. GeoBlue / Global TeleMD — best for international travelers. It’s built for travel, includes 24/7 telemedicine, and is tied to a global doctor network through Teladoc. (geobluetravelinsurance.com)
  2. Generali Travel Protection telemedicine — best if you want telemedicine bundled into a travel-insurance plan. Generali says its plans include 24/7 telemedicine and can help connect you with U.S.-licensed physicians for non-emergency issues. (generalitravelinsurance.com)
  3. Teladoc Health 24/7 Care — best general-purpose urgent care telehealth. Teladoc says it provides licensed care 24/7 for non-emergency needs, including while traveling. (teladochealth.com)
  4. Amwell Online Urgent Care — best straightforward pay-per-visit option in the U.S. Amwell says it supports travelers, is available 24/7, and lists a $69 visit on its public urgent-care page. (go.amwell.com)
  5. Global Rescue TotalCare — best if you want telehealth plus higher-end travel assistance/evacuation support. Global Rescue advertises 24/7 telehealth alongside medical advisory and rescue services. (globalrescuetravel.com)

My quick pick:

A few caveats: these services are for non-emergency issues only, and travel telemedicine can depend on where you are physically located and what’s covered by your plan. For chest pain, trouble breathing, severe injury, or stroke symptoms, use local emergency care instead. (teladochealth.com)

If you want, I can make a best-by-trip-type shortlist:

  • domestic road trip
  • international vacation
  • cruise
  • business travel
  • budget/self-pay
What are the best low-cost urgent care telemedicine services? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Here are some of the best low-cost urgent care telemedicine options:

  • Sesame Care — often the cheapest cash-pay option; visits can start around $25–$50 depending on the clinician.
  • Amazon One Medical — strong quality, easy scheduling; $49 pay-per-visit for nonmembers in many cases.
  • Teladoc Health — widely available through many employers/insurers; out-of-pocket pricing is often $75+.
  • Amwell — good all-purpose urgent care; prices commonly $69–$99 without insurance.
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — convenient for common issues; pricing is usually competitive and may be covered by insurance.
  • K Health — low-cost for simple urgent issues, especially if you want chat-based care; subscription plans can be cheaper than one-off visits.

Best budget picks:

  1. Sesame Care
  2. Amazon One Medical
  3. CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care

If you want, I can also narrow this down by no insurance, same-day availability, or prescription needs.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you want low-cost self-pay urgent care telemedicine, the best options I found are:

  1. Sesame — usually the cheapest. Virtual urgent care is advertised as low as $34, with telehealth visits from $37+. Good if you want the lowest upfront price and don’t need insurance billing. (sesamecare.com)
  2. K Health$73 one-time urgent care visit with 1 week of follow-up chats, or $49/month for membership. Solid if you may need follow-up. (khealth.com)
  3. Amwell — urgent care visits are $69 self-pay. Good middle-ground option. (go.amwell.com)
  4. CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — typically $107–$164 for common illnesses and $74–$139 for mental health if you’re paying out of pocket. Usually not the cheapest, but convenient and widely recognized. (cvs.com)
  5. Doctor On Demand / Included Health$99 for a 15-minute urgent care visit if uninsured. Better if your insurance covers it, since many visits may be $0 depending on benefits. (doctorondemand.com)

Best picks:

  • Cheapest: Sesame
  • Best for follow-up: K Health
  • Best “plain self-pay” alternative: Amwell

If you want, I can turn this into a 1-minute decision guide based on whether you have insurance, need a prescription, or just want the absolute lowest price.

What are the best urgent care telemedicine services with licensed doctors? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Some of the best urgent-care-style telemedicine services with licensed doctors are:

  • Teladoc Health — broad availability, 24/7 virtual urgent care in many areas
  • Amwell — solid urgent care option; often covered by insurance
  • MDLIVE — quick access to board-certified doctors for common acute issues
  • PlushCare — strong option if you want more continuity and follow-up care
  • Doctor On Demand (now part of Included Health) — reliable, easy-to-use urgent care visits
  • Amazon One Medical — good if you already use Amazon/One Medical and want same-day virtual care

Best overall picks:

  • Teladoc for availability
  • PlushCare for higher-touch care
  • Amwell if you want insurance-friendly options

Look for:

  • Board-certified / licensed doctors
  • 24/7 or same-day visits
  • Prescription support
  • Insurance acceptance
  • Video + chat options

Go to in-person urgent care or ER instead if you have: chest pain, trouble breathing, severe dehydration, fainting, stroke symptoms, or major bleeding.

If you want, I can also rank these by price, insurance coverage, or fastest access.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you want urgent-care-style telemedicine with licensed doctors, these are the strongest options in the U.S.:

  1. Teladoc — best all-around for broad availability; it offers 24/7 access to U.S.-licensed doctors by phone or video. (teladoc.com)
  2. MDLIVE — best for urgent care specifically; it says its board-certified doctors are licensed in your state and urgent care is available 24/7/365. (mdlive.com)
  3. Amwell — best if you want a traditional telehealth platform; its online urgent care connects you to board-certified doctors and shows you only doctors licensed in your state. (patients.amwell.com)
  4. Doctor On Demand — good for fast virtual urgent care; it offers 24/7 access to a board-certified doctor or nurse practitioner for non-emergency issues. (doctorondemand.com)
  5. Urgentcare.com Telemedicine — a simpler direct urgent-care option; it says you get a licensed provider in minutes. (urgentcare.com)

My quick pick:

  • Best overall: Teladoc
  • Best urgent-care focus: MDLIVE
  • Best if your insurance already offers it: Amwell or Teladoc (teladoc.com)

If you want, I can also rank these by price, insurance acceptance, prescription support, or fastest same-day access.

What are the best urgent care telemedicine services for women’s health issues? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Here are solid telemedicine options for women’s health urgent-but-not-emergency issues:

Best overall
  • Maven Clinic — strong for women’s health, birth control, UTIs, STI concerns, pelvic/vaginal symptoms, postpartum issues.
  • Planned Parenthood Direct — good for birth control, STI treatment/testing guidance, yeast/BV symptoms, and general reproductive health questions.
  • Wisp — fast/easy for UTIs, yeast infections, BV, herpes, birth control, and some STI-related care.
Good for broader urgent care + women’s health
  • PlushCare — real doctors, good if you want a more traditional urgent-care feel; can handle UTIs, prescription refills, vaginal symptoms, and general urgent issues.
  • Teladoc — broad urgent care coverage, useful for quick visits and common infections.
  • Amwell — similar to Teladoc; decent for same-day medical visits.
Best for specific women’s health needs
  • Nurx — excellent for birth control, STI testing/treatment support, and some UTI/yeast/BV care.
  • Hers — good for birth control and some sexual health needs; more convenient than comprehensive.
  • HealthTap — good if you want fast clinician access and ongoing messaging.
Quick pick by problem
  • UTI / yeast infection / BV: Wisp or Planned Parenthood Direct
  • Birth control: Nurx, Maven Clinic, or Hers
  • STI concern: Planned Parenthood Direct, Nurx, or Maven Clinic
  • Need a doctor today: PlushCare or Teladoc
Go to in-person urgent care or ER if you have:
  • severe pelvic/abdominal pain
  • fever
  • fainting/dizziness
  • heavy bleeding
  • pregnancy + pain/bleeding
  • possible ectopic pregnancy
  • severe allergic reaction

If you want, I can narrow this down to the best option for your specific symptom (UTI, yeast/BV, birth control, STI, pelvic pain, etc.).

retrieval Mentioned

For urgent but not emergency women’s health issues, my top picks are:

  1. Twentyeight Health — best for women’s-health-specific urgent care. It currently offers fast care for UTIs, BV, yeast infections, and emergency contraception, with prescriptions often sent in 4–6 hours. (twentyeighthealth.com)
  2. PlushCare — best all-around if you want broad virtual primary/urgent care plus women’s health. It treats UTIs, yeast infections, STIs, birth control, emergency contraception, PCOS, and endometriosis, and offers same-day online visits. (plushcare.com)
  3. Amwell — best if you want a larger telehealth network or insurance-friendly option. Its women’s health clinicians handle birth control, PMS, pelvic pain, STIs, UTIs, mastitis, endometriosis, and vulvodynia. (patients.amwell.com)
  4. Nurx — best for reproductive/sexual health and fast treatment. It offers UTI treatment, birth control, emergency contraception, STI testing, and related women’s health care. (nurx.com)
  5. Teladoc Health — best for 24/7 general urgent care that can cover common non-emergency symptoms. Teladoc’s 24/7 care is for non-emergency urgent care with 24/7 access and broad symptom coverage. (teladochealth.com)

Important: Telemedicine is not the right choice for severe vaginal bleeding, possible ectopic pregnancy symptoms (pelvic/abdominal/lower-back pain), or other emergencies—those need in-person care right away. (acog.org)

If you want, I can also give you the best pick by issue (UTI, yeast infection, BV, birth control, STI, postpartum, menopause).

What are the best urgent care telemedicine services for respiratory infections? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For respiratory infections (cold, flu, COVID, bronchitis, sinus infection), the best urgent-care telemedicine services are usually:

  1. Teladoc Health
    • Broad nationwide availability
    • Good for quick same-day visits and prescriptions
    • Strong option if you want a well-known, simple urgent-care experience
  2. MDLIVE
    • Good for urgent care + primary care style visits
    • Often covered by many employers/insurers
    • Solid choice for sinus/bronchitis-type symptoms
  3. Doctor On Demand (Included Health)
    • Very good clinician quality and easy app experience
    • Often strong for respiratory symptoms, especially if you may need work notes or follow-up
  4. PlushCare
    • Good if you want a more “real doctor” feel and easier continuity
    • Useful for lingering cough, sinus infection, asthma flare questions
  5. CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care
    • Convenient if you already use CVS/MinuteClinic
    • Good for common infections and prescription support

Best overall: Teladoc or Doctor On Demand Best for continuity/follow-up: PlushCare Best if insurance-covered: MDLIVE

What telemedicine is good for
  • Flu/COVID evaluation
  • Sinus infection symptoms
  • Mild bronchitis
  • Sore throat/cough
  • Prescription discussions
Go to in-person urgent care or ER if you have
  • Trouble breathing
  • Chest pain
  • Blue lips
  • Oxygen below normal
  • High fever that won’t come down
  • Confusion
  • Worsening symptoms after 7–10 days

If you want, I can also give you the best telemedicine option based on your insurance or by symptom (cough, fever, sinus pressure, sore throat).

retrieval Mentioned

For respiratory infections (colds, flu-like illness, sinus infection, sore throat, mild bronchitis/URI), the best telemedicine urgent-care options right now are:

  1. One Medical (Amazon) — best overall if you want fast video/chat care plus a real primary-care record. It offers 24/7 on-demand virtual care, Treat Me Now, and lists colds/flu and respiratory infections among treatable issues. (onemedical.com)
  2. CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — best for convenience and insurance-friendliness. It’s available 24/7, accepts most insurance, and explicitly treats coughs, colds, flu, strep, sinus infections, and other common illnesses. (cvs.com)
  3. Teladoc Health 24/7 Care — strong option if your employer/health plan includes it. Teladoc says it covers cold, flu, COVID-19, sinusitis, sore throat, and asthma flare-ups. (teladochealth.com)
  4. K Health Urgent Care — good low-cost self-pay option. K Health offers 24/7 urgent care in 48 states and treats upper respiratory infection; it notes it generally doesn’t accept insurance for memberships or one-time urgent-care visits (with limited exceptions). (khealth.com)
  5. GoHealth Urgent Care Telemedicine — good if you want an urgent-care style telehealth visit. It says its virtual providers can treat respiratory infection, colds, flu, sinus infections, and sore throat. (gohealthuc.com)

My quick pick:

  • Best overall: One Medical
  • Best for most people / insurance: CVS MinuteClinic
  • Best if covered by employer: Teladoc
  • Best budget self-pay: K Health

Go to in-person urgent care or the ER instead if you have difficulty breathing, chest pain, or severe worsening symptoms; CVS and One Medical both warn against using virtual care for emergencies. (cvs.com)

If you want, I can also rank these by price, insurance, or best for kids.

What are the best urgent care telemedicine services available 24/7? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Here are some of the best 24/7 urgent-care telemedicine services:

  1. Teladoc Health
    • Broad availability, strong for everyday urgent issues
    • Good for colds, flu, sinus infections, rashes, UTIs, allergies
  2. MDLIVE
    • Reliable 24/7 urgent care visits
    • Often works with many insurance plans and employer benefits
  3. Amwell
    • Solid nationwide telehealth option
    • Good access to board-certified doctors for non-emergency issues
  4. PlushCare
    • High-quality physicians, easy scheduling, follow-up care
    • Best if you may need ongoing primary care too
  5. Doctor on Demand / Included Health
    • Strong urgent care + behavioral health offering
    • Often available through employers/health plans

Best overall picks:

  • Teladoc Health for broad access
  • MDLIVE for convenience and insurance compatibility
  • PlushCare for higher-touch follow-up care

Use urgent care telemedicine for:

  • Fever, cough, flu, COVID symptoms
  • Minor infections
  • Allergies
  • Mild stomach issues
  • Rashes
  • Pink eye

Go to ER instead for:

  • Chest pain
  • Trouble breathing
  • Stroke symptoms
  • Severe bleeding
  • Major injury
  • Confusion or fainting

If you want, I can also rank these by price, insurance acceptance, or best for kids.

retrieval Mentioned

Here are the strongest 24/7 urgent care telemedicine options in the U.S. right now:

  • Teladoc Health (24/7 Care / HealthiestYou) — broad national virtual urgent care, 24/7, with U.S.-licensed providers. Good if your employer/health plan includes it. (teladochealth.com)
  • MDLIVE — one of the biggest mainstream options; urgent care is available 24/7/365, and they also offer asynchronous “E-Treatment.” (mdlive.com)
  • Amwell — strong national virtual urgent care; available 24/7/365 through its urgent care services and partner plans. (providers.amwell.com)
  • WellNow Virtual Care — available 24/7, with transparent self-pay pricing listed on the site. (wellnow.com)

Best overall: Teladoc or MDLIVE if you want the most established nationwide coverage. (mdlive.com) Best for self-pay simplicity: WellNow. (wellnow.com) Best if your insurance/employer already offers it: Amwell, Teladoc, or MDLIVE. (providers.amwell.com)

If you want, I can also narrow this down by price, insurance, pediatrics, or fastest prescription turnaround.

What are the best alternatives to a national virtual urgent care network? comparison
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Best alternatives depend on what you need, but these are the strongest options:

  • Teladoc Health — biggest all-around virtual urgent care network; good if you want broad availability and insurance coverage.
  • Amwell — solid on-demand urgent care plus access to specialists; often used by health plans.
  • MDLIVE — good for common urgent issues, mental health, and general medical visits.
  • Doctor on Demand (now part of Included Health) — strong video visits and generally easy to use.
  • PlushCare — better if you want ongoing primary care plus occasional urgent visits.
  • Sesame — best low-cost cash-pay option; transparent pricing and no subscription required.
  • Your health system’s virtual urgent care — often the best choice if you want your records all in one place and easier follow-up.
  • Retail clinic telehealth like CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care or K Health — convenient for routine issues and minor illnesses.

If you want, I can rank these by cheapest, best for insurance, best for kids, or best for same-day care.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you want alternatives to a national virtual urgent care network, the best options are usually:

  • Teladoc — broad national coverage, 24/7 doctor access, and urgent/non-emergency care. (teladoc.com)
  • MDLIVE — strong urgent care offering, 24/7/365, with upfront pricing and many insurance partners. (mdlive.com)
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — good if you already use CVS/MinuteClinic and want integrated virtual + in-person follow-up options. (cvs.com)
  • Amwell — nationwide virtual urgent care, often embedded through health plans and health systems. (providers.amwell.com)
  • Sesame — best if you want cash-pay, transparent pricing, and access to virtual primary care/urgent care options across all 50 states. (sesamecare.com)
  • GoodRx Care — a lower-cost telehealth option for routine issues, though availability can vary by state/service. (goodrx.com)

Quick pick:

If you want, I can narrow this to the best 3 based on your insurance, state, and whether you want the cheapest option.

What are the best alternatives to a telemedicine urgent care app? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Best alternatives depend on what you need instead of an urgent-care telemedicine app:

  1. In-person urgent care
    • Best for: strep tests, X-rays, stitches, IVs, physical exams.
    • Examples: CityMD, Concentra, WellNow Urgent Care, NextCare, Carbon Health.
  2. Primary care / same-day doctor visit
    • Best for: non-emergency issues that can wait a day or two.
    • Examples: One Medical, Kaiser Permanente, Cleveland Clinic, Mayo Clinic (if you’re already a patient).
  3. Retail clinic
    • Best for: minor illnesses, vaccines, simple screenings.
    • Examples: CVS MinuteClinic, Walgreens Healthcare Clinic, Walmart Health (where available).
  4. Nurse advice line
    • Best for: deciding whether you need urgent care or ER.
    • Examples: your insurer’s 24/7 nurse line, Teladoc Nurse (if offered), Aetna 24/7 Nurse Line, Blue Cross nurse line.
  5. Virtual primary care
    • Best for: ongoing care, meds, follow-ups, chronic conditions.
    • Examples: Amazon One Medical, K Health, PlushCare, MDLive, Amwell.
  6. ER / emergency services
    • Best for: chest pain, trouble breathing, stroke symptoms, severe bleeding, confusion, major injury.
    • Call 911 or go to the nearest ER.

