Hospitals & Healthcare Facilities
in Phoenix, AZ

Welcome to your go-to guide for Phoenix hospitals – we've got you covered whether you're new in town or just need to find the right care close to home. From major medical centers to specialized facilities, we've rounded up all the essential info to help you navigate the Valley's healthcare scene with confidence.

Phoenix, AZ 10 facilities listed
Directory only. We do not verify, endorse, or recommend any listed facility. Listings are advertising placements. Information sourced from public records and/or business owners — always verify directly with the provider.  |  Medical emergency? Call 911.

All Listed Facilities in Phoenix

10 listings

Listing directory only. We do not verify or recommend any facility. Information may not be current — verify directly with the provider.

Select Specialty Hospital - Phoenix Downtown

Select Specialty Hospital - Phoenix Downtown

Hospital
📍 1111 E McDowell Rd 11th Floor, Phoenix, AZ 85006, United States

Advertising listing. Not verified or endorsed by Hospitals.city.

Dignity Health St. Joseph's Hospital and Medical Center

Dignity Health St. Joseph's Hospital and Medical Center

Hospital
📍 350 W Thomas Rd, Phoenix, AZ 85013, United States

Advertising listing. Not verified or endorsed by Hospitals.city.

HonorHealth Sonoran Crossing Medical Center

HonorHealth Sonoran Crossing Medical Center

Medical Center
📍 33400 N 32nd Ave, Phoenix, AZ 85085, United States

Advertising listing. Not verified or endorsed by Hospitals.city.

Mayo Clinic Hospital PHX-1

Mayo Clinic Hospital PHX-1

Hospital
📍 5777 E Mayo Blvd, Phoenix, AZ 85054, United States

Advertising listing. Not verified or endorsed by Hospitals.city.

Dignity Health - Arizona General Hospital Laveen

Dignity Health - Arizona General Hospital Laveen

General hospital
📍 7171 S 51st Dr, Laveen Village, AZ 85339, United States

Advertising listing. Not verified or endorsed by Hospitals.city.

HonorHealth Deer Valley Medical Center

HonorHealth Deer Valley Medical Center

Hospital
📍 19829 N 27th Ave, Phoenix, AZ 85027, United States

Advertising listing. Not verified or endorsed by Hospitals.city.

HonorHealth John C. Lincoln Medical Center

HonorHealth John C. Lincoln Medical Center

General hospital
📍 250 E Dunlap Ave, Phoenix, AZ 85020, United States

Advertising listing. Not verified or endorsed by Hospitals.city.

Phoenix Children's Hospital - Thomas Campus

Phoenix Children's Hospital - Thomas Campus

Children's hospital
📍 1919 E Thomas Rd, Phoenix, AZ 85016, United States

Advertising listing. Not verified or endorsed by Hospitals.city.

Banner - University Medical Center Phoenix

Banner - University Medical Center Phoenix

University hospital
📍 1111 E McDowell Rd, Phoenix, AZ 85006, United States

Advertising listing. Not verified or endorsed by Hospitals.city.

Abrazo Central Campus

Abrazo Central Campus

General hospital
📍 2000 W Bethany Home Rd, Phoenix, AZ 85015, United States

Advertising listing. Not verified or endorsed by Hospitals.city.

About Healthcare in Phoenix

Phoenix's healthcare infrastructure is experiencing unprecedented expansion—with $2.3 billion in new medical facilities under construction across the Valley in 2024 alone. The metro area now supports 47 major hospitals and medical centers, serving 5.2 million residents across Maricopa County. This explosive growth stems from multiple factors hitting simultaneously. Population jumped 2.1% last year, adding 108,000 new residents who need healthcare access. Meanwhile, Arizona's aging demographics are shifting fast—adults 65+ now represent 18.7% of the population, up from 14.2% in 2010. That demographic shift drives demand for specialized cardiac, orthopedic, and cancer treatment facilities. But here's what makes Phoenix different from other Sun Belt markets: the medical tourism factor. Our hospitals pull patients from across the Southwest, Mexico, and even internationally for specialized procedures. Mayo Clinic alone brings in over 65,000 out-of-state patients annually. Banner Health—Arizona's largest hospital network—operates 28 facilities statewide, with 13 major campuses in metro Phoenix generating $4.8 billion in annual revenue. The result? Hospital construction and expansion projects worth $847 million are currently active, from Ahwatukee to Anthem.

