Hospitals & Healthcare Facilities
in San Antonio, TX

Welcome to your go-to guide for San Antonio hospitals – whether you're new to the Alamo City or just need to find the right medical care nearby. We've put together this handy directory to help you navigate SA's healthcare options without the headache of endless searching.

San Antonio, TX 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 San Antonio

10 listings

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

Kindred Hospital San Antonio Central

Kindred Hospital San Antonio Central

Hospital
📍 111 Dallas St 4th floor building c, San Antonio, TX 78205, United States

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

CHRISTUS Santa Rosa Hospital - Alamo Heights

CHRISTUS Santa Rosa Hospital - Alamo Heights

Hospital
📍 403 Treeline Park, San Antonio, TX 78209, United States

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

Kindred Hospital San Antonio

Kindred Hospital San Antonio

Hospital
📍 3636 Medical Dr, San Antonio, TX 78229, United States

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

Methodist Hospital

Methodist Hospital

Hospital
📍 7700 Floyd Curl Dr Main Entrance, San Antonio, TX 78229, United States

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

Methodist Hospital Stone Oak

Methodist Hospital Stone Oak

Hospital
📍 1139 E Sonterra Blvd, San Antonio, TX 78258, United States

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

Westover Hills Baptist Hospital

Westover Hills Baptist Hospital

Hospital
📍 3011 W Loop 1604 N Acc Rd, San Antonio, TX 78251, United States

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

Methodist Hospital Metropolitan

Methodist Hospital Metropolitan

Hospital
📍 1310 McCullough Ave, San Antonio, TX 78212, United States

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

Mission Trail Baptist Hospital

Mission Trail Baptist Hospital

General hospital
📍 3333 Research Plaza, San Antonio, TX 78235, United States

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

CHRISTUS Santa Rosa Hospital - Westover Hills

CHRISTUS Santa Rosa Hospital - Westover Hills

Hospital
📍 11212 TX-151, San Antonio, TX 78251, United States

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

University Health University Hospital

University Health University Hospital

General hospital
📍 4502 Medical Dr, San Antonio, TX 78229, United States

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

About Healthcare in San Antonio

San Antonio's healthcare infrastructure just crossed a massive threshold—we're now home to 43 hospitals serving 2.6 million residents across the metro, with $3.2 billion in medical facility expansion projects either completed or underway since 2022. That's not just growth. That's transformation. The numbers tell a compelling story. Methodist Healthcare broke ground on their $485 million specialty campus on the far North Side, while UT Health San Antonio added 127 beds to their downtown facility. University Hospital's $312 million tower opened last fall, and Baptist Health System is midway through a $890 million network expansion. We're talking about 2,100 new hospital beds coming online by 2027—a 34% capacity increase that mirrors our population boom. What's driving this surge? Simple math and demographics. San Antonio's population jumped 13.2% between 2020-2024, hitting 1.58 million in city limits. But here's the kicker—our 65+ population grew 28% in that same period. Add in the military presence (five major installations), medical tourism from Mexico, and our emergence as a biotech hub, and you've got demand that outpaces most Texas markets. The Texas Medical Center here now employs 106,000 people directly. That's more than our entire downtown workforce just a decade ago.

Medical Center

  • Area Profile: Dense medical corridor along Floyd Curl Drive, high-rise facilities, research campuses built 1970s-2020s
  • Common Hospital Work: Specialty care, trauma services, research facilities, outpatient surgery centers
  • Price Range: Premium market—specialist consultations $400-$800, procedures 15-20% above city average
  • Local Note: Parking nightmare but world-class care; shuttle services connect most facilities

Downtown/Southtown

  • Area Profile: Mix of historic buildings converted to medical use, new glass towers, walkable to residential areas
  • Common Hospital Work: Emergency services, behavioral health, community clinics, urgent care
  • Price Range: Mid-range pricing $200-$500 typical visits, sliding scale options available
  • Local Note: University Hospital's Level 1 trauma center serves South Texas; VIA bus routes connect all major facilities

Stone Oak/Far North Side

  • Area Profile: Newer suburban hospitals, modern facilities built 2000s-present, ample parking
  • Common Hospital Work: Family medicine, pediatrics, maternity services, elective procedures
  • Price Range: Premium suburban rates—$300-$600 specialist visits, higher facility fees
  • Local Note: Methodist Stone Oak draws patients from New Braunfels to Boerne; concierge medicine growing

📊 **Current Pricing:**

  • Emergency room visits: $1,200-$3,500 (before insurance)
  • Specialist consultations: $250-$600 (cardiology, orthopedics most expensive)
  • Inpatient stays: $2,800-$8,900 per day depending on acuity
  • Outpatient procedures: $800-$15,000 (surgery center vs hospital-based)