If you want, I can also recommend the best alternative based on your situation—for example, cheap, fastest, for kids, or for mental health.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you want alternatives to a telemedicine urgent care app, the best picks are:

  1. MDLIVE — strong all-around urgent care option with 24/7/365 access, on-demand visits, and E-Treatment for some low-acuity issues. (mdlive.com)
  2. Amwell — good if you want a broad virtual-care platform; it offers online urgent care and 24/7 provider access. (go.amwell.com)
  3. Sesame — best for cash-pay, upfront pricing; it says you can book same-day urgent care visits, with telehealth available in all 50 states and prices starting as low as $34. (sesamecare.com)
  4. PlushCare — good if you want urgent care plus ongoing primary care; it offers around-the-clock video visits and accepts many insurance plans, though Medicaid is not currently accepted. (plushcare.com)
  5. CVS MinuteClinic — best if you want in-person walk-in care instead of video-only care; CVS says MinuteClinic offers in-person or virtual visits inside CVS Pharmacy locations. (cvs.com)

If you don’t want an app at all, the best non-app alternatives are:

  • Your primary care doctor for same-day or next-day visits. (aafp.org)
  • An urgent care clinic for problems that need same-day in-person evaluation. (medlineplus.gov)
  • The ER / 911 for severe symptoms or emergencies. (medlineplus.gov)

If you want, I can narrow these down by price, insurance, or fastest access.

Which urgent care telemedicine services are better than a hospital virtual visit? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Often yes—dedicated urgent care telemedicine is better than a hospital virtual visit for quick, low-acuity issues because it’s usually faster, cheaper, and more focused on urgent care.

Good options:

  • Carbon Health Virtual Urgent Care — one of the best for “true urgent care” style visits.
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — solid for common infections, rashes, pink eye, etc.
  • MDLIVE Urgent Care — broad availability and decent turnaround.
  • Doctor On Demand / Included Health — good quality, easy scheduling.
  • Teladoc Urgent Care — widely available, convenient through many employers/insurers.
  • Amwell Urgent Care — strong hospital-system ties in some areas.

Usually better than a hospital virtual visit when you have:

  • UTI symptoms
  • sore throat / strep concern
  • sinus infection
  • pink eye
  • mild asthma flare
  • simple rashes
  • COVID/flu-type symptoms
  • minor skin infections

Hospital virtual visits are better if:

  • you need care tied to your hospital system
  • you may need labs, imaging, or follow-up with the same network
  • you have more complex medical history

Go in person / ER now if:

  • chest pain, trouble breathing, stroke symptoms, severe allergic reaction
  • high fever with confusion
  • severe dehydration
  • major injury

If you tell me your insurance and state/country, I can suggest the best specific service available to you.

retrieval Not mentioned

For simple, same-day non-emergency issues, these urgent-care telemedicine options are often better than a generic hospital virtual visit because they’re built for speed, low cost, and quick treatment:

  • UrgentCare.com Telemedicine — flat $35/visit and says you can get a provider in minutes, with prescriptions if needed. (urgentcare.com)
  • WellNow Virtual Urgent Care — works with all insurance plans and has a $75 self-pay option; it’s designed for common non-emergency problems like UTIs, minor injuries, and flu symptoms. (wellnow.com)
  • TGH Virtual Health — offers virtual urgent care 8 a.m.–8 p.m., 7 days a week, with an average wait time under 5 minutes and prescription orders sent to your pharmacy. (tgh.org)
  • UChicago Medicine Virtual Urgent Care — has 24/7 on-demand urgent care, accepts most insurance plans, and covers all ages for minor illnesses. (uchicagomedicine.org)

Best pick by use case:

If you want, I can rank these for your state and insurance.

What are the best alternatives to video-only urgent care services? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Best alternatives to video-only urgent care are:

  1. In-person urgent care
    • Best for: strep tests, X-rays, stitches, ear infections, rashes, UTIs, dehydration.
    • Examples: CityMD, Concentra, Carbon Health Urgent Care, CVS MinuteClinic, Walgreens Health Clinic.
  2. Same-day primary care
    • Best for: non-emergency issues when you want continuity with your doctor.
    • Examples: One Medical, Oak Street Health, Kaiser Permanente same-day visits.
  3. Hybrid telehealth + in-person networks
    • Best for: start with a video visit, then go in if needed.
    • Examples: Carbon Health, Teladoc, Amwell, MDLIVE.
  4. Nurse advice lines
    • Best for: deciding whether you need urgent care at all.
    • Examples: UnitedHealthcare NurseLine, Blue Cross nurse lines, your health system’s after-hours nurse line.
  5. Retail clinics
    • Best for: simple issues like flu, COVID testing, minor infections, vaccines.
    • Examples: CVS MinuteClinic, Walgreens, Kroger Little Clinic.
  6. At-home testing + telehealth
    • Best for: common infections or monitoring.
    • Examples: Visby Medical, iHealth, Flowflex tests combined with Teladoc or Amwell.

If you tell me your symptoms and location, I can suggest the best option nearby.

retrieval Not mentioned

Best alternatives depend on how sick you are, but the usual step-up options are:

  • In-person urgent care / walk-in clinic — best for issues that need an exam, swabs, stitches, X-rays, or same-day treatment. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Primary care / same-day office visit — best if you’re stable and can get seen by your regular clinician; they often know your history and can coordinate follow-up. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Retail clinic / pharmacy clinic — good for very minor, straightforward problems like simple sore throats, UTI symptoms, rashes, or vaccine-related needs. (blogs.cdc.gov)
  • Emergency department / 911 — for chest pain, trouble breathing, stroke symptoms, major injury, severe allergic reaction, overdose, seizure, or anything life-threatening. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Nurse advice line / tele-triage — useful when you’re unsure where to go and just need guidance on the right care setting. HHS notes telehealth can also be used for triage to decide whether ED care is needed. (telehealth.hhs.gov)

If you want, I can turn this into a quick “go here for this symptom” cheat sheet.

Which is better: chat-based urgent care or video-based urgent care? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Neither is always “better” — it depends on the problem.

  • Chat-based urgent care is better for:
    • quick questions
    • simple rashes, cold symptoms, UTIs, refills
    • when you want speed and don’t need a visual exam
  • Video-based urgent care is better for:
    • anything that needs looking at: rash, eye issue, swelling, breathing concerns
    • better diagnosis quality
    • when you may need a prescription or clearer triage

Best overall: video-based urgent care, because the clinician can actually see you.

Good options:

  • Teladoc
  • Amwell
  • Doctor On Demand
  • CVS MinuteClinic Video Visit

If you want, I can also tell you which is best for kids, UTIs, rash, or sore throat.

retrieval Not mentioned

Usually, video-based urgent care is better for most acute issues because the clinician can see you, assess breathing, rashes, swelling, work of breathing, and overall appearance in real time. HHS describes video visits as a standard form of synchronous telehealth and notes they’re used for urgent-care-type problems like fever, sore throat, and pain. (telehealth.hhs.gov)

Chat-based urgent care is better when the problem is simple, you mainly need quick guidance, or the visit is more like an e-visit/triage step than a full exam. HHS and CDC describe messaging/chat as asynchronous or text-based telehealth, which is useful but less able to support a direct physical assessment. (telehealth.hhs.gov)

Rule of thumb:

  • Choose video if you have a rash, eye issue, cough, fever, sinus symptoms, sore throat, UTI symptoms, or anything where seeing the problem helps. (telehealth.hhs.gov)
  • Choose chat if you just need advice, follow-up, or help deciding whether you need in-person care. (telehealth.hhs.gov)

If you have chest pain, trouble breathing, severe bleeding, fainting, stroke symptoms, or a major injury, skip both and seek emergency care immediately. (telehealth.hhs.gov)

If you want, I can also give you a “chat vs video” decision guide by symptom.

What are the best alternatives to a subscription-based urgent care telemedicine service? comparison
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Best alternatives depend on what you need, but these are the main options:

  1. Pay-per-visit telehealth
    • Amwell, MDLIVE, Teladoc Health
    • Good if you only use care occasionally and don’t want a subscription.
    • Usually cheaper than many subscription plans if you visit rarely.
  2. Your health insurance telehealth benefit
    • Many plans include virtual urgent care at no extra cost or a low copay.
    • Check your insurer’s app/site: UnitedHealthcare, Aetna, Cigna, Blue Cross Blue Shield plans often have this.
  3. Retail clinics
    • CVS MinuteClinic, Walgreens Healthcare Clinic, Kroger Little Clinic
    • Good for minor issues like sore throat, UTIs, rashes, vaccines, and basic testing.
  4. Local urgent care centers
    • Best for problems needing an in-person exam, X-ray, stitches, or testing.
    • Often faster and cheaper than the ER.
  5. Primary care with same-day/next-day visits
    • Best if you have an established doctor and want continuity of care.
    • Often the best value for non-emergencies.
  6. 24/7 nurse advice lines
    • Often included with insurance or employer benefits.
    • Good for deciding whether you need telehealth, urgent care, or ER.
  7. Cash-pay virtual urgent care
    • Some systems offer one-time visits without a membership, like K Health, Doctor On Demand, or local hospital telehealth programs.

Best value for most people:

  • If you rarely need care: pay-per-visit telehealth
  • If you have insurance: your plan’s telehealth benefit
  • If you need testing or treatment in person: CVS MinuteClinic or a local urgent care

If you want, I can compare these by price, speed, or what conditions they cover.

retrieval Not mentioned

Best alternatives depend on what you need, but these are usually the top options:

  • Your primary care doctor’s same-day/next-day visit — best for continuity, refills, and follow-up. Many health systems now offer virtual or urgent appointments through the PCP office. (my.clevelandclinic.org)
  • Retail clinics (like CVS MinuteClinic) — best for minor illnesses and simple injuries, and often cheaper/easier than urgent care. They’re meant for non-emergency issues, not serious problems. (cvs.com)
  • Health-system virtual urgent care / on-demand visits — best if you want telemedicine without a subscription; examples include Mayo Clinic Primary Care On Demand and Cleveland Clinic virtual visits. (mayoclinic.org)
  • In-person urgent care / express care — best when you may need tests, stitches, an exam, or imaging. (my.clevelandclinic.org)
  • Emergency room — best for chest pain, stroke symptoms, severe injuries, trouble breathing, or other life-threatening issues. (my.clevelandclinic.org)

If you want, I can also rank the best alternatives by lowest cost, fastest access, or best for families.

What are the best alternatives to employer-sponsored virtual urgent care? comparison
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Good alternatives to employer-sponsored virtual urgent care:

  • Direct-to-consumer telehealth
    • Teladoc Health
    • Amwell
    • Doctor On Demand (now included under Included Health in some plans)
    • MDLive
    • PlushCare
    • Sesame (often cheaper self-pay)
  • Retail clinics
    • CVS MinuteClinic
    • Walgreens Healthcare Clinic (availability varies)
    • Great for minor infections, rashes, simple testing, vaccines.
  • Local urgent care centers
    • Best if you may need an exam, strep/flu/COVID testing, stitches, X-rays, or prescriptions.
  • Primary care telehealth
    • Many local PCPs offer video or same-day messaging through MyChart, K Health, or their own patient portals.
  • Nurse advice lines / care navigation
    • Often offered by insurers; can tell you whether you need urgent care, ER, or can wait.
  • Community health centers / federally qualified health centers
    • Good low-cost option if you’re uninsured or paying cash.

If you want, I can also rank these by lowest cost, fastest access, or best for common urgent symptoms.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you mean for minor, non-emergency problems, the best alternatives are usually:

  1. Your own primary care doctor / patient portal — best for continuity, meds, and follow-up.
  2. A retail clinic / convenience clinic — good for straightforward issues like sore throat, earache, UTI, rashes, and vaccines; AAFP says these should not replace coordinated primary care. (aafp.org)
  3. Cash-pay or insurance-covered local urgent care — best when you need same-day in-person evaluation, tests, or treatment.
  4. Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs) / community health centers — often the best low-cost option; HRSA says they provide care regardless of ability to pay and use sliding-fee discounts. (hrsa.gov)
  5. Your insurer’s nurse advice line / member telehealth — useful for triage and deciding where to go next. (blueshieldca.com)

If you want, I can also give you a “best option by symptom” cheat sheet (cold/flu, UTI, rash, injury, fever, etc.).

Which urgent care telemedicine services are better for prescriptions than walk-in clinics? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

For prescriptions, telemedicine is often better than walk-in clinics when the issue is straightforward (UTI symptoms, pink eye, sinus infection, cold sores, simple refills, etc.).

Best telemedicine options for prescriptions
  • PlushCare — strong for primary-care-style visits and prescription refills; good if you want an ongoing doctor.
  • Sesame — often cheapest cash-pay option; good for quick, same-day prescription visits.
  • Lemonaid Health — very streamlined for common conditions and some chronic med refills.
  • Teladoc — broad availability, easy access, good if your employer/insurance includes it.
  • Amwell — similar to Teladoc; solid for general urgent care visits.
  • K Health — fast chat-based visits; convenient for simple prescription needs.
Usually better than a walk-in clinic when:
  • You already know the problem
  • You need a common non-controlled prescription
  • You want faster access
  • You want home delivery or a same-day e-prescription
Walk-in clinics are better when:
  • You may need a physical exam, test, or procedure
  • You might need labs, strep/COVID/flu testing
  • The issue could be more serious or unclear
Important limitation

Most telemedicine urgent care services won’t prescribe controlled substances and may not handle anything that requires an in-person exam.

If you want, I can rank these by cheapest, fastest, or best for antibiotics/refills.

retrieval Not mentioned

If your goal is just to get a straightforward prescription fast, these telemedicine urgent care options are usually better than a walk-in clinic:

  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — strong for common illness prescriptions and refills; they’ll send meds to your pharmacy, but not controlled substances/pain meds. (cvs.com)
  • Amwell Online Urgent Care — good for video visits with e-prescribing; they note prescription refills and pharmacy selection, but exclude controlled substances and some other meds. (providers.amwell.com)
  • Teladoc 24/7 Care — good for non-emergency conditions where a prescription is medically necessary; they do not prescribe DEA controlled substances. (teladoc.com)
  • Doctor On Demand — can prescribe many meds after a clinician visit, but not controlled substances/pain meds. (doctorondemand.com)
  • Carbon Health Virtual Urgent Care — explicitly offers medication prescription refills. (carbonhealth.com)

Best overall for prescription convenience: 1) MinuteClinic Virtual Care 2) Amwell 3) Teladoc

When walk-in clinics are better: if you likely need a physical exam, swab, urine test, or a medication that’s commonly restricted online. CDC notes telemedicine works best when an in-person exam/test isn’t necessary. (cdc.gov)

If you want, I can narrow this to the best option for antibiotics, refills, UTIs, sinus infections, or anxiety meds.

What are the best alternatives to an app-based urgent care provider? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Best alternatives depend on how urgent it is:

  • Your primary care doctor’s same-day/next-day visit — best if it’s not severe.
  • Retail clinics like CVS MinuteClinic, Walgreens Healthcare Clinic, or Kaiser Permanente Urgent Care — good for minor infections, rashes, sprains, and basic labs.
  • Local urgent care centers — usually the closest substitute for app-based urgent care. Chains like CityMD, Concentra, NextCare, and MedExpress are common options.
  • Telehealth through your health plan — many insurers offer 24/7 video visits with real clinicians.
  • Nurse advice lines — useful for deciding whether you need urgent care or the ER.
  • Emergency room (ER) — for chest pain, trouble breathing, severe bleeding, stroke symptoms, or major injury.

If you want, I can also help you pick the best option by symptom or by your insurance/provider network.

retrieval Not mentioned

Best alternatives depend on how urgent it is:

  1. Same-day primary care / virtual primary care — best if you have a regular doctor and the issue is minor to moderate. Many systems offer on-demand video visits for things like sore throat, rash, cough, UTI, or sinus symptoms, and can order labs or refer you if needed. (communityhealth.mayoclinic.org)
  2. Retail clinic or urgent care center — best for walk-in treatment of minor illnesses and injuries when you want in-person care. Urgent care centers are designed for unscheduled care outside a traditional emergency department. (acep.org)
  3. Telehealth/nurse triage line — best if you want quick guidance before deciding where to go. HHS notes telehealth can be used through web/phone-based services for medical advice and care. (mayoclinic.org)
  4. Emergency department — best for true emergencies like chest pain, trouble breathing, severe bleeding, or major head trauma. (acep.org)

If you want, I can also rank the best options by cost, speed, or for kids vs adults.

What are the best alternatives to a 24/7 virtual urgent care service? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Best alternatives, depending on what you need:

  1. Your primary care doctor’s same-day/after-hours line
    • Best for: non-emergencies, follow-up, meds, chronic issues
    • Ask if they offer same-day visits or an after-hours nurse line
  2. Retail clinics
    • Examples: CVS MinuteClinic, Walgreens Healthcare Clinic, Kaiser Urgent Care
    • Best for: sore throat, UTI, minor rashes, pink eye, vaccines
  3. In-person urgent care centers
    • Best for: things that need quick exam/testing but aren’t ER-level
    • Good for: sprains, cuts, fevers, infections, X-rays
  4. Insurance nurse advice line
    • Often included with plans
    • Best for: deciding whether you need urgent care, ER, or home care
  5. Direct telehealth memberships
    • Examples: Doctor On Demand, Teladoc, Amwell, Amazon One Medical
    • Best for: on-demand video visits without a full urgent care subscription
  6. Community health centers / FQHCs
    • Best for: lower-cost care, especially if you’re uninsured or underinsured
  7. Emergency room or 911
    • Use for: chest pain, trouble breathing, stroke symptoms, severe bleeding, confusion, severe allergic reaction

If you want, I can also rank the best low-cost alternatives or the best options for kids, travel, or mental health.

retrieval Not mentioned

Best alternatives depend on what you need:

  • Your primary care doctor (same-day or next-day visit): best for non-emergencies when you want continuity and your full history considered. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Nurse advice line / on-call clinician: good when you’re unsure where to go and need triage. MedlinePlus notes many practices forward after-hours calls to an on-call provider or nurse hotline. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Urgent care clinic: best for problems that aren’t life-threatening but can’t wait, like minor cuts, sprains, sore throat, earache, low fever, or limited rashes. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Emergency room / 911: for life-threatening or potentially disabling symptoms, such as trouble breathing, severe chest pain, stroke symptoms, seizures, overdose, or severe allergic reaction. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Patient portal / e-visit / secure message: good for simple issues, refills, results, and quick follow-ups without needing a live 24/7 urgent-care-style visit. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Scheduled telehealth with your own clinician: often the best virtual alternative because it preserves continuity better than a one-off urgent care visit. (aafp.org)

If you want, I can turn this into a “which option should I use?” cheat sheet.

