Mon – Fri: 9:00am – 7:00pm, Sat – Sun: 8:30am – 5:00pm

Do Urgent Care Clinics Do X-rays? What to Expect

Do Urgent Care Clinics Do X-rays? What to Expect

Do Urgent Care Clinics Do X-rays? What to Expect

Quick answer: Yes, urgent care clinics perform X-rays on-site. You walk in, get the image, and a provider reads it — usually within minutes. CityHealth offers digital X-rays in San Leandro for bones, chest, and soft-tissue injuries.

What Urgent Care X-rays Actually Show

You twisted your ankle stepping off a curb. Or your chest has hurt for two days and the cough won’t quit. In either case, an X-ray gives the provider a picture of what is happening beneath the skin.

Urgent care clinics use digital radiography to look at:

  • Bones — fractures, dislocations, and hairline breaks
  • Chest — pneumonia, fluid buildup, or enlarged heart silhouette
  • Joints — swelling, alignment issues, and degenerative changes
  • Soft tissue — foreign objects, severe gas patterns, and some masses

The image appears on a screen within seconds. A physician assistant or physician reads it right there. If the injury is complex, they send the file to a radiologist for a second read and call you with results later the same day.

How the Process Works

When you arrive at CityHealth with an injury that needs imaging, the front desk checks you in. You do not need an appointment.

A medical assistant brings you to the X-ray suite. You remove jewelry or metal near the area being scanned. The technician positions the limb or torso, steps behind a wall, and takes the image. One angle is often enough for a simple fracture. Two or three angles give a clearer picture of complex joints like the wrist or ankle.

The whole process takes 10 to 20 minutes. You stay in the clinic while the provider reviews the image. If it is a clean break, they may splint it on the spot and refer you to orthopedics. If it looks fine, they wrap it, give you care instructions, and send you home.

What Urgent Care Cannot X-ray

Urgent care clinics do not have MRI or CT scanners. If you need images of ligaments, tendons, the brain, or the abdomen in detail, the provider writes an order and sends you to an imaging center or hospital.

Here is how the decision usually breaks down:

  • Urgent care X-ray: suspected fracture, pneumonia, foreign object, joint check
  • Imaging center MRI/CT: torn ACL, herniated disc, abdominal mass, head trauma
  • Emergency room: multiple trauma, open fracture, chest pain with cardiac symptoms

How Much Does an Urgent Care X-ray Cost?

Without insurance, a single-view X-ray at urgent care typically runs $100 to $250. Most clinics bundle the visit fee and the image into one bill. CityHealth accepts Medi-Cal, Medicare, and most private insurance plans. You pay your standard urgent care copay, which is usually lower than an ER copay.

When to Skip Urgent Care and Go to the ER

Go to the emergency room if the injury involves:

  • Bone sticking through the skin
  • Severe deformity with numbness or loss of pulse
  • Head trauma with confusion or vomiting
  • Chest pain with shortness of breath and sweating

These need immediate advanced imaging and surgical consultation, which urgent care does not provide.

FAQ

Do I need an appointment for an X-ray at urgent care?

No. CityHealth takes walk-ins for X-rays during all open hours.

How long do results take?

The provider reads the image during your visit. Complex cases get a radiologist over-read by the end of the day.

Will urgent care X-ray my chest?

Yes, if you have symptoms of pneumonia, persistent cough, or chest injury.

Does urgent care bill insurance for X-rays?

Yes. CityHealth bills your insurance for both the visit and the imaging.

If you need an X-ray today, walk into CityHealth in San Leandro. No appointment needed.

Sean Parkin, PA
Sean Parkin, PA
Physician Assistant

Sean Parkin, PA, is a board-certified physician assistant at CityHealth. He provides comprehensive urgent care, diagnostic evaluations, and treatment at the CityHealth San Leandro location. Sean holds a Master of Physician Assistant Studies and is passionate about making quality healthcare accessible to the East Bay community.

Related Posts