Rhode Island flag

Benefits

Community Health Centers in Rhode Island — low-cost medical care for immigrants

FQHCs (Federally Qualified Health Centers) in Rhode Island: primary medical care with sliding fee scale, regardless of immigration status. Dental, mental health, pharmacy services.

Community Health Centers (FQHC) in Rhode Island

Rhode Island at a glance

Rhode Island is home to about 162,413 foreign-born residents (14.8% of the state’s 1,095,371 people) and 187,503 residents of Hispanic or Latino origin (17.1%), per the U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey (2023 5-year estimates). The procedures below apply to everyone in Rhode Island regardless of immigration status unless noted.

Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHC) are the most important low-cost medical care network in US for uninsured or underinsured people. They serve EVERYONE regardless of immigration status.

How FQHCs work — the short version

A Federally Qualified Health Center is a nonprofit clinic funded under Section 330 of the Public Health Service Act. Three things matter in practice: every site must serve you regardless of immigration status, fees follow a sliding scale based on income (a pay stub is usually enough proof), and most Rhode Island locations put primary care, pediatrics, dental, mental health, and a low-cost pharmacy under one roof. No insurance is required, and in areas with large Spanish-speaking populations, bilingual staff are the norm.

For the full guide — typical services, what to bring to a first visit, and how the sliding fee scale is calculated — see the national community health centers guide.

Important: Public Charge Rule

Using FQHCs does NOT affect your immigration case. Public Charge Rule doesn’t consider low-cost medical services. See Public Charge Rule.

FQHC locations in Rhode Island: the real numbers

Rhode Island has 61 active federally funded health center sites, per HRSA's Health Center Service Delivery Sites file. Every one of them is required to serve you regardless of immigration status or ability to pay. The cities with the most locations:

CityFQHC sites
Providence13
Central Falls5
Woonsocket5
Pascoag4
West Warwick4

Coverage by county

CountySites
Providence40
Kent8
Washington7
Newport4
Bristol2

Major health center sites you can call today

Health center siteCityPhone
BVCHC Central FallsCentral Falls(401) 729-5235
Thundermist South CountyWakefield(401) 783-0523
Providence Community Health Center at Prairie AvenueProvidence(401) 444-0570
Thundermist West WarwickWest Warwick(401) 615-2800
Thundermist WoonsocketWoonsocket(401) 767-4100
Wood River Health Services, INC.Hope Valley(401) 539-2461
Everett C. Wilcox Family Health CenterWarwick401-467-9610 x112
Family Health Services - CranstonCranston(401) 943-1981

Source: HRSA Health Center Service Delivery and Look-Alike Sites (retrieved 2026-06-10; refreshed quarterly). Hours and walk-in policies change — call before visiting, or search every site at findahealthcenter.hrsa.gov.


Last verified: 2026-05-25.

General information, not medical advice. For specific care, talk to a medical provider.


Last verified: 2026-05-25.

General procedural information for educational purposes. Not legal, tax, or immigration advice. Laws and fees change — verify with the issuing agency before taking action. For case-specific guidance, consult a licensed immigration attorney or other appropriate professional.

Frequently asked questions

Do FQHCs in Rhode Island ask immigration status?
NO. FQHCs are legally required to serve EVERYONE regardless of immigration status, ability to pay, or insurance. Your information is not shared with immigration authorities.
How much do FQHC services cost in Rhode Island?
FQHCs use ‘sliding fee scale’: families below Federal Poverty Level pay $0-$25 per visit; higher incomes pay based on income, but NEVER more than commercial price. Minimum fee usually $20-$30.
What services do FQHCs in Rhode Island offer?
Primary medical care (adults and kids), pediatrics, gynecology and prenatal, mental health and counseling, basic dental services, low-cost pharmacy, vaccines, school/work physicals, chronic disease management (diabetes, hypertension).