How do I get treated for a UTI without going to urgent care? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

You can often get treated without urgent care by using:

  1. Primary care / same-day telehealth
    • Call your regular doctor and ask for a same-day visit or telehealth UTI visit.
    • Many clinics can send a prescription after a quick symptom review.
  2. Online/virtual care
    • Services like Teladoc, Amwell, Sesame, K Health, or your health system’s app can often prescribe antibiotics if it’s a straightforward UTI.
  3. MinuteClinic / retail clinic
    • CVS MinuteClinic or Walgreens Healthcare Clinic may be cheaper and faster than urgent care.
  4. Pharmacy test kits (not treatment)
    • An OTC dipstick like AZO Test Strips or Rite Aid/Walgreens UTI test strips can support suspicion, but you still need a clinician for antibiotics.
What you can do now
  • Hydrate
  • Use AZO Urinary Pain Relief (phenazopyridine) for burning/urgency for up to 2 days
    • It does not treat the infection
    • It turns urine orange
  • For pain/fever: ibuprofen (Advil/Motrin) or acetaminophen (Tylenol) if you can take them
Go to urgent care / ER now if you have:
  • Fever
  • Back/flank pain
  • Vomiting
  • Blood in urine
  • Pregnancy
  • Male UTI
  • Kidney disease
  • Symptoms not improving within 24–48 hours

If you want, I can help you find the best non-urgent option near you or tell you which telehealth service is most likely to prescribe quickly.

retrieval Not mentioned

You usually need a clinician to confirm a UTI and prescribe antibiotics, but you do not have to go to urgent care specifically. A few options:

  • Call your primary care doctor and ask for a same-day or next-day sick visit.
  • Use telehealth/virtual urgent care if they can prescribe after reviewing your symptoms.
  • If you have a gynecologist/urologist, contact them.
  • If your symptoms are severe or you have red flags, you may need in-person care instead. (niddk.nih.gov)

What usually treats a bacterial bladder infection:

  • Antibiotics prescribed by a health professional.
  • Drink more water.
  • OTC pain relievers like ibuprofen or acetaminophen may be recommended.
  • A heating pad can help with discomfort. (niddk.nih.gov)

Go in promptly / don’t wait if you have fever, back/flank pain, vomiting, confusion, blood in the urine, are pregnant, are a man with symptoms, or feel very ill—those can mean a kidney infection or a more complicated UTI. (niddk.nih.gov)

If you want, I can help you figure out whether your symptoms sound like a simple bladder UTI or something that needs urgent care.

How can I see a doctor quickly for a sinus infection? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Fastest options:

  1. Telehealth today
    • Try Teladoc, Amwell, Doctor On Demand, or Amazon Clinic.
    • Good if you just need a quick diagnosis and maybe a prescription.
  2. Urgent care
    • Walk in or book online at CVS MinuteClinic, CityMD, Carbon Health, Concentra, or a local urgent care.
    • Best if you want to be seen the same day.
  3. Primary care “same-day” visit
    • Call your doctor’s office and say: “I think I have a sinus infection and need the soonest available appointment.”

Go now / ER if you have:

  • trouble breathing
  • swelling around the eyes
  • severe headache or stiff neck
  • confusion
  • high fever that won’t come down

If you want, I can help you choose the fastest option based on your ZIP code and insurance.

retrieval Not mentioned

Fastest options:

  1. Telehealth / video visit — often same day; good for sinus symptoms.
  2. Urgent care clinic — usually no appointment, seen within hours.
  3. Primary care same-day sick visit — call early and ask for a cancellation slot.
  4. Retail clinic (CVS MinuteClinic, Walgreens, etc.) — if available near you.

Go today / ASAP if you have:

  • fever that’s high or worsening
  • severe facial pain/swelling
  • symptoms >10 days or getting better then worse
  • trouble breathing
  • swelling around the eyes
  • confusion, stiff neck, or severe headache

If you want, I can help you find the fastest option near you.

How do I get a prescription for a minor infection today? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Best way to get one today:

  1. Use same-day urgent care or telehealth
    • In-person: CVS MinuteClinic, Walgreens Urgent Care, CityMD, local urgent care
    • Virtual: Teladoc, MDLIVE, Amazon One Medical
  2. Have ready
    • Photos of the infection
    • Your symptoms, when it started, any fever
    • Your medication list, allergies, and pharmacy name
  3. Ask for the prescription to be sent electronically
    • They can usually send it to CVS, Walgreens, Rite Aid, Walmart Pharmacy, etc. the same day

Important: many “minor infections” don’t need antibiotics, so a clinician needs to check first.

Go in now if you have:

  • Fever
  • Rapidly spreading redness/swelling
  • Severe pain
  • Pus with worsening symptoms
  • Infection on the face/eye
  • Trouble breathing or swallowing

If you tell me what kind of infection (skin, throat, UTI, tooth, ear, etc.) and your age, I can point you to the fastest option.

retrieval Not mentioned

If it’s a minor infection, the fastest way to get a prescription today is usually:

  1. Same-day telehealth or urgent care visit with a clinician who can examine you and prescribe if needed.
  2. Community pharmacist / pharmacy clinic if you’re in a place that offers minor-infection services; pharmacists can often advise and sometimes supply prescription-only treatment for specific conditions. (england.nhs.uk)
  3. If you have COVID/flu-like symptoms, ask about testing and whether you qualify for treatment, since not all infections need antibiotics. (cdc.gov)

Important: don’t try to use leftover antibiotics or take someone else’s; antibiotics only help when a clinician decides a bacterial infection is likely, and many common illnesses don’t need them. (medlineplus.gov)

Go to urgent care / ER now if you have trouble breathing, chest pain, confusion, severe weakness, rapidly worsening symptoms, or a high fever with a very ill appearance. (cdc.gov)

If you want, tell me your symptoms, age, and state/country, and I’ll help you figure out the quickest appropriate option today.

What should I do for a rash if I can't get to a clinic? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

If you can’t get to a clinic, treat it as skin first aid and watch for warning signs.

What to do now
  • Stop any new products: soaps, lotions, laundry detergent, perfume, plants, meds if recently started.
  • Wash gently with lukewarm water and a mild cleanser:
    • Dove Sensitive Skin Beauty Bar
    • CeraVe Hydrating Cleanser
    • Vanicream Gentle Body Wash
  • Cool the skin: cool compresses 10–15 min, a few times/day.
  • Moisturize with a bland ointment/cream:
    • Vaseline Petroleum Jelly
    • Aquaphor Healing Ointment
    • CeraVe Moisturizing Cream
    • Vanicream Moisturizing Cream
  • For itch/inflammation (if skin is not open or infected):
    • Hydrocortisone 1% cream thin layer 1–2x/day for up to 7 days
    • Cetirizine (Zyrtec) or loratadine (Claritin) for itching
  • Avoid scratching, hot showers, tight clothes, and fragranced products.
Get urgent help now if you have:
  • Trouble breathing, lip/face swelling, or dizziness
  • Rapidly spreading rash
  • Fever, severe pain, purple/black spots
  • Blistering, skin peeling, or sores in the mouth/eyes
  • Pus, warmth, swelling, or red streaks
  • A rash after a new medication
If you want, send:
  • where the rash is
  • what it looks like
  • how long it’s been there
  • any new products/foods/meds
  • whether it itches, hurts, or has fever

I can help you narrow down what it might be and what to try next.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you can’t get to a clinic, try basic home care first:

  • Stop using any new soap, lotion, detergent, perfume, or medicine that might have triggered it.
  • Wash gently with lukewarm water and mild, fragrance-free soap.
  • Cool compresses 10–15 minutes at a time can help itching.
  • Don’t scratch; keep nails short.
  • For itchy, mild rashes, an OTC antihistamine may help; for contact-type rashes, a pharmacist can often advise on OTC treatment. (medlineplus.gov)

Get urgent help now if you have any of these:

  • Trouble breathing or swallowing
  • Swelling of the face, lips, tongue, or throat
  • A rash with fever, feeling very ill, or rapid spreading
  • Blistering, open sores, or raw skin
  • A painful rash or one involving the eyes, mouth, lips, or genitals
  • Purple/bruiselike spots. (aad.org)

If you tell me what the rash looks like, where it is, how long it’s been there, and whether you have fever, itching, pain, or any new products/meds, I can help you narrow down what to do next.

How can I get help for a sore throat after hours? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

If it’s after hours, your best options are:

  1. Telehealth/virtual urgent care
    • Use your health plan’s app or a service like Teladoc, Amwell, or Doctor On Demand.
    • A clinician can tell you if you need testing or a prescription.
  2. Urgent care clinic
    • Good if you have fever, swollen tonsils, white patches, or bad pain and can’t wait.
    • Many are open evenings/weekends.
  3. Call your doctor’s after-hours line
    • Many primary care offices have an on-call nurse or doctor.

Go to the ER now if you have:

  • trouble breathing
  • drooling or can’t swallow saliva
  • severe swelling in the neck/throat
  • chest pain
  • confusion
  • dehydration
  • a rash with fever
  • muffled “hot potato” voice

For temporary relief tonight:

  • Tylenol (acetaminophen) or Advil/Motrin (ibuprofen) if you can take them
  • Cepacol lozenges or Ricola drops
  • Chloraseptic sore throat spray
  • warm tea with honey, and lots of fluids

If you want, I can help you decide whether this sounds more like a strep throat, viral sore throat, or something that needs urgent care.

retrieval Not mentioned

If it’s after hours, your best options are:

  • Use a telehealth/after-hours nurse line if the sore throat is bothersome but you’re otherwise stable. (nhs.uk)
  • Go to urgent care if you might need an exam or a strep test, especially with fever, swollen glands, white patches, or worsening pain. (mayoclinic.org)
  • Go to the ER / call 911 now if you have trouble breathing, trouble swallowing, drooling, or feel like your throat is closing. (mayoclinic.org)

While you wait, you can try:

  • Fluids, warm tea with honey (if age 1+), salt-water gargles, and OTC pain relief like acetaminophen or ibuprofen if you can take them safely. (cdc.gov)

If you want, I can help you decide urgent care vs ER based on your symptoms.

What is the fastest way to get medical advice for flu symptoms? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Fastest options:

  1. Telehealth / virtual urgent care — usually the quickest way to talk to a clinician today.
  2. Your doctor’s nurse line / on-call provider — if you have one, they can often advise fast.
  3. Urgent care clinic — best if you need an exam or flu test.
  4. ER / call 911 — only for severe symptoms.

Go to urgent/emergency care now if you have:

  • trouble breathing
  • chest pain
  • confusion
  • blue lips
  • severe dehydration
  • symptoms that are rapidly worsening

If you want, I can help you decide whether telehealth, urgent care, or ER is the best next step based on your symptoms.

retrieval Not mentioned

Fastest: same-day telehealth or a call to your primary care office. For flu symptoms, CDC says people at higher risk or who are very sick should contact a clinician early, because antivirals work best when started within 2 days. (cdc.gov)

Go to urgent care / ER now if you have trouble breathing, chest pain/pressure, confusion, bluish lips/face, severe dehydration, or symptoms that improve then worsen. (cdc.gov)

If you just need quick advice and don’t have a doctor available, telehealth is a good fastest option; HHS says telehealth can be used for urgent care and emergency care triage. (telehealth.hhs.gov)

If you want, I can help you decide telehealth vs urgent care vs ER based on your symptoms.

How do I get urgent care for pink eye without waiting in person? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Use a telehealth urgent care or virtual visit—many can diagnose pink eye and send drops to your pharmacy the same day.

Good options:

  • Teladoc
  • Doctor On Demand by Included Health
  • Amwell
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care
  • Kaiser Permanente / your insurer’s virtual urgent care if you have it

If you want the fastest path:

  1. Open your insurer app or one of the services above.
  2. Choose “eye infection,” “pink eye,” or “conjunctivitis.”
  3. Have your photo ID, insurance card, symptoms, and pharmacy info ready.
  4. Ask for a same-day video visit.

You can also use CVS MinuteClinic or Walgreens healthcare clinic if they offer virtual care in your state.

Go in person urgently if you have:

  • severe eye pain
  • vision changes
  • light sensitivity
  • contact lens use with redness/discharge
  • eye injury
  • fever or swelling around the eye

If you want, tell me your state/country and I can point you to the fastest virtual option available there.

retrieval Not mentioned

Yes — the fastest no-wait option is usually a same-day virtual/telehealth visit with a PCP, urgent care, or retail clinic. Many systems treat pink eye (conjunctivitis) online and can send a prescription to your pharmacy if needed. (my.clevelandclinic.org)

What to do now

  1. Open your insurer’s app or your doctor’s portal and look for Virtual Visit / Telehealth / On-demand care. (my.clevelandclinic.org)
  2. If you don’t have that, try a virtual urgent care service from a nearby health system or retail clinic. Cleveland Clinic, for example, lists pink eye among conditions they handle virtually. (my.clevelandclinic.org)
  3. If you wear contact lenses, stop wearing them until a clinician says it’s okay. (cdc.gov)

Don’t wait for telehealth—get in-person urgent care today if you have:

  • Eye pain
  • Light sensitivity
  • Blurred vision that doesn’t clear after wiping discharge
  • Very red eye
  • Symptoms getting worse or not improving
  • A newborn with pink-eye symptoms (cdc.gov)

If you want, I can help you find a same-day virtual urgent care option near you.

How can I get care for allergies on the weekend? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

For weekend allergy care, your best options are:

  • Telehealth/virtual urgent care: fastest for advice, refills, and prescriptions.
  • Urgent care clinic: good if symptoms are bothering you or you may need stronger treatment.
  • Pharmacy help: for OTC options like Zyrtec (cetirizine), Claritin (loratadine), Allegra (fexofenadine), or Flonase (fluticasone).
  • Emergency room / call 911 if you have trouble breathing, throat swelling, wheezing, fainting, or rapidly worsening hives.

If you want, tell me your symptoms and I can suggest the best weekend option.

retrieval Not mentioned

For weekend allergy care, you usually have 4 options:

  • Telehealth / urgent virtual visit: good for seasonal allergies, hives, mild asthma/allergy flare, or medication refills.
  • Urgent care: best if symptoms are moderate, you need an exam, or you’re not sure it’s “just allergies.”
  • Retail clinic: if you need simple evaluation and treatment.
  • ER / call 911: if you have trouble breathing, swelling of lips/tongue/throat, wheezing, fainting, or severe vomiting.

If it seems like typical allergies, common short-term measures include:

  • a non-drowsy antihistamine like cetirizine (Zyrtec), loratadine (Claritin), or fexofenadine (Allegra)
  • saline nasal rinse
  • fluticasone (Flonase) nasal spray for congestion/post-nasal drip

If you want, I can help you figure out whether urgent care or telehealth is the better fit based on your symptoms.

What do I use for a quick medical visit for a child with a fever? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

For a quick visit, use urgent care or your child’s pediatrician same-day line.

For the fever itself, bring/use:

  • Digital thermometer: Vicks SpeedRead, Braun ThermoScan 7, or iProven
  • Fever medicine:
    • Tylenol Children’s (acetaminophen)
    • Children’s Motrin or Children’s Advil (ibuprofen, if age 6 months+)
  • Hydration: Pedialyte

Go to the ER now if the child is:

  • Under 3 months old with a fever
  • Hard to wake, struggling to breathe, dehydrated, having a seizure, or has a stiff neck/rash

If you want, I can tell you which medicine to use and the dose by age/weight.

retrieval Not mentioned

For a quick medical visit for a child with fever, use:

  • Your child’s pediatrician
  • Same-day urgent care
  • Pediatric telehealth/virtual visit for mild symptoms

Go to urgent care or ER sooner if your child has:

  • trouble breathing
  • extreme sleepiness or hard to wake
  • signs of dehydration
  • seizure
  • stiff neck
  • purple rash
  • fever in a baby under 3 months
  • very high fever or your child looks very ill

If you want, I can help you decide pediatrician vs urgent care vs ER based on the child’s age, temperature, and symptoms.

How do I get immediate medical attention for a non-emergency issue? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

For a non-emergency but needs-today issue, fastest options are:

  1. Urgent care clinic
    • Best for things like minor infections, sprains, rashes, small cuts, fever, sore throat.
    • Many take walk-ins and have short waits.
  2. Same-day primary care / “sick visit” appointment
    • Call your doctor’s office and say: “I need a same-day appointment for an urgent non-emergency issue.”
  3. Telehealth/virtual urgent care
    • Good if you need quick advice, prescriptions, or a triage decision.
    • Common options: Teladoc, Amwell, MDLIVE, Doctor On Demand.
  4. Pharmacy clinic / retail clinic
    • Some CVS MinuteClinic, Walgreens healthcare clinic, or similar clinics can handle simple issues.

If you’re unsure whether it’s urgent, call a nurse line or telehealth first.

Go to the ER immediately if you have chest pain, trouble breathing, stroke symptoms, severe bleeding, fainting, confusion, or a rapidly worsening condition.

If you want, I can help you figure out whether urgent care or ER is the right choice for your symptoms.

retrieval Not mentioned

If it’s not life-threatening, the fastest options are usually:

  1. Call your primary care doctor and ask for a same-day / urgent appointment.
  2. Go to an urgent care clinic or walk-in clinic if you can’t be seen soon enough. (medlineplus.gov)
  3. If you’re unsure, call your insurer’s nurse line or a local advice line—they can direct you to the right place.
  4. For mental health crisis, call or text 988. (medlineplus.gov)

Go to the ER / call 911 right away if you have symptoms like trouble breathing, chest pain, severe bleeding, seizure, overdose/poisoning, or severe allergic reaction. (medlineplus.gov)

If you tell me your symptoms, I can help you choose the fastest appropriate option.