Central Phoenix/Midtown

  • Area Profile: Mixed urban core with 1950s-80s medical districts, high-rise medical towers, parking structures from $12-25/day
  • Common Hospital Work: Urban trauma centers, specialty clinics, outpatient surgery centers, emergency departments
  • Price Range: ER visits $2,800-4,200, specialist consultations $380-650, parking adds $15-25/visit
  • Local Note: Traffic congestion around St. Joseph's and Banner University impacts ambulance response times during rush hours

Scottsdale/North Phoenix

  • Area Profile: Affluent corridor along Shea Boulevard and Frank Lloyd Wright, newer facilities built 1990s-2020s
  • Common Hospital Work: Elective procedures, cosmetic surgery, concierge medicine, executive health programs
  • Price Range: Premium pricing 25-40% above metro average, valet parking standard, private rooms $450-750/night
  • Local Note: HonorHealth Scottsdale Shea draws wealthy retirees and medical tourists seeking luxury amenities

West Valley (Glendale/Peoria)

  • Area Profile: Rapidly growing suburbs, newer hospital campuses built since 2000, family-oriented demographics
  • Common Hospital Work: Maternity services, pediatrics, family medicine, urgent care expansion
  • Price Range: More affordable than central Phoenix, maternity packages $8,500-12,000, pediatric visits $180-280
  • Local Note: Banner Thunderbird serves as regional trauma center but patients often transfer to downtown for complex cases

📊 **Current Pricing:**

  • Emergency visits: $2,400-4,800 (basic to complex cases)
  • Specialist consultations: $320-650 (most common range)
  • Inpatient stays: $2,200-8,500/day (depending on acuity level)

The pricing landscape shifted dramatically post-COVID. Emergency department visits cost 18% more than pre-pandemic levels, while elective procedures saw 12% increases due to staffing shortages and supply chain disruptions. 📈 **Market Trends:** Hospital capacity utilization hit 87% in Q3 2024—well above the national average of 76%. That's creating bottlenecks, especially during winter months when seasonal residents return. Nursing shortages persist with 2,800 open RN positions across metro Phoenix hospitals. Wait times for non-emergency procedures now average 3-6 weeks, compared to 2-3 weeks in 2019. Material costs for medical supplies jumped 23% year-over-year. But here's the interesting part: construction costs for new hospital facilities only rose 8% due to competitive bidding among contractors eager for healthcare projects. 💰 **What People Are Spending:**

  1. Emergency care: $3,200 average per visit (most common)
  2. Outpatient surgery: $8,500-15,000 per procedure
  3. Maternity services: $11,000-18,000 total package
  4. Cardiac procedures: $25,000-85,000 depending on complexity
  5. Cancer treatment: $15,000-45,000 per course

**Economic Indicators:** Phoenix metro population grew 2.1% in 2024, adding 108,000 residents—that's 296 new people daily needing healthcare access. Major employers like Intel ($20B chip fab investment), TSMC ($40B semiconductor plants), and expanding logistics operations create demand for occupational health services. The Loop 303 corridor alone will add 15,000 jobs by 2027. **Housing Market:** - Median home value: $485,600 - Year-over-year change: +3.2% - New construction permits: 28,400 units in 2024 - Inventory levels: 2.1 months of supply New subdivisions in Buckeye, Queen Creek, and Casa Grande are 25-45 minutes from major hospitals. That's driving urgent care expansion—we've seen 47 new urgent care facilities open since 2022. **How This Affects Hospitals:** Population growth concentrates in outer suburbs, but major hospitals cluster in established urban areas. The result? Longer ambulance transport times and increased demand for satellite emergency departments. Banner Health opened 6 new micro-hospitals since 2023, while HonorHealth is building 4 more urgent care locations in growth corridors. Real estate prices near major medical campuses appreciate 8-12% faster than metro average. Properties within 2 miles of Mayo Clinic or Banner University command premium rents from medical residents and staff.