📈 **Market Trends:** The healthcare labor shortage hit us hard—nursing positions up 23% year-over-year, but wages jumped accordingly. RN starting salaries now $68,000-$78,000, up from $58,000 in 2022. Wait times for elective procedures stretched to 6-8 weeks average, though emergency care remains immediate. Telehealth adoption stabilized at 35% of visits (down from 60% during COVID peak). Most interesting? Medical tourism revenue from Mexico hit $127 million in 2024—that's double pre-pandemic levels. Facility expansion is crazy right now. But here's what the data doesn't show: parking infrastructure isn't keeping pace. Methodist Medical Center patients report 15-minute average parking search times. That's going to get worse before it gets better. 💰 **What People Are Spending:**

  1. Emergency visits (uninsured): $2,100 average
  2. Maternity care (vaginal delivery): $8,400 facility costs
  3. Cardiac procedures: $25,000-$85,000 depending on complexity
  4. Outpatient surgery: $4,200 average
  5. Imaging (MRI/CT): $800-$2,400 per scan

**Economic Indicators:** San Antonio's economy is literally being reshaped by healthcare growth. We added 47,000 jobs in 2024, with 31% in healthcare or related services. The biotech corridor along I-10 West now houses 89 companies—that's up from 23 in 2019. Major employers like Rackspace, USAA, and Valero are expanding employee health benefits, driving demand for premium services. Population growth hit 2.1% annually through 2024. That's 33,000 new residents yearly who need healthcare. The Brooks development alone added 4,500 residents since 2022, all within 10 minutes of multiple hospital systems. **Housing Market:** - Median home value: $298,400 - Year-over-year change: +8.3% - New construction permits: 18,200 units in 2024 - Inventory levels: 2.8 months of supply **How This Affects Hospitals:** More residents = more patients. But it's not just quantity. Our new residents skew younger (median age 34) and higher income ($67,400 household median). They're choosing providers based on convenience and technology, not just insurance networks. That's why you're seeing urgent care clinics in H-E-B stores and concierge medicine practices doubling their patient loads. The housing boom in areas like Cibolo and Schertz means longer commutes to Medical Center facilities. Expect more satellite locations and telemedicine adoption in outer suburbs.

**Weather Data:**

  • ☀️ Summer: Highs 95-102°F, 65+ days above 100°F annually
  • ❄️ Winter: Lows 35-45°F, rare freezing (2-3 days typical)
  • 🌧️ Annual rainfall: 32 inches, concentrated May-October
  • 💨 Wind/storms: Severe weather March-May, occasional flooding on South/West sides

**Impact on Hospitals:** Summer heat drives emergency visits up 18% July-September. Heat exhaustion, dehydration, and construction injuries spike when temps hit triple digits. Hospitals staff extra personnel for outdoor events like Fiesta (April) and summer festivals. Winter brings different challenges. The February 2021 freeze exposed infrastructure weaknesses—several facilities lost power or water. Now most hospitals have upgraded backup systems, but that bitter lesson cost lives and revealed gaps in emergency preparedness. **Homeowner Tips:**

  • ✓ Keep emergency kit with 72-hour medication supply
  • ✓ Program multiple hospital numbers in phone (traffic affects ambulance routes)
  • ✓ Know which facilities accept your insurance before emergencies
  • ✓ Summer hydration is serious—ER visits double during heat waves

**License Verification:** Texas Medical Board regulates physicians—check license status at tmb.state.tx.us. Nurses fall under Texas Board of Nursing (bon.texas.gov). Don't assume. I've seen fake credentials, especially in home health and private duty nursing. **Insurance Requirements:** Malpractice insurance minimums vary by specialty. Primary care physicians typically carry $1 million per occurrence, $3 million aggregate. Surgeons and high-risk specialties often carry $5-10 million. Verify current coverage through your state's insurance commission database. ⚠️ **Red Flags in San Antonio:**

  1. Providers operating from temporary or shared office space without permanent local address
  2. Cash-only practices that refuse insurance billing (unless clearly advertised as concierge/direct-pay)
  3. Medical tourism operations promising procedures "much cheaper than hospitals" without proper accreditation
  4. Home health agencies advertising on social media without proper Texas licensing credentials

**Where to Check Complaints:** Texas Medical Board handles physician complaints. Texas Department of State Health Services oversees facilities. Better Business Bureau tracks business practices, but medical complaints go through state boards first.