How much does urgent care telemedicine cost? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Urgent care telemedicine usually costs:

  • With insurance: often $0–$75 copay, depending on your plan
  • Without insurance: typically $49–$150 per visit
  • After-hours / specialty urgent care: can be $100–$200+

Common options and prices:

  • Teladoc: often around $0–$89 with insurance; self-pay varies
  • Amwell: often $79–$99 without insurance
  • MDLIVE: often $0–$82 with insurance; self-pay varies
  • Doctor On Demand (now Included Health): usually $75–$129 self-pay

Costs can be higher if you need:

  • prescriptions
  • labs/tests
  • follow-up visits
  • weekend/night access

If you want, I can compare cheap telehealth urgent care options by price and insurance.

retrieval Not mentioned

It usually costs $0–$89 for a virtual urgent care visit, depending on your insurance and the telehealth company. MDLIVE lists urgent care visits at $0–$89, with some copays as low as $0. (mdlive.com)

If you’re paying out of pocket, a common ballpark is about $60–$80+; AARP notes CVS MinuteClinic video visits at $60 and says a non-insured urgent care visit for something like flu or a UTI may run about $80. (aarp.org)

If you want, I can also help you estimate the cost for your specific insurance plan or provider.

Is urgent care telemedicine free? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Usually not automatically free.

It may be $0 if:

  • your insurance plan covers telemedicine with a $0 copay
  • your employer offers it as a benefit
  • you’re using a service tied to your plan, like Teladoc, MDLIVE, or Amwell

It may cost:

  • a copay
  • the full visit fee if you’re uninsured or out-of-network

Best move: check your insurer’s app or member portal, or the telehealth provider’s pricing page before you book. If you want, I can help you check whether a specific plan or service is free.

retrieval Not mentioned

Usually no, not always free. Urgent-care telemedicine is often billed like a regular visit, so you may owe a copay, coinsurance, or deductible depending on your insurance plan. (healthcare.gov)

Some simple portal messages or follow-ups can be free or low-cost, but more involved telehealth care may be billed to insurance. (my.clevelandclinic.org)

If you have Medicare, certain telehealth services are covered, but after the Part B deductible you generally pay 20% of the Medicare-approved amount. (medicare.gov)

Best move: check the telemedicine provider’s pricing and your insurance benefits before you start.

What is the cheapest virtual urgent care service? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

If you’re paying cash, the cheapest commonly available virtual urgent care is usually:

  • Sesame Care — often $29–$49 per visit
  • K Health — often around $29 for a visit
  • Amazon One Medical — often $29 for video visits if you’re a member

If you have insurance, the cheapest may actually be:

  • Teladoc
  • Amwell
  • MDLIVE
  • your health plan’s own telehealth app

…because many plans make visits $0–$20.

Best bet: compare Sesame Care and K Health first if you want the lowest out-of-pocket price.

If you want, I can also list the cheapest options for your state.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you mean the cheapest advertised self-pay virtual urgent care from major U.S. providers, CareNow Virtual Care is the lowest I found at $75 per telehealth urgent care session. (carenow.com)

A few nearby options:

If you want, I can narrow this down to your state or to the cheapest option with insurance/no insurance.

How much is a video visit for urgent care? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

A video urgent-care visit usually costs:

  • With insurance: often $0–$75 copay
  • Without insurance: about $50–$150 cash price
  • After hours / specialty urgent telehealth: can be $100+

Examples:

  • Teladoc: often around $0–$75 with insurance, or ~$89+ cash
  • Amwell: similar, usually $79–$99 without insurance
  • MDLIVE: often $0–$82 with insurance, ~$80–$100 cash

Best move: check your insurer’s telehealth benefit or the urgent care’s pricing page before you start the visit.

If you want, I can help you estimate the cost for a specific insurer or provider.

retrieval Not mentioned

It depends on the provider and your insurance. For example, one urgent-care network lists virtual urgent care at $35 with insurance/registration and $55 self-pay, while another offers a flat $45 virtual care fee. Many others bill it like a regular urgent-care or telehealth office visit, so your copay can vary. (premierhealth.com)

If you want, tell me the clinic name or your insurance, and I can help narrow it down.

Do urgent care telemedicine services accept insurance? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Yes—many urgent care telemedicine services do accept insurance, but it depends on:

  • Your insurance plan
  • Whether the telehealth provider is in-network
  • Whether the visit is billed as telemedicine, urgent care, or virtual urgent care

Common insurers often cover telehealth visits, including Blue Cross Blue Shield, Aetna, Cigna, UnitedHealthcare, and Kaiser—but copays/deductibles can vary.

Examples of services that often take insurance:

  • Teladoc
  • Amwell
  • MDLIVE
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care
  • K Health

Before you book, check:

  1. The provider’s insurance list
  2. Your plan’s telehealth benefits
  3. Any copay or deductible for virtual urgent care

If you want, I can help you find an urgent care telemedicine service that accepts your specific insurance.

retrieval Not mentioned

Often, yes — many urgent care telemedicine services accept insurance, but not all.

Common possibilities:

  • In-network coverage: you pay a copay or coinsurance.
  • Out-of-network: you may pay more, or submit a claim yourself.
  • Self-pay / cash price: if insurance isn’t accepted.

Best way to check:

  1. Look up the telemedicine provider’s accepted plans.
  2. Call your insurance and ask if telehealth urgent care is covered.
  3. Ask whether the visit is billed as urgent care, telehealth, or primary care — that affects cost.

If you want, I can help you check a specific telemedicine service or insurance plan.

What are the out-of-pocket prices for online urgent care? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Typical out-of-pocket online urgent care prices are usually:

  • $0–$30 with some insurance plans
  • $40–$80 for a basic video visit without insurance
  • $80–$150+ for more complex visits, prescriptions, or same-day specialist-style telehealth

Examples:

  • Teladoc: often about $89 without insurance
  • Amwell: often $79–$99 per visit
  • MDLIVE: often $0–$82 depending on plan/cash price
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care: often $59–$89
  • PlushCare: usually around $99/month membership, then visits may be included/discounted depending on plan

If you want, I can compare the cheapest options for no insurance, with insurance, or for a specific symptom.

retrieval Not mentioned

Out-of-pocket, online urgent care is usually about $69–$118 per visit, depending on the service. For example, Amwell lists virtual visits at $69, Doctor On Demand starts at $99 for uninsured patients, and Eden Telemed charges $118 for a one-time visit. (go.amwell.com)

A few services can be $0 with insurance/employer coverage, and some plans make virtual urgent care a small copay instead. (doctorondemand.com)

If you want, I can also compare the cheapest options by without insurance / with insurance / prescription included.

Are there low-cost urgent care telemedicine options? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Yes—there are several low-cost urgent care telemedicine options:

  • GoodRx Care — often among the cheapest self-pay visits; pricing is usually transparent.
  • Amazon One Medical — convenient, but not always the lowest-cost option unless you have Prime/One Medical access.
  • Teladoc — widely available through employers/insurers; self-pay pricing can be moderate.
  • MDLIVE — often covered by insurance and sometimes offers lower cash-pay rates.
  • Amwell — good if your health plan includes it.
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — useful for common issues like colds, sinus infections, UTIs, rashes.
  • Walmart Care Clinic / virtual services — availability varies by state.

If you want the cheapest route, check:

  1. Your insurance app/portal (often the lowest out-of-pocket).
  2. GoodRx Care for cash-pay pricing.
  3. CVS/MinuteClinic if they offer the condition you need.

Typical cash prices can range roughly from $30–$100+, depending on the service and state.

If you tell me your state, insurance status, and the symptom, I can narrow it down to the best low-cost option.

retrieval Not mentioned

Yes—if you want low-cost urgent care telemedicine, these are common options in the U.S.:

  • Amwell: urgent-care virtual visits are listed at $69 cash pay. (go.amwell.com)
  • Doctor On Demand / Included Health: urgent-care visits are $99 without insurance, and may be $0 with some insurance/employer plans. (doctorondemand.com)
  • K Health: offers 24/7 virtual urgent care and says it keeps prices low; some plans/memberships are available, but exact visit pricing can vary by option and state. (khealth.com)

Quick rule of thumb:

  • Best cash price from the ones above: Amwell. (go.amwell.com)
  • Best chance of $0: Doctor On Demand if your employer/insurance covers it. (doctorondemand.com)

If you want, I can also help you find the cheapest option for your state or for a specific problem like UTI, sinus infection, rash, or flu.

How much do virtual urgent care prescriptions cost? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

It varies a lot, but virtual urgent care prescriptions usually cost the same as the visit, not extra for the prescription itself.

Typical costs:

  • Telehealth visit: about $30–$100 without insurance
  • With insurance: often $0–$50 depending on your plan
  • Prescription cost at the pharmacy: depends on the drug, but many common generics are $4–$20 with cash savings programs

Examples:

  • Amoxicillin / cephalexin / prednisone: often low-cost generics
  • Albuterol inhaler or antibiotics: can range from cheap generic to $20–$60+
  • Brand-name meds: can be much higher

Ways to save:

  • GoodRx or SingleCare for pharmacy discounts
  • Telehealth services like Teladoc, Amwell, or MDLIVE often show visit prices upfront

If you want, I can estimate the cost for a specific medication or virtual urgent care service.

retrieval Not mentioned

Usually you pay for two things:

  1. The virtual urgent care visit — often about $40–$90 without insurance, though some services are cheaper or even $0 depending on your plan. For example, CVS says some virtual care services can cost $0, while its self-pay visit prices for common illnesses are $107–$164. GoodRx Care says visits start at $19 for Gold members and $39–$70 without membership. (goodrx.com)
  2. The prescription itself — this is separate from the visit and can range from a few dollars to much more, depending on the drug, insurance, and pharmacy. HealthCare.gov notes that copays vary by service, including drugs, and can apply after deductible. (healthcare.gov)

If you want, I can estimate the cost for a specific medication or tell you the typical price for a certain virtual urgent care service.

Can I use urgent care telemedicine without a subscription? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Yes—often you can.

Many urgent care telemedicine services let you pay per visit with no subscription, for example:

  • Teladoc
  • Amwell
  • Dr. B
  • local urgent care clinics with video visits

A subscription is usually only needed for:

  • ongoing primary care
  • certain membership-based platforms
  • employer/insurance-sponsored plans

Before booking, check for:

  • “cash pay” or “self-pay” pricing
  • whether they accept your insurance
  • if they treat your issue (e.g., UTI, rash, cold/flu)

If you want, I can help you find a no-subscription urgent care telemedicine option in your state.

retrieval Not mentioned

Yes — often you can use urgent care telemedicine without a subscription.

Common options:

  • Pay-per-visit / one-time visit
  • Insurance-billed telehealth
  • Subscription/membership plans (optional, not always required)

What to check:

  • Whether the service offers urgent care / on-demand visits
  • Self-pay price
  • Whether they accept your insurance
  • If they require a membership for after-hours or same-day care

If you want, I can help you find no-subscription urgent care telemedicine options in the U.S.

What is the price for 24/7 urgent care telemedicine? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

24/7 urgent care telemedicine usually costs:

  • With insurance: often $0–$50 copay
  • Without insurance: typically $60–$150 per visit

Examples:

  • Teladoc: often around $0–$89
  • Amwell: about $69+
  • Doctor on Demand: around $75–$199
  • MDLIVE: often $0–$82 with insurance, more self-pay

If you want, I can help you find the cheapest 24/7 option for your state or insurance plan.

retrieval Not mentioned

Typical self-pay pricing for 24/7 urgent care telemedicine is about $69–$73 per visit on major services like Amwell and K Health. (go.amwell.com)

With insurance, the cost can be much lower; examples include $10–$49 depending on coverage, and some plans show the exact price after you log in. (business.amwell.com)

If you want, I can check the price for a specific provider or your insurance plan.

TOM — Top of Mind (15 prompts)

What are the best urgent care telemedicine services?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best urgent-care telemedicine options:

  • Teladoc Health — one of the biggest names; 24/7 general urgent care, broad availability, easy app use.
  • Amwell — strong video visits, often covered by insurance, good for common urgent issues.
  • MDLIVE — good urgent care + mental health; usually fast access and solid user ratings.
  • Doctor On Demand (by Included Health) — polished app, reliable video quality, good for adults and kids in many states.
  • K Health — useful if you want AI-guided symptom intake before seeing a clinician; often competitively priced.
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — convenient if you already use CVS; good for straightforward urgent issues.
  • Walmart Virtual Care — low-cost option in some areas, though availability can be more limited.
  • Oscar Virtual Urgent Care / Amazon Clinic — can be convenient depending on your location and symptoms.

Best overall: Teladoc, Amwell, or Doctor On Demand Best for low cost: K Health or Walmart Virtual Care Best if already using a pharmacy chain: CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care

Good for: sore throat, sinus infection, UTI symptoms, pink eye, rash, minor cold/flu symptoms, medication refills, and simple infections.

Not for: chest pain, trouble breathing, stroke symptoms, severe allergic reaction, major injuries, or anything life-threatening — go to the ER or call emergency services.

If you want, I can also rank these by price, speed, or insurance coverage.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the best urgent care telemedicine services are:

  • Teladoc Health — broad availability, good for common urgent issues, prescription refills, rashes, sinus infections, UTIs, etc.
  • Amwell — strong video-visit experience and solid access to board-certified doctors.
  • MDLIVE — good urgent care option with fast scheduling, often covered by insurance.
  • Doctor On Demand (by Included Health) — very polished app, good for same-day urgent care and mental health.
  • Sesame — often the cheapest cash-pay option; useful if you want upfront pricing.
  • Amazon One Medical — excellent if you already use Amazon/One Medical; good for virtual urgent care and follow-up.

Best overall: Teladoc or Doctor On Demand Best for low price: Sesame Best if insured: MDLIVE or Amwell

If you want, I can also rank them by price, wait time, insurance coverage, or state availability.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Top urgent-care-style telemedicine services:

  1. Teladoc Health
    • Best for: fast general urgent-care visits, broad availability
    • Good app, 24/7 access in many plans
  2. MDLIVE
    • Best for: affordable urgent care, employer/insurance coverage
    • Common choice for colds, flu, UTIs, rashes, allergies
  3. Amwell
    • Best for: insurance-based telehealth, reliable video visits
    • Often easy to use through health plans
  4. Doctor On Demand / Included Health
    • Best for: high-quality physician visits, strong user experience
    • Good for same-day urgent issues
  5. PlushCare
    • Best for: more personalized care and follow-up
    • Useful if you want a PCP-like feel, not just one-off visits
  6. CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care
    • Best for: basic urgent care from a familiar retail brand
    • Good for minor infections and routine acute issues
  7. K Health
    • Best for: quick symptom triage + telemedicine
    • Often cheaper, helpful for simple urgent problems

My short pick:

  • Best overall: Teladoc
  • Best if you have insurance: Amwell or MDLIVE
  • Best experience: Doctor On Demand / Included Health
  • Best for follow-up care: PlushCare

Use in-person urgent care/ER instead if you have chest pain, trouble breathing, severe bleeding, fainting, stroke symptoms, or severe abdominal pain.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the best urgent care telemedicine services are:

  1. Teladoc Health — best overall for broad access and 24/7 urgent care
  2. Amwell — strong for general urgent care and insurance-covered visits
  3. MDLive — good for fast same-day virtual urgent care
  4. K Health — best app-based option for quick symptom-based care
  5. Amazon One Medical — great if you want a polished primary/urgent care hybrid
  6. PlushCare — good for high-quality doctor visits and follow-up care
  7. CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — convenient if you already use CVS

Best picks by use case

  • Fastest access: Teladoc, MDLive
  • Best insurance coverage: Amwell, Teladoc
  • Best UX/app experience: K Health, One Medical
  • Best for ongoing care + urgent care: One Medical, PlushCare

What urgent care telemedicine is good for

  • Cold/flu symptoms
  • Sore throat
  • UTI symptoms
  • Mild rashes
  • Pink eye
  • Minor allergies
  • Prescription refills / simple med requests

Not good for

  • Chest pain
  • Trouble breathing
  • Severe abdominal pain
  • Major injuries
  • Stroke symptoms
  • Heavy bleeding

If you want, I can also give you the best urgent care telemedicine services by insurance, price, or country.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best urgent care telemedicine services:

  • Teladoc Health — best overall for broad availability, 24/7 access, and quick visits for common urgent issues.
  • Amwell — strong all-around option, especially if your employer or health plan already includes it.
  • MDLIVE — good for fast same-day virtual urgent care and dermatology.
  • PlushCare — good if you want more continuity with the same doctor and easy follow-up care.
  • Sesame — often the best cash-pay option if you want transparent, low prices.
  • Doctor On Demand — now part of Included Health; still a solid choice for urgent care-style video visits.

Best pick by need:

  • Fastest/easiest: Teladoc or MDLIVE
  • Lowest self-pay cost: Sesame
  • Best for ongoing care: PlushCare
  • Best with insurance/employer plan: Amwell or Teladoc

Good to know: These work well for things like colds, flu, sinus infections, UTIs, rashes, allergies, pink eye, and minor stomach issues. If you have chest pain, trouble breathing, severe bleeding, stroke symptoms, or a broken bone, go to the ER instead.

If you want, I can also narrow this down to the best for insurance, best for no insurance, or best for prescriptions.

Which urgent care telemedicine service is most recommended?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Teladoc Health is probably the most broadly recommended urgent-care telemedicine service overall. It’s widely available, easy to use, and often covered by insurance.

Also worth considering:

  • Doctor On Demand (Included Health) — often praised for quality and user experience
  • MDLIVE — strong option if your insurer partners with it
  • Amwell — solid, especially through employer/health-plan access

If you want the best pick for most people: Teladoc. If you want, I can also recommend the best one based on your insurance, country, or symptoms.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Best all-around pick: Teladoc Health It’s usually the most recommended for urgent care telemedicine because it’s widely available, often covered by insurance, and has 24/7 virtual urgent care in many plans.