**Weather Data:**

  • ☀️ Summer: 105-118°F daily highs, intense UV exposure increases skin cancer rates
  • ❄️ Winter: 45-75°F, perfect weather draws 300,000+ seasonal residents
  • 🌧️ Annual rainfall: 8.03 inches, mostly July-September monsoons
  • 💨 Wind/storms: Haboob dust storms reduce visibility, monsoon microbursts cause trauma spikes

**Impact on Hospitals:** Summer heat creates predictable emergency patterns. Heat-related illness admissions jump 340% from May to September. Burn injuries from hot pavement and car surfaces spike—Phoenix Children's Hospital sees 60-80 cases weekly during peak summer months. Winter months bring different challenges. October through March, hospitals operate at 95%+ capacity due to seasonal residents returning. Snowbird population adds roughly 300,000 people, mostly seniors with existing health conditions. That's why many hospitals staff up 15-20% during winter months. Monsoon season (July-September) brings trauma surges. Dust storms cause multi-vehicle accidents on I-10 and Loop 101. Flash flooding in washes leads to water rescues and drownings—typically 12-15 fatalities annually. **Homeowner Tips:** ✓ Schedule elective procedures October-December for shorter wait times ✓ Keep emergency kit with 3 days of medications during monsoon season ✓ Know which hospitals accept your insurance—networks vary significantly ✓ Download hospital mobile apps for wait time estimates before driving to ER

**License Verification:** The Arizona Department of Health Services regulates hospital licensing through their Bureau of Medical Facilities Licensing. Every hospital must maintain current licenses for their facility type—general acute care, specialty hospital, or psychiatric facility. You can verify hospital licenses online through AZDHS License Lookup system using facility name or license number. Individual healthcare providers require separate licensing through Arizona Medical Board (physicians), Arizona State Board of Nursing (RNs), or other specialty boards depending on their profession. **Insurance Requirements:** - Medical malpractice coverage: $1-3 million per occurrence minimum - General liability: $2 million minimum for facility operations - Workers' compensation required for all hospital employees Hospital networks like Banner, HonorHealth, and Dignity Health carry comprehensive coverage, but always verify for smaller specialty facilities. ⚠️ **Red Flags in Phoenix:**

  1. Medical tourism scams targeting border crossers—unlicensed "hospitals" in strip malls
  2. Fake emergency transport services operating without proper credentials or equipment
  3. Billing fraud from facilities claiming to be "hospitals" but operating as urgent care centers
  4. Unaccredited facilities advertising advanced procedures they're not equipped to handle safely

**Where to Check Complaints:** - Arizona Department of Health Services (facility complaints) - Arizona Medical Board (physician complaints) - Better Business Bureau Arizona - Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Hospital Compare ratings

**Essential Questions to Ask:** → How long have you been practicing in Arizona specifically, and are you familiar with desert climate health challenges? → What's your hospital's average emergency department wait time, and do you have fast-track options? → How do you handle monsoon season capacity surges and seasonal resident influx? → What insurance networks do you participate in, and what are typical out-of-pocket costs? → Do you have transfer agreements with Level 1 trauma centers for complex cases? → What's your policy on family presence during procedures, especially for out-of-state patients? **What to Look For:**