**Essential Questions to Ask:** → How long have you practiced in San Antonio specifically? (Local referral networks matter) → Which hospitals do you have admitting privileges at? (Affects where you'll receive care) → What's your typical response time for urgent calls or results? → Do you accept my insurance, and what are typical out-of-pocket costs? → How do you handle after-hours emergencies and weekend coverage? → Can you provide references from patients with similar conditions or procedures? **What to Look For:**

  • ✓ Active privileges at multiple local hospitals (flexibility in emergencies)
  • ✓ Board certification current and verifiable online
  • ✓ Office staff that understands insurance pre-authorization process
  • ✓ Electronic health records that interface with other local providers
  • ✓ Clear communication about costs upfront

**Deal Breakers:** Pressure to pay cash when insurance should cover services. Reluctance to provide license numbers or hospital affiliations. No clear emergency contact protocol. Office that consistently runs 45+ minutes behind schedule without explanation or apology.

Frequently Asked Questions

What should I expect to pay for hospital services in San Antonio? +
Look, hospital costs in San Antonio vary wildly depending on what you need. Emergency room visits typically run $1,500-$4,000 before insurance, while routine procedures at places like Methodist or Baptist Health System can range from $500-$15,000+. The key thing about SA is we've got both major medical centers downtown and smaller community hospitals that might be more budget-friendly. Always ask for cost estimates upfront and check if they accept your insurance - many San Antonio hospitals offer payment plans too.
How do I verify a hospital is properly licensed in Texas? +
Here's the thing - you want to check with the Texas Department of State Health Services (DSHS) for hospital licensing. Every legit hospital in San Antonio has to be licensed through them, and you can search their database online. Also check if they're accredited by The Joint Commission - most reputable SA hospitals like University Health or Christus Santa Rosa proudly display this. Don't just take their word for it, especially with newer facilities popping up around the Medical Center area.
When's the best time to schedule non-emergency procedures in San Antonio? +
Smart question! In San Antonio, avoid July-August if possible - our brutal heat means higher demand for hospital services and staff shortages due to vacations. Fall and early spring (October-November, February-March) are your sweet spots when SA hospitals are typically less crowded. Plus, you'll want to recover when it's not 100+ degrees outside. Holiday weeks are obviously busy, and January can be crazy with people using new insurance benefits.
What questions should I ask before choosing a hospital in San Antonio? +
Start with the basics - do they take your insurance and what's your out-of-pocket cost? For San Antonio specifically, ask about their experience with your condition (we've got some amazing specialists at UT Health San Antonio). Find out average wait times, especially in the ER. Ask about their infection rates and patient satisfaction scores - Texas hospitals have to report this stuff. Also crucial: do they have the right equipment on-site, or will you need to transfer somewhere else mid-treatment?
How long does it typically take to get scheduled at San Antonio hospitals? +
Depends totally on what you need, but here's what I see in SA. Emergency stuff is obviously immediate, routine appointments might be 2-4 weeks at busy places like the Medical Center hospitals. Specialists can book out 6-8 weeks, sometimes longer for popular docs. Surgery scheduling varies wildly - could be next week for urgent cases, or 2-3 months for elective procedures. University Health tends to move faster than some private hospitals, but they're also busier with trauma cases.
Do I need special permits for home medical equipment in San Antonio? +
Most home medical equipment doesn't need permits in San Antonio, but there are exceptions. If you're getting oxygen tanks or certain breathing equipment, the fire department might need to know (especially in older SA neighborhoods). Medical waste disposal has specific rules through the city. The bigger issue is making sure your insurance covers the equipment and that the supplier is licensed in Texas. Some HOAs in places like Stone Oak or Alamo Heights have restrictions on medical equipment storage too.
What are the biggest red flags when dealing with hospitals in San Antonio? +
Watch out for hospitals that won't give you upfront pricing - that's a huge red flag anywhere, but especially problematic in San Antonio's competitive market. Be wary if they pressure you to use their specific specialists without explaining why. Another biggie: if they can't clearly explain your insurance coverage or keep changing the story about costs. Some smaller SA facilities have had issues with surprise billing, so get everything in writing. If the place looks run-down or staff seem overwhelmed, trust your gut.
Why does it matter if my hospital has experience in San Antonio specifically? +
Here's why San Antonio experience matters - our population has unique health challenges like higher diabetes and obesity rates, plus we're a military town with lots of veterans needing specialized care. Hospitals familiar with SA know how to work with TRICARE and understand our demographics. They're also plugged into the local specialist network - crucial when you need quick referrals. Plus, experienced SA hospitals know which insurance plans are common here and how to navigate our specific city and county health programs.

Facility Types in San Antonio

Hospital 8
General hospital 2