Other strong options:

  • MDLIVE — great if you want fast access and your insurance includes it
  • Amwell — solid for urgent care plus specialist follow-ups
  • Doctor On Demand / Included Health — very good for user experience and quality

If you want the simplest recommendation: Teladoc Health. If you tell me your insurance or whether you want cash-pay vs covered, I can suggest the best one for you.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Best overall pick: Teladoc Health — usually the most widely available, 24/7, and easy to use for urgent-care-style telemedicine.

Also strong options:

  • Amwell — good if your health plan already includes it
  • MDLIVE — solid for quick urgent care visits and often insurance-friendly
  • Doctor On Demand (now part of Included Health) — very good experience, especially for video visits
  • PlushCare — good if you want ongoing primary care plus urgent visits

If you want the simplest recommendation: start with Teladoc unless your insurance specifically covers Amwell or MDLIVE better.

If you want, I can also recommend the best one based on your insurance, state, and whether you need adult or pediatric care.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Best overall: Teladoc Health — it’s the most widely available and well-known urgent care telemedicine option, with 24/7 access in many plans.

Other strong picks:

  • MDLive — good for quick urgent care visits and often covered by insurance
  • Amwell — solid all-around option, especially through employer/health plan access
  • PlushCare — often liked for more consistent doctor quality, but usually pricier without insurance

If you want the most recommended single choice, I’d pick Teladoc. If you want, I can also rank them by price, speed, or insurance coverage.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

If you want a widely recommended urgent-care telemedicine service, the safest top picks are:

  1. Teladoc Health — biggest reach, widely accepted, good for general urgent care.
  2. Doctor On Demand by Included Health — very strong doctor quality and user experience.
  3. Amwell — solid option, often available through employers/insurance.
  4. MDLIVE — good if your health plan includes it.

Best overall for most people: Teladoc Best for clinician quality/user experience: Doctor On Demand

If you tell me your country, insurance, and whether you need same-day video or prescription help, I can narrow it down to the best one for you.

If you have chest pain, trouble breathing, stroke symptoms, severe bleeding, or confusion, skip telemedicine and go to the ER/911.

What are the top urgent care telemedicine options?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Top urgent-care telemedicine options in the U.S.:

  1. Teladoc Health
    • Best for broad availability and quick urgent-care visits
    • Treats colds/flu, sinus infections, UTIs, rashes, allergies, etc.
  2. Amwell
    • Strong all-around urgent care and insurance support
    • Good if you want access through an employer/health plan
  3. MDLIVE
    • Popular for evening/weekend virtual urgent care
    • Often easy to use for common minor illnesses
  4. Doctor On Demand by Included Health
    • Very good video-visit experience
    • Strong for convenient, same-day urgent care and primary care
  5. Sesame Care
    • Best for transparent self-pay pricing
    • Good if you want to avoid insurance hassles
  6. CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care
    • Good for common urgent issues and pharmacy integration
    • Useful if you already use CVS/Walgreens-style retail care
  7. Carbon Health Virtual Care
    • Strong option if you’re in a city with Carbon clinics
    • Good for urgent care plus follow-up in-person if needed
  8. K Health
    • Fast, app-based urgent care with AI symptom intake
    • Good for quick triage and common conditions

Best picks overall:

  • Best overall: Teladoc or Doctor On Demand
  • Best cheap cash-pay: Sesame Care
  • Best if you want pharmacy/retail convenience: CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care

If you want, I can also give you the best option by insurance, price, or condition (UTI, rash, sinus infection, etc.).

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Top urgent care telemedicine options:

  • Teladoc Health — broad availability, 24/7 urgent care, good for common issues like colds, rashes, UTIs, allergies.
  • Amwell — strong virtual urgent care network, often covered by insurance, easy app-based visits.
  • MDLIVE — solid 24/7 urgent care and behavioral health, usually quick access.
  • Amazon One Medical — great for members, fast chat/video visits, strong if you already use Amazon/One Medical.
  • Doctor On Demand by Included Health — reliable urgent care plus primary care, generally good video quality and clinician access.
  • K Health — app-first, often cheaper self-pay, good for quick symptom triage and urgent care-style visits.

If you want the shortest path to a doctor: Teladoc or MDLIVE.

If you want the best overall app experience: Amazon One Medical or Doctor On Demand.

If you’re paying out of pocket and want lower cost: K Health.

If you want, I can also compare them by price, insurance coverage, wait times, and prescription support.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the top urgent care telemedicine options in the U.S.:

  1. Teladoc Health
    • 24/7 doctor visits for common urgent issues
    • Good for: colds/flu, UTIs, allergies, rashes, minor infections
  2. Amwell
    • Strong video-visit platform with urgent care and behavioral health
    • Good for: same-day virtual urgent care, prescriptions when appropriate
  3. MDLIVE
    • Often fast access to board-certified doctors
    • Good for: urgent care, dermatology, and mental health visits
  4. Doctor On Demand
    • Easy-to-use app, solid urgent care coverage
    • Good for: non-emergency issues, quick consults, prescriptions
  5. K Health
    • AI-assisted symptom intake + clinician visit
    • Good for: quick triage and common urgent care needs
  6. Amazon Clinic
    • Message-based care in many states
    • Good for: straightforward issues like allergies, UTIs, acne, sinus infections
  7. CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care
    • Convenient if you already use CVS
    • Good for: minor illnesses and routine urgent care
  8. Walgreens Find Care / Virtual Care
    • Pharmacy-integrated telehealth
    • Good for: common urgent care and pharmacy follow-up

Best overall picks:

  • Teladoc for broad availability
  • MDLIVE for fast urgent care access
  • Doctor On Demand for ease of use
  • Amazon Clinic for simple, low-friction visits

If you want, I can also rank these by price, wait time, or best for kids.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Top urgent care telemedicine options in the U.S. include:

  • Teladoc Health — broad urgent care coverage, 24/7 virtual visits
  • Amwell — strong urgent care and video visit network, often tied to insurers
  • MDLIVE — good for common urgent issues, usually quick access
  • Doctor on Demand by Included Health — solid urgent care plus primary care/therapy
  • K Health — app-based, fast symptom check, often lower cost
  • Cleveland Clinic Express Care Online — good if you want a major health-system option
  • Mayo Clinic Care Network / related virtual offerings — excellent if available through your plan or region

If you want the best overall, I’d usually start with:

  1. Teladoc Health
  2. Amwell
  3. MDLIVE

Quick note: for chest pain, trouble breathing, stroke symptoms, severe allergic reaction, or heavy bleeding, skip telemedicine and go to the ER/911.

If you want, I can also rank these by cost, speed, insurance coverage, or best for kids.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Top urgent care telemedicine options in the U.S. are usually:

  1. Teladoc Health — broad urgent care coverage, strong availability, good for common issues like colds, UTIs, rashes, allergies.
  2. Amwell — solid general urgent care video visits, often available through employers/health plans.
  3. Doctor On Demand by Included Health — very popular for fast same-day visits; good UX.
  4. Hims & Hers — best if you want straightforward treatment for select issues, not full urgent care breadth.
  5. PlushCare — good for primary-care-style urgent care, prescriptions, and follow-up.
  6. K Health — app-based, often quick, useful for symptom checking plus telehealth.
  7. CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — convenient if you already use CVS/minuteclinic services.
  8. Walgreens Find Care / Telehealth — good pharmacy tie-in; availability varies by state.

Best overall: Teladoc or Doctor On Demand. Best if you want integrated care: Amwell, PlushCare, or CVS MinuteClinic. Best for simple, fast issues: K Health or Hims & Hers.

Use urgent care telemedicine for: sore throat, sinus infection symptoms, UTIs, pink eye, mild asthma flare, rashes, allergies, minor infections. Go in person or to ER for: chest pain, trouble breathing, stroke symptoms, severe dehydration, major injury, or high fever with confusion.

If you want, I can also rank them by price, speed, insurance acceptance, or prescription support.

What are the most popular urgent care telemedicine services?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the most popular urgent care telemedicine services in the U.S. are:

  • Teladoc Health — broad virtual urgent care, common for colds, flu, rashes, UTIs, allergies
  • Amwell — large telehealth platform used by many employers and insurers
  • MDLIVE — well-known for 24/7 virtual urgent care and behavioral health
  • Doctor on Demand by Included Health — strong for same-day video visits
  • K Health — app-based urgent care plus AI symptom screening
  • PlushCare — primary care and urgent care-style video visits
  • Heal — in some areas offers virtual and in-home urgent care
  • Amazon Clinic — condition-specific message/video care for common urgent issues
  • CVS Virtual Care — urgent care via CVS/MinuteClinic ecosystem
  • Walmart Health Virtual Care — virtual visits for common non-emergency issues

If you want, I can also rank them by price, insurance acceptance, or best for kids vs adults.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the most popular urgent care telemedicine services in the U.S. are:

  • Teladoc Health — one of the biggest, covers common urgent issues like colds, flu, rashes, UTIs, allergies.
  • Amwell — widely used by employers and insurers; good general urgent care/video visits.
  • MDLIVE — popular for 24/7 urgent care, dermatology, and behavioral health.
  • Doctor On Demand by Included Health — strong reputation for quick video visits with board-certified doctors.
  • LiveHealth Online — commonly offered through health plans; easy access for non-emergency care.
  • CVS Health Virtual Care — integrated with CVS MinuteClinic and pharmacy services.
  • Kaiser Permanente Urgent Care Video Visits — great if you’re already in Kaiser’s system.
  • UnitedHealthcare / Optum Virtual Visits — often bundled with insurance plans.
  • Walgreens Virtual Care — convenient for minor illnesses and prescriptions in some states.
  • Amazon Clinic — growing fast for simple conditions like pink eye, UTI, and sinus issues.

If you want, I can also rank them by cost, insurance acceptance, or best for kids / prescriptions.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the most popular urgent care telemedicine services in the U.S. are:

  • Teladoc Health — one of the biggest virtual urgent care providers; broad doctor network and 24/7 access.
  • Amwell — well-known telehealth platform used by many employers and health plans.
  • Doctor on Demand (now part of Included Health) — popular for urgent care, mental health, and primary care.
  • MDLive — common for quick virtual visits for colds, flu, rashes, UTIs, etc.
  • K Health — app-based care with AI triage and clinician visits; often cheaper for self-pay.
  • LiveHealth Online — strong option if your insurance includes it, especially for urgent care and behavioral health.
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — tied to CVS, good for common urgent care needs.
  • Walgreens Virtual Care — another retail-pharmacy-backed option.
  • Amazon Clinic — convenient for message-based treatment of common conditions.
  • Oak Street Health / Optum Virtual Care — more common through certain insurance/health-system setups.

If you want, I can also rank these by price, insurance acceptance, or best for fast same-day visits.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the most popular urgent care telemedicine services in the U.S. are:

  • Teladoc Health – one of the biggest names; 24/7 urgent care visits for common issues like colds, flu, infections, rashes, etc.
  • Amwell – broad telehealth platform with urgent care-style visits, often available through insurers and employers.
  • MDLIVE – very popular for on-demand urgent care, dermatology, and behavioral health.
  • Doctor on Demand by Included Health – well-known for video visits with board-certified clinicians, including urgent care.
  • K Health – app-based urgent care and primary care, with AI symptom triage plus clinician visits.
  • PlushCare – PCP-style telemedicine that also handles urgent care concerns and prescriptions.
  • GoodRx Care – low-cost telemedicine for common urgent needs, especially if you’re paying cash.
  • Zocdoc Virtual Care – useful for quickly finding available clinicians for telehealth appointments.
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care – convenient if you already use CVS/MinuteClinic services.
  • Walgreens Health Corner / Virtual Care – offered through Walgreens in some areas, good for pharmacy-connected care.

If you want, I can also narrow these down to:

  1. best for lowest cost,
  2. best with insurance, or
  3. best for prescription refills / UTI / sinus infection / rashes.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the most popular urgent care telemedicine services in the U.S. are:

  • Teladoc Health — one of the biggest names; broad urgent care coverage, 24/7 in many plans.
  • Amwell — widely used by insurers and health systems; good for general urgent care visits.
  • MDLIVE — common for after-hours urgent care, especially through employer/insurance plans.
  • Doctor On Demand (now part of Included Health) — popular for quick video visits with physicians.
  • PlushCare — well-known direct-to-consumer option for same-day or next-day virtual urgent care.
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — convenient if you already use CVS/MinuteClinic.
  • Walgreens Healthcare Clinic / VillageMD virtual options — another common retail-health option.
  • Sesame Care — popular cash-pay marketplace with often lower self-pay pricing.

If you want, I can also rank these by:

  1. cheapest self-pay,
  2. best for insurance, or
  3. best for 24/7 urgent care.
What is the best virtual urgent care service? 40/mo
4/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Best overall: Teladoc Health — usually the most reliable pick for 24/7 virtual urgent care, broad insurance support, and easy access.

Strong alternatives

  • Amwell — great if your insurance already covers it; solid doctor availability.
  • Doctor On Demand (included in Included Health / Amazon One Medical in some plans) — good video visits and straightforward pricing.
  • MDLive — often a good choice through employer or health-plan benefits.
  • K Health — convenient, app-first, often cheaper for self-pay.

Quick rule:

  • Have insurance? Use the urgent care telehealth service your plan covers first.
  • No insurance / self-pay? Teladoc or K Health are usually the easiest starting points.

If you want, I can recommend the best one for your insurance, state, and budget.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

The best virtual urgent care depends on what you want, but my top pick for most people is Teladoc Health — it’s widely available, easy to use, and usually has fast access for common urgent issues.

Good options by use case:

  • Teladoc Health — best overall for broad availability and convenience
  • MDLIVE — very solid for urgent care + behavioral health, often good through employer/insurance plans
  • Amwell — strong option if your insurance covers it and you want a traditional telehealth experience
  • K Health — good for quick symptom checking and low-friction visits
  • Amazon Clinic — convenient for simple, common issues if available in your state

If you want the best one for you, choose based on:

  1. Your insurance coverage
  2. Availability in your state
  3. Wait times
  4. Whether they can prescribe meds
  5. If they can handle your specific issue (UTI, rash, sinus infection, etc.)

If you tell me your country/state and whether you have insurance, I can narrow it to the best specific service for you.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

The best overall virtual urgent care is often PlushCare — it’s usually the best mix of fast access, quality primary/urgent care doctors, and follow-up care.

Other strong picks:

  • Teladoc Health — best for broad availability and employer/insurance coverage
  • Amwell — good if your health plan already includes it
  • MDLIVE — solid, commonly covered, easy for basic urgent issues
  • Doctor on Demand — also good, especially if you want video visits with board-certified doctors

My quick recommendation:

  • Best overall: PlushCare
  • Best if insurance-covered: Amwell or Teladoc
  • Best for simple, fast visits: MDLIVE

If you want, I can also rank them for cost, speed, or insurance coverage.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Best overall: Teladoc Health It’s the most widely available, 24/7, and usually has solid urgent-care coverage for common issues like colds, UTI symptoms, rashes, allergies, and minor infections.

Good alternatives:

  • Amwell — strong option if your health plan already includes it.
  • Doctor On Demand — very good for fast video visits and clear pricing.
  • K Health — often cheaper; good if you want symptom-checking plus a visit.
  • Amazon Clinic — convenient for straightforward conditions and messaging-based care.

Quick pick:

  • Fastest/best overall: Teladoc
  • Best if covered by insurance: Amwell or Doctor On Demand
  • Best budget option: K Health
  • Most convenient for simple issues: Amazon Clinic

If you want, I can recommend the best one based on your insurance, state, and whether you need prescriptions.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

Best overall: Teladoc It’s usually the most reliable mix of availability, fast access, and broad insurance acceptance.

Other strong options:

  • Amwell — great if you want a solid traditional telehealth visit with good doctor access
  • CVS Health Virtual Care — convenient if you already use CVS/minuteclinic services
  • K Health — good for lower-cost, text-first urgent care style visits

My quick pick:

  • Best overall: Teladoc
  • Best for convenience: CVS Health Virtual Care
  • Best for low cost: K Health

If you want, I can also rank them for price, speed, insurance acceptance, or pediatrics.

Which telemedicine urgent care service should I use?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

If you want a solid default, I’d start with Doctor On Demand (now part of Included Health) or Teladoc Health.

Quick picks:

  • Doctor On Demand — best for straightforward urgent care video visits, fast access
  • Teladoc Health — best overall availability and insurer coverage
  • Amwell — good if your health plan already includes it
  • MDLive — good budget-friendly option through many employers/plans
  • PlushCare — better if you may need follow-up care or ongoing primary care

Use telemedicine for: colds, flu, UTIs, pink eye, rashes, minor infections, mild asthma, prescription refills. Don’t use it for: chest pain, trouble breathing, severe abdominal pain, stroke symptoms, major injury, or anything life-threatening—go to urgent care/ER.

If you tell me your country/state and whether you have insurance, I can point you to the best one for your situation.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

If you want a general telemedicine urgent care option, I’d start with:

  • Teladoc Health — broad availability, good for common urgent issues
  • Amwell — solid urgent care video visits
  • MDLIVE — often fast and insurance-friendly
  • PlushCare — good if you want a more “primary-care-like” experience

Best pick by situation:

  • Have insurance? Check whether Teladoc, Amwell, or MDLIVE is covered first.
  • Want the fastest self-pay visit? Try Sesame.
  • Need ongoing follow-up, prescriptions, or a regular doctor feel? PlushCare.

Don’t use telemedicine if you have chest pain, trouble breathing, stroke symptoms, severe bleeding, fainting, or a major injury—go to ER/urgent care instead.

If you tell me your country/state and whether you have insurance, I can narrow it to the best specific service.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

If you want fast, general urgent-care telemedicine in the U.S., my top picks are:

  • Sesame Care — usually the best mix of price + same-day availability
  • Teladoc Health — most widely recognized and solid for common urgent issues
  • Amazon One Medical — good if you already use Amazon/One Medical and want a smoother experience
  • Amwell — reliable, often used through insurance plans
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — good for minor illness and if you already use CVS

My quick recommendation:

  • Best overall value: Sesame Care
  • Best if you have insurance through them: Teladoc or Amwell
  • Best convenience: Amazon One Medical

Use telehealth for: colds, flu, pink eye, UTIs, rashes, sinus infections, medication refills, mild stomach bugs. Go to in-person urgent care/ER instead for chest pain, trouble breathing, severe dehydration, heavy bleeding, stroke symptoms, severe abdominal pain, or worsening symptoms.