  • ✓ Joint Commission accreditation (gold standard for hospital quality)
  • ✓ CMS 4-star rating or higher for overall hospital quality
  • ✓ Magnet designation for nursing excellence (only 12 Arizona hospitals have this)
  • ✓ Trauma center designation appropriate for your needs
  • ✓ 24/7 specialist coverage for your condition

**Deal Breakers:** Medicare non-participation (limits emergency options), history of serious safety violations from state inspectors, no transfer agreements with major medical centers, or refusing to provide upfront cost estimates for non-emergency procedures.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does it cost to hire hospital contractors in Phoenix? +
Look, hospital construction in Phoenix runs $400-800 per square foot depending on complexity - that's for full medical facilities. Smaller clinic buildouts are around $200-350/sq ft. The Arizona heat drives up HVAC costs significantly, and you'll need specialized medical gas systems that can handle our 115°F summers. Get multiple bids because Phoenix has tons of competition, which keeps prices more reasonable than other major cities.
How do I verify a hospital contractor is properly licensed in Arizona? +
Here's the thing - check the Arizona Registrar of Contractors website (roc.az.gov) for their license status. Hospital contractors need a Commercial General license (CG) and often specialized licenses for medical gas, electrical, and plumbing work. In Phoenix, also verify they're bonded for at least $1 million since hospital projects are complex. Don't just take their word - the ROC database shows any complaints or violations too.
What's the best time to start a hospital construction project in Phoenix? +
Start planning in fall (October-November) so construction begins in winter when Phoenix weather is perfect. You'll avoid the brutal summer heat that slows work and increases costs. Hospital projects here typically take 12-18 months, so starting in December means you'll finish before the next summer hits hard. Plus, contractors are less busy in winter and you'll get better pricing and attention.
What questions should I ask hospital contractors before hiring them? +
Ask about their experience with Arizona's medical facility regulations - they're strict here. Get specifics: "How many hospitals have you built in Phoenix in the last 3 years?" Ask about their relationships with local medical gas suppliers and if they understand OSHPD seismic requirements (yes, even in Phoenix). Also ask how they handle the extreme heat during construction and what backup plans they have for equipment failures in 110°F weather.
How long do hospital construction projects actually take in Phoenix? +
Realistic timeline in Phoenix is 14-20 months for a full hospital, 6-10 months for major renovations. The permitting process through the City of Phoenix alone takes 3-4 months if everything's perfect. Add Arizona Department of Health Services approvals and you're looking at 5-6 months before breaking ground. Summer heat can add 15-20% to timeline since crews start earlier and work shorter days.
What permits do I need for hospital construction in Phoenix? +
You'll need building permits from Phoenix Development Services, plus Arizona Department of Health Services approval for medical facilities. Expect to pull separate permits for medical gas systems, specialized electrical, and fire suppression - Phoenix is strict about hospital safety systems. The whole permit package typically costs $25,000-75,000 depending on size. Start the permit process 4-6 months early because Arizona's medical facility reviews are thorough.
What are the biggest red flags when hiring hospital contractors in Phoenix? +
Huge red flag if they haven't worked on hospitals in Arizona before - our regulations are different than California or Texas. Be wary if they can't name local medical equipment suppliers or don't mention the challenges of Phoenix's extreme heat on medical systems. Also avoid contractors who lowball bids by more than 20% below others - hospital work has thin margins and they'll cut corners or hit you with change orders later.
Why does it matter if my hospital contractor has Phoenix experience? +
Phoenix hospital contractors understand our unique challenges - like designing HVAC systems that work when it's 118°F outside and keeping medical equipment cool during power outages. They know local suppliers for medical gases and have relationships with Arizona health inspectors. Plus, they understand how our monsoon season affects construction schedules and how to work around Phoenix Sky Harbor's flight paths if you're building near the airport. Out-of-state contractors learn these lessons on your dime.

Facility Types in Phoenix

Hospital 4
General hospital 3
Children's hospital 1
Medical Center 1
University hospital 1