If you tell me your state/country, insurance, and what’s going on, I can narrow it to the best specific service.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Good options depend on what you need:

  • Best all-around / easiest: Amazon One Medical

Great for quick video visits, good app, solid after-visit care. Best if you want a smoother experience and can pay membership in some areas.

  • Best fast urgent care coverage: Teladoc Health

Widely available, good for common urgent issues like colds, UTIs, rashes, allergies, pink eye.

  • Best if you already use insurance benefits: Amwell or Doctor on Demand

Often integrated with employer/health plan telehealth.

  • Best low-cost simple visit: K Health

Often cheaper for straightforward issues and prescription needs.

  • Best for prescription-focused care: PlushCare

Strong for primary-care-style telehealth and follow-ups.

If you want one pick: Teladoc for broad urgent-care access, or Amazon One Medical if you want the best overall experience.

Use telemedicine urgent care for: sore throat, sinus symptoms, mild asthma flare, UTI symptoms, rashes, allergies, pink eye, minor infections. Go in person / ER for: chest pain, trouble breathing, stroke symptoms, severe dehydration, major bleeding, severe abdominal pain, or a high fever in a very young child.

If you tell me your country/state, insurance, and main symptom, I can recommend the best specific service for you.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

If you want a default pick, I’d try Teladoc Health or MDLive first.

Quick guide:

  • Best overall / easiest insurance coverage: Teladoc Health
  • Good alternative with broad availability: MDLive
  • Best if you want cheap self-pay pricing: Sesame Care
  • Best if you want ongoing primary-care style follow-up: PlushCare
  • Good for same-day video visits and general care: Amwell

Use ER/911 instead for chest pain, trouble breathing, stroke symptoms, severe bleeding, or if you feel dangerously unwell.

If you tell me your symptoms, state, and whether you want insurance or cash pay, I can point you to the best one.

What are the best on-demand urgent care telemedicine platforms?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best on-demand urgent care telemedicine platforms:

  1. Teladoc Health
    • Big national coverage, fast access, good for common urgent issues (colds, UTIs, rashes, minor infections).
    • Often available through employers/insurers.
  2. Amwell
    • Strong video visit platform, widely used by health plans.
    • Good for urgent care, primary care, and behavioral health.
  3. MDLIVE
    • Very solid for 24/7 urgent care visits.
    • Good app experience and usually easy scheduling.
  4. Doctor On Demand
    • Now part of Included Health.
    • Known for high-quality clinicians and straightforward urgent care visits.
  5. K Health
    • Good for fast, symptom-based triage plus telehealth visits.
    • Helpful if you want an AI-assisted intake before seeing a clinician.
  6. PlushCare
    • Strong option for same-day visits and ongoing primary care.
    • Good if you want urgent care plus continuity.
  7. CVS Health Virtual Care / MinuteClinic Virtual Care
    • Convenient if you already use CVS/Aetna.
    • Useful for common minor illnesses and prescription needs.

Best overall picks:

  • Best all-around: Teladoc Health
  • Best for same-day care: MDLIVE
  • Best for insurance-integrated care: Amwell
  • Best for app + symptom check: K Health

If you want, I can also rank these by price, wait time, insurance acceptance, or best for kids.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Top on-demand urgent care telemedicine platforms:

  • Teladoc Health — biggest name, wide availability, good for quick general urgent care visits.
  • Amwell — strong hospital/health-system integrations, solid video visit quality.
  • MDLive — easy same-day urgent care, often covered by employers/insurers.
  • Included Health (Doctor On Demand) — very polished app, good primary/urgent care mix.
  • PlushCare — good if you want more continuity and follow-up, not just one-off visits.
  • Sesame — often cheapest self-pay option; pay-per-visit pricing.
  • MeMD — decent urgent care coverage in many states, especially through employers.

Best picks by use case:

  • Best overall: Teladoc
  • Best for insurance-covered access: MDLive or Amwell
  • Best self-pay value: Sesame
  • Best for ongoing care + urgent visits: PlushCare

What to check before choosing:

  • Your state availability
  • Whether they treat your issue (fever, UTI, rash, sinus infection, etc.)
  • Insurance coverage / copay
  • Prescription support
  • Wait times and hours

If you want, I can also give you the best platform for your specific insurance or country.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best on-demand urgent care telemedicine platforms (adult/child minor urgent issues, quick video visits, prescriptions where appropriate):

  1. K Health
    • Best for: fast symptom triage + low-cost urgent care
    • Pros: AI-guided intake, clear pricing, 24/7 visits, prescription support in many states
  2. Teladoc Health
    • Best for: broad availability and reliability
    • Pros: 24/7 general medical visits, strong national footprint, good for common urgent issues
  3. Amwell
    • Best for: insurance-backed telehealth
    • Pros: widely used by employers/health plans, solid urgent care coverage, easy app/web access
  4. MDLIVE
    • Best for: quick urgent care plus mental health options
    • Pros: often covered by insurance, 24/7 urgent care, convenient for sinus, UTI, rash, cold/flu
  5. Virtual Care by CVS Health / MinuteClinic
    • Best for: pharmacy-linked care and follow-up convenience
    • Pros: good for common acute issues, integrated with CVS ecosystem, prescription pickup is easy
  6. Amazon Clinic
    • Best for: simple, no-video asynchronous care in some cases
    • Pros: straightforward for common problems like allergies, UTI, acne; good if you want speed over live visit
  7. PlushCare
    • Best for: primary-care-like urgent visits
    • Pros: good continuity if you want the same doctor over time; works well for refills and common urgent issues

Best overall picks:

  • Fastest/simple: K Health
  • Most established: Teladoc
  • Best if insurance-covered: Amwell or MDLIVE
  • Best for pharmacy convenience: CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care

If you want, I can also narrow this to the best for no insurance, best for kids, or best for prescriptions.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Top on-demand urgent care telemedicine platforms:

  1. Teladoc Health
    • Best overall for broad urgent care coverage and fast access
    • 24/7 general medical visits in many plans
    • Good if your employer or insurer includes it
  2. MDLIVE
    • Great for quick, same-day urgent care visits
    • Strong for common issues like colds, UTIs, allergies, rashes
    • Often available through major insurers
  3. Doctor On Demand by Included Health
    • One of the best-known, easy-to-use telehealth apps
    • Good clinician quality and simple scheduling
    • Solid option for urgent but non-emergency care
  4. Amwell
    • Strong insurance integration and broad provider network
    • Good for general urgent care plus specialist follow-up
    • Often bundled through health plans
  5. PlushCare
    • Best for more personalized primary/urgent care hybrid use
    • Good if you want a regular doctor relationship too
    • Works well for follow-up prescriptions and ongoing care
  6. Sesame
    • Best self-pay option for transparent pricing
    • Often cheaper than insured telehealth for one-off urgent visits
    • Good if you want to pay cash and avoid membership fees
  7. Carbon Health Virtual Care
    • Strong if you’re already in the Carbon Health ecosystem
    • Good for urgent care plus in-person follow-up if needed
    • Convenient in supported markets

Best picks by need

  • Best overall: Teladoc
  • Best insurance-based option: MDLIVE or Amwell
  • Best cash-pay: Sesame
  • Best for ongoing care + urgent visits: PlushCare
  • Best simple app experience: Doctor On Demand

If you want, I can also rank these by price, insurance acceptance, or best for kids/UTIs/skin issues.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best on-demand urgent care telemedicine platforms:

  1. Teladoc Health
    • Best for: broad availability, large insurance/network coverage
    • Good for: colds, flu, UTIs, allergies, rashes, minor infections
  2. Amwell
    • Best for: strong urgent care offering and many employer/insurance plans
    • Good for: fast video visits, 24/7 care in many states
  3. MDLIVE
    • Best for: quick access and solid urgent care + behavioral health options
    • Good for: common acute issues, often easy to use through insurance
  4. PlushCare
    • Best for: higher-touch primary/urgent care with board-certified doctors
    • Good for: when you want a more consistent doctor experience
  5. Doctor On Demand by Included Health
    • Best for: simple, reliable urgent care visits
    • Good for: straightforward same-day video consultations
  6. Sesame
    • Best for: self-pay pricing and transparent costs
    • Good for: people without insurance or who want to compare prices

My quick picks:

  • Best overall: Teladoc
  • Best for self-pay: Sesame
  • Best premium-feeling visit: PlushCare
  • Best employer-plan option: Amwell or MDLIVE

If you want, I can also rank these by price, insurance acceptance, or fastest appointment times.

What are the top-rated virtual urgent care services?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the best-known, top-rated virtual urgent care services are:

  • Teladoc Health — broad availability, 24/7 urgent care, strong name recognition
  • Amwell — good for general urgent care and insurance-linked visits
  • MDLIVE — popular for quick telehealth visits, often covered by employers/insurers
  • PlushCare — highly rated for same-day video visits and good clinician access
  • Doctor On Demand (now part of Included Health) — strong virtual urgent care and mental health care
  • Zocdoc — not a provider itself, but useful for finding highly rated virtual urgent care doctors
  • K Health — app-based, fast triage + virtual urgent care; often praised for convenience
  • Carbon Health — good if you want a mix of virtual and in-person care
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — convenient if you already use CVS/MinuteClinic
  • Mercy Care / local hospital-affiliated telehealth — often excellent if you want continuity with a local health system

Quick picks:

  • Best overall: Teladoc or PlushCare
  • Best for insurance coverage: MDLIVE or Amwell
  • Best if you want local continuity: Carbon Health or a hospital-affiliated service

If you want, I can also narrow this down by insurance, cost, or your state.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the top-rated virtual urgent care services are:

  • Teladoc Health — very widely used, strong for general urgent care, colds, flu, infections, rashes, and prescriptions.
  • Amwell — solid telehealth platform with board-certified doctors and good insurer coverage.
  • MDLIVE — known for quick access to urgent care, mental health, and dermatology.
  • Doctor On Demand — popular for fast video visits and good quality care.
  • Amazon Clinic — convenient if you already use Amazon; good for common conditions and easy checkout.
  • K Health — strong app-based care with symptom checking and affordable virtual visits.

If you want the “best” one, it usually breaks down like this:

  • Best overall: Teladoc
  • Best for insurance coverage: Amwell or MDLIVE
  • Best for convenience: Amazon Clinic
  • Best app experience: K Health

If you tell me your state, insurance, and whether you want prescriptions, I can narrow it to the best option for you.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the most consistently well-rated virtual urgent care services:

  • Teladoc Health — broad availability, fast access, good for common urgent issues
  • Amwell — strong doctor network, easy app/website access
  • Doctor on Demand by Included Health — highly rated for video visit quality and responsiveness
  • MDLIVE — widely used, often quick same-day availability
  • PlushCare — good for both urgent care and follow-up primary care
  • K Health — convenient app-based triage + clinician visits
  • Amazon One Medical — excellent if available in your area, especially for members
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — solid option for minor illnesses and simple follow-ups

Best overall picks:

  • Doctor on Demand
  • Teladoc
  • PlushCare

Best for convenience/app experience:

  • K Health
  • Amazon One Medical

Best if you want pharmacy + urgent care combo:

  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care

If you want, I can also narrow these down by insurance coverage, price, or best for kids.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the most highly rated virtual urgent care options are:

  • Teladoc Health — widely available, strong for general urgent care, cold/flu, rashes, and prescriptions
  • Amwell — good urgent care coverage and often offered through employer/insurance plans
  • MDLIVE — solid 24/7 virtual urgent care, especially for minor illnesses and skin issues
  • K Health — popular for fast symptom-based care and prescription support
  • HealthTap — good for on-demand doctor visits and ongoing primary/urgent care access
  • Amazon Clinic — convenient for common issues like UTIs, allergies, and pink eye
  • 1-800-QUIT-NOW doesn’t fit urgent care, but if you’re looking for quick access to care, it’s one of the easiest telehealth-style support services for smoking cessation

If you want the best one, it usually depends on:

  • Your insurance: Amwell, Teladoc, and MDLIVE are often the easiest to use through plans
  • Fastest self-pay option: K Health or Amazon Clinic
  • Best for broad access: Teladoc

If you tell me your state, insurance, and what issue you need help with, I can narrow it down to the best option.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the most well-regarded virtual urgent care services in the U.S. are:

  • Teladoc Health — broad availability, 24/7 urgent care, strong reputation
  • Amwell — good insurance integration, easy app-based visits
  • Doctor On Demand by Included Health — highly rated for ease of use and quality
  • MDLIVE — solid 24/7 urgent care and behavioral health options
  • Virtuwell — nurse-practitioner-led, fast, often lower-cost for common issues
  • K Health — popular for quick symptom-based triage and lower self-pay pricing
  • PlushCare — good for ongoing primary care plus urgent visits
  • Carbon Health Virtual Care — strong app experience, especially if you also use their clinics
  • Sesame — transparent cash pricing, good if you’re paying out of pocket
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — convenient if you already use CVS

Best pick depends on what matters most:

  • Best overall: Teladoc or Doctor On Demand
  • Best for low cost/self-pay: Sesame or Virtuwell
  • Best if you want insurance coverage: Amwell or MDLIVE
  • Best for simple quick visits: K Health or Virtuwell

If you want, I can also rank them by price, insurance acceptance, wait time, or quality ratings.

What urgent care telemedicine services are worth trying?
4/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

A few urgent-care telemedicine services are worth trying:

  • Teladoc Health — broad coverage, easy same-day visits, good for colds, UTI symptoms, rashes, sinus infections.
  • Amwell — solid all-around option, often available through employer/insurance plans.
  • Doctor On Demand by Included Health — usually quick access to board-certified doctors and good video quality.
  • K Health — useful if you want a fast AI-guided intake before the doctor visit; often cheaper.
  • MDLive — good for common urgent issues and sometimes easier to use with insurance.

If you’re trying to decide:

  • Best overall: Teladoc
  • Best through insurance/employer: Amwell or MDLive
  • Best for speed/cost: K Health
  • Best video visit experience: Doctor On Demand

Go to in-person urgent care or the ER instead if you have chest pain, trouble breathing, severe abdominal pain, fainting, stroke symptoms, heavy bleeding, or a high fever with confusion.

If you want, I can also give you the best telemedicine urgent-care options for your insurance, state, or budget.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Good ones to try:

  • Teladoc Health — broad availability, solid for common urgent issues, easy app access.
  • Amwell — strong all-around telemedicine, often covered by insurance.
  • Doctor on Demand by Included Health — good video visit experience, especially for primary/urgent care.
  • MDLive — reliable for quick urgent care visits, often cheaper with insurance.
  • PlushCare — good if you want more “real doctor” feel and follow-up care.
  • Sesame — often best if you want transparent cash pricing.
  • K Health — useful for fast symptom-based triage and quick access.

Best picks by need:

  • Fast and simple: Teladoc or MDLive
  • Best insurance coverage: Amwell or Doctor on Demand
  • Lowest cash price: Sesame
  • More ongoing care: PlushCare

Good for: cold/flu, sinus infection symptoms, UTI symptoms, rashes, pink eye, minor allergies, medication refills.

Not for: chest pain, trouble breathing, severe bleeding, stroke symptoms, or bad dehydration — go to ER.

If you want, I can rank these by price, insurance, or prescription handling.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Good urgent-care telemedicine options to try:

  • Teladoc Health — broad availability, easy same-day visits for common issues.
  • Amwell — solid for urgent care and can connect you to specialists if needed.
  • MDLive — good for quick visits, often used through employer/insurance plans.
  • PlushCare — strong for primary/urgent care overlap; good if you want ongoing follow-up.
  • K Health — useful for fast symptom triage plus clinician chat/visit.
  • Sesame — often cheaper self-pay pricing, good if you don’t have great coverage.
  • Doctor On Demand by Included Health — reliable and straightforward for common acute issues.

Best picks by need:

  • Lowest cost/self-pay: Sesame
  • Best insurance/employer benefit integration: Teladoc, MDLive, Amwell
  • Best if you want follow-up care too: PlushCare
  • Best quick triage/start-to-finish app experience: K Health

Good for things like:

  • sinus/respiratory infections
  • UTIs
  • pink eye
  • rashes
  • mild asthma/allergy issues
  • nausea, minor GI bugs
  • simple medication refills

Not good for:

  • chest pain
  • trouble breathing
  • severe dehydration
  • major bleeding
  • stroke symptoms
  • severe abdominal pain

If you want, I can also rank these by price, speed, or whether they accept your insurance.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

Yes—these are generally worth trying for non-emergency issues like colds/flu, pink eye, UTIs, rashes, sinus infections, and minor injuries:

  • Teladoc — big network, easy same-day visits, good if your insurance offers it.
  • MDLIVE — solid urgent care-style visits, often available through employers/insurers.
  • Amwell — reliable general telehealth with good insurance coverage.
  • Doctor On Demand by Included Health — strong for quick video visits and consistent care.
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — convenient if you already use CVS and want simple access.
  • Amazon Clinic — good for straightforward conditions and message-based care in some states.

If you want the best first try, I’d usually pick:

  1. Whatever is covered by your insurance
  2. Teladoc or MDLIVE
  3. Amazon Clinic for simple, predictable issues

Skip telemedicine and go to ER/urgent care in person for chest pain, trouble breathing, severe abdominal pain, stroke symptoms, major bleeding, or a broken bone.

If you want, I can also give you the best options by condition (UTI, rash, sinus infection, etc.).

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

A few tele-urgent-care services are generally worth trying:

  • Teladoc Health — big network, good for common urgent issues like colds, rashes, UTIs, pink eye.
  • Amwell — solid all-around option, often easy through employer/insurance.
  • MDLIVE — strong for quick same-day visits; good if you want an uncomplicated app-based experience.
  • Doctor On Demand by Included Health — well-known, usually good video quality and convenient scheduling.
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — convenient if you already use CVS and want straightforward care.
  • Sesame — good if you’re paying cash and want transparent pricing.

Best picks by need:

  • Fastest/easiest: MDLIVE or Teladoc
  • Best with insurance: Amwell or Teladoc
  • Best cash price: Sesame
  • Best pharmacy integration: CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care

Use telemedicine for things like:

  • sore throat, cough, sinus symptoms
  • minor skin issues
  • UTIs
  • eye irritation
  • medication refills in some cases

Go to in-person urgent care or ER for:

  • chest pain
  • trouble breathing
  • severe abdominal pain
  • high fever with confusion
  • major injuries
  • signs of stroke or allergic reaction

If you want, I can also rank the best ones for low cost, speed, or insurance coverage.

What are the best urgent care video visit options?
3/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

Top urgent care video-visit options (US) are usually:

  • K Health — strong for quick symptom checks + prescriptions; often lower-cost self-pay.
  • Teladoc — widely available through many employers/insurers; solid all-around urgent care.
  • Amwell — good urgent care coverage, often easy if your insurance already includes it.
  • MDLIVE — reliable for common urgent issues, especially if your plan offers it.
  • Doctor On Demand by Included Health — polished video visits and good clinician access.
  • Amazon One Medical — great if you already use One Medical; very convenient, but membership may apply.
  • PlushCare — good if you want continuity and follow-up, including some primary-care style support.

Best picks by situation:

  • Lowest hassle/cost: K Health
  • Best if insured: Teladoc or Amwell
  • Best overall user experience: Doctor On Demand or One Medical
  • Best for ongoing follow-up: PlushCare

Good for video urgent care:

  • sore throat, sinus symptoms, cough/cold/flu
  • UTI symptoms
  • rashes
  • pink eye
  • minor skin infections
  • medication refills

Not good for video urgent care:

  • chest pain
  • trouble breathing
  • severe abdominal pain
  • stroke symptoms
  • major injury/bleeding

If you want, I can also rank the best cheap options, best insurance-covered options, or best apps for same-day prescriptions.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the best urgent care video visit options are:

  • Teladoc Health — broad availability, good for common urgent issues
  • Amwell — strong national network, often covered by insurance
  • Doctor On Demand (now part of Included Health in some plans) — easy app-based visits
  • MDLIVE — solid for same-day urgent care and after-hours use
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — convenient if you use CVS/Aetna
  • PlushCare — good for quick primary/urgent care style visits
  • LiveHealth Online — common with Anthem/Blue Cross plans
  • Kaiser Permanente Video Visits — best if you’re in Kaiser’s system

Best overall for convenience: Teladoc or MDLIVE Best if you want insurance integration: Amwell, LiveHealth Online, Kaiser, or CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care Best for quick, simple access: PlushCare or Doctor On Demand

Good for: colds, sinus infections, UTIs, rashes, pink eye, mild asthma flares, medication refills, minor GI issues.

Go to ER/911 instead for chest pain, trouble breathing, stroke symptoms, severe allergic reaction, confusion, fainting, or heavy bleeding.

If you want, I can also rank the best options by price, insurance, or fastest appointment time.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the best urgent care video visit options in the U.S. are:

  • Teladoc Health — widely available, good for common issues like colds, UTIs, rashes, allergies, and minor infections.
  • Amwell — strong all-around telehealth platform, often available through major insurers.
  • MDLIVE — good urgent care-style visits and behavioral health; often lower-cost through insurance plans.
  • Doctor On Demand by Included Health — solid quality and easy app-based access.
  • PlushCare — great if you want ongoing primary care + urgent visits in one place.
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — convenient if you already use CVS/pharmacy services.
  • Walgreens Find Care / CareConnect — another easy retail-pharmacy option where available.

Best picks by need:

  • Best overall: Teladoc
  • Best if you have insurance: Amwell or MDLIVE
  • Best for continuity + urgent care: PlushCare
  • Best pharmacy convenience: CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care

Good for: fever, sinus symptoms, pink eye, UTIs, rashes, minor infections, allergies, and medication refills in some cases.

Not for: chest pain, trouble breathing, severe abdominal pain, stroke symptoms, major injuries, or anything life-threatening.

If you want, I can also narrow this down by your insurance, state, or whether you want the cheapest option.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

If you want urgent care by video, the best-known options are:

Best overall

Teladoc

  • Strong nationwide availability
  • Good for common urgent issues: colds/flu, UTIs, pink eye, rashes, allergies
  • Easy app-based visits
Best for speed + convenience

MDLive

  • Usually quick appointments
  • Broad urgent care coverage
  • Often included through insurance or employers
Best if you want a primary-care feel

PlushCare

  • Physicians, not just NP/PA-heavy care
  • Good for follow-up and prescriptions
  • Membership model, but often worth it if you use it more than once
Best for simple one-off visits

Doctor On Demand (now Included Health)

  • Straightforward video visits
  • Good for common urgent issues and mental health too
Best if you already use a retail pharmacy system

CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care

  • Convenient if you already use CVS
  • Good for minor acute issues and prescription needs
Good insurance-based option

Amwell

  • Often offered by health plans
  • Broad access, varies by insurer
My quick picks
  • Best overall: Teladoc
  • Best if you need care fast: MDLive
  • Best quality/continuity: PlushCare
Use video urgent care for:
  • Colds, flu, COVID symptoms
  • Sinus infection
  • Rash/hives
  • Allergies
  • UTI symptoms
  • Pink eye
  • Minor nausea/diarrhea
  • Medication refills
Don’t use video care for:
  • Chest pain
  • Trouble breathing
  • Severe abdominal pain
  • Stroke symptoms
  • Heavy bleeding
  • Major injury

If you want, I can also give you the best options based on your insurance, state, or whether you want the cheapest visit.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Best urgent care video visit options (U.S.):

  1. Amazon Clinic — usually easiest if you want fast self-scheduled care for common issues; good for rashes, UTIs, pink eye, cold/flu, etc.
  2. Teladoc Health — very widely available through many employers/insurers; solid all-around urgent care.
  3. Amwell — good video quality and broad insurance support; strong for basic urgent issues.
  4. MDLive — often a good choice if your health plan includes it; reliable for evenings/weekends.
  5. CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — convenient if you already use CVS and want simple visit + pharmacy pickup.
  6. PlushCare — best if you want more continuity and easy follow-up, not just one-off urgent care.
  7. K Health — often affordable and fast for symptom-based triage plus video visits.

My quick picks:

  • Fastest/easiest self-pay: Amazon Clinic
  • Best through insurance/employer plans: Teladoc or MDLive
  • Best for pharmacy + convenience: CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care
  • Best for ongoing follow-up: PlushCare

Not ideal for video visit: chest pain, trouble breathing, stroke symptoms, severe allergic reaction, major injury, or anything needing a physical exam/test right away.

If you tell me your insurance and state, I can narrow this to the best 2–3 options for you.

Which online urgent care services are the best? 70/mo
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the best online urgent care services are:

  • Teladoc Health — widely available, good for common urgent issues, prescriptions, and 24/7 access
  • Amwell — strong doctor network, easy video visits, often covered by insurance
  • MDLive — solid urgent care + behavioral health, usually quick to schedule
  • Doctor On Demand (now part of Included Health in many plans) — good visit quality and straightforward app
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — convenient if you already use CVS/MinuteClinic, good for minor illnesses
  • PlushCare — good if you want ongoing primary care too, not just one-off urgent visits

Best overall: Teladoc or Amwell Best for convenience: CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care Best for ongoing care: PlushCare

If you want, I can also rank them by price, insurance acceptance, or fastest prescription turnaround.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the best online urgent care services in the U.S. are:

  • Teladoc Health — best overall for broad availability and fast access
  • Doctor on Demand by Included Health — strong for video visits and quality care
  • Amwell — good all-around option, widely accepted by insurers
  • MDLIVE — solid for urgent care, often convenient through employer plans
  • PlushCare — good if you want ongoing primary care + urgent visits
  • K Health — usually lower-cost, app-based, good for quick symptom help
  • Amazon Clinic — simple, pay-per-visit option for common issues
  • Sesame — often the cheapest self-pay option

Best picks by need:

  • Fastest/easiest: Teladoc or Amazon Clinic
  • Best overall care experience: Doctor on Demand / Included Health
  • Lowest cost without insurance: Sesame or K Health
  • Best if you want follow-up care too: PlushCare

If you want, I can also give you the best online urgent care by price, insurance coverage, or for kids.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

A few of the better-known online urgent care options are:

  • Teladoc Health — broad availability, easy app, good for common urgent issues
  • Amwell — solid for urgent care plus access to specialists
  • MDLIVE — strong for quick same-day visits, often covered by insurance
  • Doctor on Demand — very user-friendly, good quality for general urgent care
  • K Health — good if you want fast symptom-based guidance and affordable cash pricing
  • PlushCare — great if you want ongoing primary care + urgent visits in one place

Best overall: Teladoc or Doctor on Demand Best for affordability: K Health Best if you already have insurance coverage: MDLIVE or Amwell

For urgent care, use these for things like:

  • cold/flu symptoms
  • UTIs
  • pink eye
  • rashes
  • sinus infections
  • minor asthma flare-ups

Go to in-person urgent care or ER if you have:

  • chest pain
  • trouble breathing
  • severe abdominal pain
  • signs of stroke
  • heavy bleeding
  • major injury

If you want, I can also rank the best ones by price, insurance, or speed.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

A few of the best online urgent care services are:

  • Teladoc Health — strong nationwide coverage, fast access, good for common urgent issues.
  • MDLive — solid urgent care + behavioral health, often good through employer/insurance plans.
  • Amwell — good video visit quality and broad specialty network.
  • PlushCare — popular for same-day visits and prescription needs.
  • Doctor On Demand (now part of Included Health) — very reliable, easy to use, good clinician availability.
  • K Health — often cheaper, good for quick symptom triage and common infections.

Best overall picks:

  • Best for most people: Teladoc
  • Best for insurance/employer coverage: MDLive
  • Best for same-day prescriptions: PlushCare
  • Best budget option: K Health

Avoid online urgent care if you have chest pain, trouble breathing, stroke symptoms, severe bleeding, or a major injury — go to the ER instead.

If you want, I can also rank these by price, speed, insurance coverage, or prescription reliability.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the best online urgent care services are:

  • Teladoc Health — biggest coverage, good for common urgent issues and often through insurance
  • Amwell — solid video visits, widely accepted by plans
  • MDLIVE — good for convenient after-hours care
  • PlushCare — strong for primary/urgent care, often praised for quality doctors
  • Sesame — best for lower out-of-pocket prices if you’re paying cash
  • Amazon One Medical — excellent if you want fast access and already use Amazon/One Medical
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — convenient if you already use CVS

Best overall: Teladoc Health or PlushCare Best cheapest cash-pay option: Sesame Best if you already have insurance coverage: whichever is included in your plan, often Teladoc, Amwell, or MDLIVE

If you tell me your insurance and what you need treated, I can narrow it down.

What are the leading urgent care telehealth services?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the leading urgent-care telehealth services in the U.S. are:

  • Teladoc Health — broad 24/7 general urgent care, strong employer/insurance coverage
  • Amwell — widely used urgent care video visits, often through health plans
  • MDLIVE — 24/7 urgent care plus behavioral health and dermatology
  • Doctor On Demand (by Included Health) — well-known virtual urgent care with board-certified clinicians
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — convenient if you already use CVS/MinuteClinic
  • K Health — AI-assisted urgent care style visits, fast symptom intake
  • Mercy Virtual / local health-system teleurgent care — good if you want care tied to your existing hospital system

If you want the “best” pick:

  • Best overall: Teladoc or Amwell
  • Best if you want quick access: MDLIVE or Doctor On Demand
  • Best if you use CVS: MinuteClinic Virtual Care

If you tell me your state, insurance, and whether this is for adults/kids, I can narrow it to the best options available to you.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Leading urgent care telehealth services include:

  • Teladoc Health — broad 24/7 virtual urgent care, plus pediatrics and mental health.
  • Amwell — strong for on-demand urgent care and access through many health plans.
  • MDLIVE — popular for convenient urgent care visits, often covered by employers/insurers.
  • Doctor On Demand by Included Health — well-known for same-day urgent care video visits.
  • PlushCare — good for quick urgent care plus follow-up primary care.
  • One Medical (Amazon One Medical) — virtual urgent care backed by a larger primary care network.
  • Zocdoc Virtual Care — useful for finding same-day telehealth appointments with independent clinicians.

If you want the best choice, it usually comes down to:

  • Fastest access: Teladoc, MDLIVE, Doctor On Demand
  • Best if you want ongoing care: One Medical, PlushCare
  • Best through insurance/employer: Amwell, MDLIVE, Teladoc

If you tell me your state, insurance, and whether you need adult, pediatric, or COVID/UTI/sinus care, I can narrow it to the best option.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Leading urgent care telehealth services in the U.S. include:

  • Teladoc Health — broad virtual urgent care for common issues like colds, flu, infections, rashes, and minor injuries.
  • Amwell — strong on-demand urgent care plus specialist access through many employers and insurers.
  • MDLIVE — popular for 24/7 urgent care, especially for skin, respiratory, allergy, and general medical concerns.
  • Doctor On Demand by Included Health — well-known virtual urgent care with board-certified physicians.
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — convenient if you already use CVS/MinuteClinic services.
  • Mercy Virtual / other health-system telehealth — often best if you want care tied to your local hospital network.
  • K Health — app-based urgent care with AI triage and clinician visits.
  • Amazon Clinic — easy for common urgent-care-type conditions in participating states.

If you want, I can also give you:

  1. the best low-cost options,
  2. best insurance-friendly options, or
  3. a ranked list by speed/quality.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the leading urgent care telehealth services in the U.S. are:

  • Teladoc Health — broad 24/7 virtual urgent care for common issues like colds, rashes, UTIs, allergies.
  • Amwell — strong nationwide telehealth platform with on-demand urgent care and access to specialists.
  • MDLive — popular for quick virtual urgent care, including dermatology and mental health add-ons.
  • Doctor on Demand (now part of Included Health) — well-known for fast, board-certified urgent care visits.
  • PlushCare — good for same-day urgent care plus ongoing primary care if you want continuity.
  • K Health — app-based urgent care with AI symptom intake and doctor follow-up.
  • Carbon Health Virtual Care — integrated with in-person urgent care clinics in many areas.
  • Cleveland Clinic Express Care Online — strong option if you want care tied to a major health system.

If you want, I can also rank these by price, speed, insurance acceptance, or best for kids.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the leading urgent care telehealth services are:

  • Teladoc Health — broad 24/7 urgent care for common issues like colds, UTIs, rashes, allergies, and flu symptoms.
  • Amwell — strong national virtual urgent care option, often available through employer or health plan benefits.
  • MDLIVE — popular for 24/7 urgent care, plus mental health and dermatology.
  • PlushCare — good for same-day virtual visits with board-certified doctors; often used for urgent care and primary care.
  • Included Health (Doctor On Demand) — well-known virtual urgent care service with fast access and insurance integration.
  • CVS Health Virtual Care / MinuteClinic Virtual Care — convenient if you already use CVS and want retail-health integration.
  • K Health — app-based care with AI triage plus clinician visits; useful for quick symptom evaluation.

If you want, I can also narrow these down by best for low cost, fastest access, or best with insurance.

What are the best immediate care telemedicine services?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the best immediate care / urgent telemedicine services are:

  1. Teladoc Health — broad availability, 24/7 urgent care, good for common issues like colds, rashes, UTIs, allergies.
  2. Amwell — solid urgent care visits, often easy to use through employer/insurance plans.
  3. MDLive — strong for fast same-day care, includes urgent care, psych, and dermatology.
  4. PlushCare — good if you want a more “primary care-like” experience and follow-up care.
  5. Doctor on Demand by Included Health — reliable same-day urgent care, usually quick to connect.
  6. Amazon Clinic / One Medical — convenient for straightforward, asynchronous treatment in many states.

Best overall: Teladoc or MDLive Best for a more personal doctor relationship: PlushCare Best if your employer/health plan offers it: Amwell or Doctor on Demand

If you want, I can also rank them for price, speed, insurance coverage, or kids/family care.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the best immediate-care telemedicine services are:

  • Teladoc Health — broad 24/7 urgent care, good for quick visits and many insurance plans.
  • Amwell — solid same-day virtual urgent care; easy app-based access.
  • Doctor on Demand by Included Health — strong for fast medical visits, often praised for quality and short wait times.
  • MDLIVE — good 24/7 urgent care, usually easy to use through employer/insurance plans.
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — convenient if you already use CVS; good for common issues and follow-up care.
  • K Health — fast AI-assisted intake plus clinician chat/visit; often cheaper for self-pay.

Best overall for speed + availability: Teladoc or MDLIVE Best for quality of care: Doctor on Demand / Included Health Best if you use CVS: MinuteClinic Virtual Care Best low-cost self-pay option: K Health

If you want, I can also rank these for cost, wait time, or insurance coverage.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best immediate care telemedicine services (urgent-care style, on-demand):

  1. Teladoc Health
    • Best overall for broad availability and fast access
    • Good for: colds, flu, allergies, rashes, infections, GI issues
  2. Amwell Urgent Care
    • Best for solid insurance coverage and hospital-network integration
    • Good for: same-day urgent visits, simple prescriptions
  3. MDLIVE
    • Best for quick access and easy app-based visits
    • Good for: common acute issues, mental health too
  4. PlushCare
    • Best for higher-touch primary/urgent care feel
    • Good for: longer visits, follow-up care, ongoing meds
  5. Doctor On Demand (by Included Health)
    • Best for straightforward same-day urgent care
    • Good for: fever, sinus infections, UTIs, pink eye, etc.
  6. Sesame
    • Best for low-cost self-pay care
    • Good for: transparent pricing, one-off urgent visits
Best pick by need
  • Fastest/easiest: Teladoc or MDLIVE
  • Best if using insurance: Amwell or Doctor On Demand
  • Best if paying cash: Sesame
  • Best for a more personalized visit: PlushCare
When telemedicine is not enough

Go to in-person urgent care/ER for: chest pain, trouble breathing, severe dehydration, stroke symptoms, major injury, heavy bleeding, severe abdominal pain, or high fever with confusion.

If you want, I can also give you the best telemedicine services by insurance, price, or for kids.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the best immediate-care telemedicine services are:

  • Teladoc Health — broad availability, quick access to urgent care, good for common issues like cold/flu, UTIs, rashes, allergies.
  • Amwell — strong general urgent care coverage and often available through employer/insurance plans.
  • MDLIVE — fast virtual urgent care plus behavioral health and dermatology in many states.
  • Doctor on Demand by Included Health — very easy to use, good same-day access to physicians and therapists.
  • Sesame — often the best cash-pay option; transparent pricing and fast booking.
  • Amazon One Medical — good if you want a more polished primary-care style telehealth experience, but not always the cheapest.

Best overall: Teladoc or Doctor on Demand Best for lower-cost self-pay: Sesame Best if your employer offers it: Amwell or MDLIVE

If you want, I can also narrow this down by price, speed, insurance coverage, or country/state.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best immediate-care telemedicine services in the U.S.:

  1. Teladoc Health
    • Strong for 24/7 general urgent care
    • Good app, broad insurance support
    • Handles things like colds, flu, allergies, UTIs, rashes
  2. Amwell
    • Reliable on-demand urgent care
    • Often available through employer/insurance plans
    • Easy to use for same-day video visits
  3. MDLIVE
    • Good 24/7 urgent care plus behavioral health
    • Usually fast access and solid insurance coverage
    • Often a cheaper option if covered by your plan
  4. Doctor On Demand by Included Health
    • Excellent for same-day medical visits
    • Very user-friendly
    • Good quality for general urgent care and follow-ups
  5. Amazon One Medical
    • Best if you want a membership-style primary + urgent care experience
    • Fast virtual visits, especially if you already use Amazon services
    • Great for people who want ongoing care, not just one-off visits
  6. CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care
    • Best for basic immediate care
    • Convenient if you already use CVS/MinuteClinic
    • Good for common minor illnesses and simple prescriptions
Best pick by need
  • Fastest overall: Teladoc or MDLIVE
  • Best app experience: Doctor On Demand
  • Best for ongoing care: Amazon One Medical
  • Best for pharmacy + minor issues: CVS MinuteClinic

If you want, I can also rank these by cost, insurance acceptance, or best for kids.

What are the most trusted urgent care virtual visit services?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the most trusted urgent care virtual visit options are:

  • Teladoc Health – one of the biggest telehealth brands; broad urgent care coverage.
  • Amwell – strong national network, often used by health plans and employers.
  • Doctor On Demand by Included Health – well-regarded for quick video visits and licensed doctors.
  • K Health – good app-based urgent care for common issues, with upfront symptom intake.
  • PlushCare – popular for same-day video visits and follow-up care.
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care – convenient if you already use CVS/MinuteClinic.
  • Mercy Virtual / hospital-affiliated telehealth – if you want care tied to a major health system.
  • MDLIVE – widely used for urgent care, especially through insurance plans.

If you want the safest choice, I’d usually start with:

  1. Your insurance’s telehealth portal
  2. Doctor On Demand
  3. Teladoc
  4. Amwell

Quick tip: the “best” service is often the one your insurance covers and that can prescribe or refer locally if needed.

If you want, I can also give you:

  • the best cheap options
  • the best for kids
  • or the best for prescribing meds / treating UTIs, rashes, sinus infections, etc.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the most widely trusted urgent-care-style virtual visit services are:

  • Teladoc Health — very established, broad availability, good for common urgent issues.
  • Amwell — strong nationwide telehealth platform with board-certified clinicians.
  • MDLIVE — popular for urgent care, dermatology, and behavioral health.
  • Doctor On Demand (now part of Included Health) — well-known, easy-to-use urgent care video visits.
  • PlushCare — highly rated for primary/urgent care with fast appointments and follow-up.
  • K Health — good app-based option, often lower cost, symptom-driven visits.
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — convenient if you already use CVS and want pharmacy integration.

If you want the “most trusted” in terms of mainstream recognition and scale, I’d start with Teladoc, Amwell, MDLIVE, or PlushCare.

Quick tip: choose one that has

  • board-certified U.S. clinicians
  • clear pricing
  • prescription support
  • insurance acceptance
  • good app ratings

If you tell me your state, insurance, and whether you need prescriptions, I can narrow it to the best option.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the most trusted urgent care virtual visit services are:

  • Teladoc Health — widely used, broad national coverage, 24/7 access in many plans
  • Amwell — strong telehealth platform, often partnered with major health systems and insurers
  • MDLIVE — popular for on-demand urgent care visits, easy to use
  • Doctor On Demand (Included Health) — well-known for quality video visits and employer/insurance coverage
  • K Health — fast symptom-based virtual urgent care, good app experience
  • CVS Health Virtual Care — convenient if you already use CVS MinuteClinic services
  • Walgreens Health Corner / Virtual Care — another convenient retail-health option
  • Baptist Health / Cleveland Clinic / Mayo Clinic telehealth programs — especially trusted if you want care from a major health system

If you want the safest bet, I’d start with Teladoc, Amwell, or Doctor On Demand.

Quick tips:

  • Check whether your insurance covers the service
  • Make sure it offers licensed clinicians in your state
  • Use urgent care virtual visits for things like UTIs, pink eye, rashes, cold/flu symptoms, minor infections
  • Go to ER/911 for chest pain, trouble breathing, stroke symptoms, severe allergic reaction, or major injury

If you want, I can also rank these by price, speed, or best for uninsured users.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the most trusted urgent care virtual visit services are:

  • Teladoc Health — widely used, 24/7 general urgent care
  • Amwell — solid nationwide telehealth platform
  • MDLive — common for quick urgent care visits
  • Doctor On Demand by Included Health — strong reputation, easy same-day care
  • PlushCare — good for primary/urgent care-style visits
  • CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care — convenient if you already use CVS
  • Kaiser Permanente Video Visits — excellent if you’re in the Kaiser system
  • Mercy Virtual / local health-system telehealth — often best if you want continuity with your own doctors

Best overall pick:

  • Teladoc Health or Doctor On Demand for broad availability and ease of use.

If you want the most trusted by your own records/history:

  • Your local hospital system’s virtual urgent care is often best.

Go to ER / call emergency services instead for:

  • chest pain, trouble breathing
  • stroke signs
  • severe allergic reaction
  • heavy bleeding
  • fainting, confusion, or severe dehydration

If you want, I can also rank these by price, speed, insurance acceptance, or pediatric care.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the most trusted urgent care virtual visit services are:

  • Teladoc Health — one of the biggest and most established telehealth brands
  • Amwell — widely used by hospitals and insurers
  • MDLIVE — common through employer and insurance plans
  • Doctor on Demand / Included Health — strong clinical reputation, especially for employer-based coverage
  • CVS Health Virtual Care — convenient if you already use CVS/Aetna services
  • Kaiser Permanente Virtual Care — very trusted if you’re in Kaiser’s system
  • Mayo Clinic Care Network / virtual options — excellent for higher-trust, integrated care when available

Best pick depends on your situation:

  • Best overall general trust: Teladoc, Amwell
  • Best if you want insurer/employer coverage: MDLIVE, Included Health
  • Best if you want pharmacy/retail convenience: CVS Virtual Care
  • Best if you’re already in a health system: Kaiser, Mayo-linked services

When choosing, check:

  1. Board-certified clinicians
  2. Prescription capability
  3. Your insurance coverage
  4. Average wait time
  5. Access to records/follow-up

If you want, I can also give you a top 5 by cheapest, best by insurance, or best for kids.

What are the best urgent care chat or video services?
3/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best urgent care chat/video services:

  1. Teladoc Health
    • Best overall for broad availability
    • 24/7 video visits; some plans offer chat
    • Good for colds, flu, UTIs, allergies, rashes
  2. Doctor On Demand (Included under Included Health)
    • Best for straightforward video urgent care
    • Easy-to-use app, generally fast access
    • Good for minor infections, pink eye, sinus issues
  3. Amwell
    • Best if you want insurance-friendly telehealth
    • Video visits with urgent care doctors
    • Often covered by major insurance plans
  4. MDLIVE
    • Best for 24/7 urgent care access
    • Video visits and sometimes messaging/chat depending on plan
    • Good for common non-emergency issues
  5. PlushCare
    • Best for higher-touch virtual care
    • Video visits, prescriptions when appropriate
    • Often feels more like a primary care clinic
  6. Sesame
    • Best for cash-pay pricing
    • You can book quick video visits with transparent prices
    • Good if you don’t want to use insurance

If you want the simplest pick:

  • Teladoc for widest access
  • Doctor On Demand for easiest video urgent care
  • Sesame for lowest out-of-pocket pricing

If you want, I can also give you the best options by insurance, price, or fastest same-day availability.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best urgent-care-style chat/video services:

  1. Teladoc
    • Best overall for broad urgent care access
    • 24/7 video visits in many areas
    • Good for colds, flu, rashes, UTIs, allergies
  2. Amwell
    • Strong video visit platform
    • Often available through employers/health plans
    • Good clinician availability and easy app use
  3. MDLIVE
    • Very solid for on-demand urgent care
    • 24/7 access in many plans
    • Also offers mental health and dermatology
  4. Doctor On Demand (Included in Amazon One Medical / One Medical’s virtual care)
    • Excellent user experience
    • Fast video visits and good primary-care follow-up
    • Great if you already use Amazon/One Medical
  5. K Health
    • Best for chat-first symptom checking + clinician follow-up
    • More affordable in some cases
    • Good for quick triage and simple issues
  6. Sesame
    • Best for cash-pay pricing
    • Often lower-cost urgent care video visits
    • Good if you don’t want insurance hassles
  7. CVS MinuteClinic Virtual Care
    • Convenient if you like CVS/MinuteClinic
    • Good for common urgent care needs
    • Easy if you also use CVS pharmacy

My quick picks:

  • Best overall: Teladoc
  • Best for affordability: Sesame
  • Best chat-based option: K Health
  • Best if you want a polished app: Doctor On Demand / One Medical
  • Best if your insurance already covers it: MDLIVE or Amwell

If you want, I can also give you the best urgent care app based on your insurance, budget, or condition.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

Some of the best urgent care chat/video services are:

  • Teladoc — strong all-around option, broad availability, good for common urgent issues
  • Amwell — solid video visits, often covered by insurance, easy to use
  • Doctor on Demand (Included Health) — highly rated for fast video visits and good clinician quality
  • HealthTap — good for ongoing access and quick consults
  • K Health — best if you want symptom-checking + chat-based urgent care

Best picks by need

  • Best overall: Doctor on Demand
  • Best for insurance coverage: Amwell or Teladoc
  • Best chat-first experience: K Health
  • Best for convenience and speed: Teladoc

Good to know

  • For chest pain, trouble breathing, stroke symptoms, severe bleeding, or serious injury: go to the ER / call 911, not urgent care chat.
  • Many services work through an app or website and can treat things like colds, flu, UTI symptoms, rashes, pink eye, and minor infections.

If you want, I can also give you the best urgent care app based on your insurance, state, or price.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Best urgent care chat/video services (US) are usually:

  • Teladoc Health — big network, good for common urgent issues, often available 24/7.
  • Amwell — strong video visits, widely used by insurers.
  • MDLIVE — good for after-hours urgent care and behavioral health.
  • PlushCare — good if you want higher-touch primary/urgent care style visits.
  • Sesame — often the cheapest cash-pay option for quick video visits.
  • Doctor on Demand (now included with Included Health in many plans) — solid video urgent care, especially through employers/insurance.

Best picks by need

  • Best overall: Teladoc
  • Best video quality/insurance coverage: Amwell
  • Best for low-cost cash pay: Sesame
  • Best for more “real doctor” follow-up feel: PlushCare
  • Best after-hours: MDLIVE

Use urgent care chat/video for: colds, flu, UTIs, rashes, allergies, pink eye, minor infections, medication refills. Go to ER now for chest pain, trouble breathing, stroke symptoms, severe bleeding, fainting, or severe allergic reaction.

If you want, I can also give you the best one for your insurance, state, and budget.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the best urgent care chat/video services are:

  • Teladoc Health — broad access, 24/7, good for common urgent issues.
  • Amwell — strong video visits, often covered by insurance plans.
  • MDLive — good for urgent care, mental health, and dermatology.
  • Doctor On Demand (now part of Included Health) — very polished video care experience.
  • Bupa / Babylon in some regions — convenient if available in your country.
  • K Health — chat-first, fast triage, good for symptom checking and basic urgent care.
  • Amazon One Medical — excellent if you already have access through a membership/employer.

Best pick by use case:

  • Fastest easy access: Teladoc or MDLive
  • Best video quality: Doctor On Demand / Included Health
  • Best chat-first experience: K Health
  • Best if you already use a health plan: Amwell or One Medical

If you want, I can also narrow this down by country, insurance, or whether you need 24/7 care.

All 72 prompts run for Teladoc Health

LBA — Latent Brand Association (6)

  • 1 What is Teladoc Health known for?
  • 2 What are Teladoc Health's main strengths and weaknesses?
  • 3 Who should use Teladoc Health? Who should avoid it?
  • 4 How does Teladoc Health compare to its main competitors?
  • 5 What do people typically complain about with Teladoc Health?
  • 6 What is a typical urgent care telemedicine service known for? control

Authority — LLM Authority (50)

  • 1 What are the best urgent care telemedicine services for adults? discovery
  • 2 What are the best urgent care telemedicine services for kids? discovery
  • 3 What are the best urgent care telemedicine services for a sinus infection? discovery
  • 4 What are the best virtual urgent care options for a UTI? discovery
  • 5 What are the best telemedicine urgent care services for pink eye? discovery
  • 6 What are the best urgent care telemedicine services for a rash? discovery
  • 7 What are the best online urgent care services for allergies? discovery
  • 8 What are the best virtual urgent care services for flu symptoms? discovery
  • 9 What are the best urgent care telemedicine services for sore throat? discovery
  • 10 What are the best urgent care telemedicine services for after-hours care? discovery
  • 11 What are the best urgent care telemedicine services with prescriptions? discovery
  • 12 What are the best urgent care telemedicine services with video visits? discovery
  • 13 What are the best urgent care telemedicine services with chat visits? discovery
  • 14 What are the best urgent care telemedicine services for same-day care? discovery
  • 15 What are the best urgent care telemedicine services for travelers? discovery
  • 16 What are the best low-cost urgent care telemedicine services? discovery
  • 17 What are the best urgent care telemedicine services with licensed doctors? discovery
  • 18 What are the best urgent care telemedicine services for women’s health issues? discovery
  • 19 What are the best urgent care telemedicine services for respiratory infections? discovery
  • 20 What are the best urgent care telemedicine services available 24/7? discovery
  • 21 What are the best alternatives to a national virtual urgent care network? comparison
  • 22 What are the best alternatives to a telemedicine urgent care app? comparison
  • 23 Which urgent care telemedicine services are better than a hospital virtual visit? comparison
  • 24 What are the best alternatives to video-only urgent care services? comparison
  • 25 Which is better: chat-based urgent care or video-based urgent care? comparison
  • 26 What are the best alternatives to a subscription-based urgent care telemedicine service? comparison
  • 27 What are the best alternatives to employer-sponsored virtual urgent care? comparison
  • 28 Which urgent care telemedicine services are better for prescriptions than walk-in clinics? comparison
  • 29 What are the best alternatives to an app-based urgent care provider? comparison
  • 30 What are the best alternatives to a 24/7 virtual urgent care service? comparison
  • 31 How do I get treated for a UTI without going to urgent care? problem
  • 32 How can I see a doctor quickly for a sinus infection? problem
  • 33 How do I get a prescription for a minor infection today? problem
  • 34 What should I do for a rash if I can't get to a clinic? problem
  • 35 How can I get help for a sore throat after hours? problem
  • 36 What is the fastest way to get medical advice for flu symptoms? problem
  • 37 How do I get urgent care for pink eye without waiting in person? problem
  • 38 How can I get care for allergies on the weekend? problem
  • 39 What do I use for a quick medical visit for a child with a fever? problem
  • 40 How do I get immediate medical attention for a non-emergency issue? problem
  • 41 How much does urgent care telemedicine cost? transactional
  • 42 Is urgent care telemedicine free? transactional
  • 43 What is the cheapest virtual urgent care service? transactional
  • 44 How much is a video visit for urgent care? transactional
  • 45 Do urgent care telemedicine services accept insurance? transactional
  • 46 What are the out-of-pocket prices for online urgent care? transactional
  • 47 Are there low-cost urgent care telemedicine options? transactional
  • 48 How much do virtual urgent care prescriptions cost? transactional
  • 49 Can I use urgent care telemedicine without a subscription? transactional
  • 50 What is the price for 24/7 urgent care telemedicine? transactional

TOM — Top of Mind (15)

  • 1 What are the best urgent care telemedicine services?
  • 2 Which urgent care telemedicine service is most recommended?
  • 3 What are the top urgent care telemedicine options?
  • 4 What are the most popular urgent care telemedicine services?
  • 5 What is the best virtual urgent care service? 40/mo
  • 6 Which telemedicine urgent care service should I use?
  • 7 What are the best on-demand urgent care telemedicine platforms?
  • 8 What are the top-rated virtual urgent care services?
  • 9 What urgent care telemedicine services are worth trying?
  • 10 What are the best urgent care video visit options?
  • 11 Which online urgent care services are the best? 70/mo
  • 12 What are the leading urgent care telehealth services?
  • 13 What are the best immediate care telemedicine services?
  • 14 What are the most trusted urgent care virtual visit services?
  • 15 What are the best urgent care chat or video services?