Concierge Doctors in Austin, TX
40 concierge and direct primary care practices — average membership:
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Frequently Asked Questions
How much does concierge medicine cost in Austin?
What types of concierge practices are in Austin?
Are there affordable DPC options in Austin?
Does Austin have hospital-affiliated concierge medicine?
Do Austin concierge doctors accept insurance?
How do I find a concierge doctor in Austin?
Quick Facts: Concierge Medicine in Austin
- Practices on NextMD: 40
- Doctors: 58
- Average membership: $163/mo
- Metro population: 2.6 million (2025)
- Most affordable option: $59/mo (Arbor Family Medicine, DPC; currently full)
- Smallest patient panel: 50 patients per doctor (RiverRock Medical)
- Practice density: 1 practice per 65,000 residents
- Most expensive option: $25,000/year (RiverRock Medical, longevity medicine)
- Major hospital systems: Ascension Seton, St. David's, Baylor Scott & White, Dell Children's
About Concierge Medicine in Austin
Austin's concierge medicine market reflects the city itself: fast-growing, tech-forward, and increasingly focused on optimization and longevity. The metro has a population of approximately 2.6 million (as of 2025) and supports 40 concierge medicine and direct primary care (DPC) practices listed on NextMD, with 58 doctors. The average membership is $163/mo per month.
Austin is the fastest-growing major metro in Texas and one of the fastest in the country. The arrival of Tesla, Apple, Oracle, Samsung, and dozens of tech companies has brought a population of high-earning professionals who are younger and more health-conscious than the typical concierge medicine demographic. That has driven growth in two areas that set Austin apart from other markets: performance health and longevity medicine.
The city's hospital infrastructure includes Ascension Seton (the second-highest-ranked hospital in Austin), St. David's Medical Center (ranked 9th in Texas, with the Texas Cardiac Arrhythmia Institute), Baylor Scott & White, and Dell Children's Medical Center. Unlike cities like Houston or Chicago, no Austin hospital system currently operates a branded concierge medicine program, which means the market is entirely independent and MDVIP-affiliated practices.
Austin also has one of the strongest MDVIP presences of any metro, with multiple affiliated physicians offering concierge care through the MDVIP model.
What Does Concierge Medicine Cost in Austin?
The average membership in Austin is $163/mo per month. Pricing spans from $59 per month for DPC to $25,000 per year for ultra-premium longevity medicine. For a national comparison, see how concierge medicine pricing works across the US.
| Practice Model | Typical Cost | What You Get |
|---|---|---|
| Direct primary care (DPC) | $59 to $100/month | Flat monthly fee, no copays, same-day access, messaging, basic labs |
| Concierge medicine | $2,100 to $10,000/year | Annual retainer, smaller panels, extended visits, 24/7 access |
| Hybrid | $30 to $350/month | Insurance billing plus enhanced access, aesthetics, or integrative services |
| Performance/longevity medicine | $199 to $25,000/year | Optimization, metabolic mapping, hormone therapy, advanced diagnostics |
Practices with Published Pricing
DPC (most affordable):
- Arbor Family Medicine (Austin). $59 per month. Single-physician DPC with a 500 to 600 patient cap. Currently not accepting new patients, which signals high demand at this price point.
- Texas Direct Medical Care (Austin). $90 per month. DPC model that handles 80 to 90 percent of patient medical needs in-clinic. Single physician.
- Hill Country Family Clinic (Austin and Dripping Springs). $100 per month. Two-location DPC with aesthetic services included in membership.
Hybrid and mid-range:
- METSI Care (East Austin). $125 per month. Hybrid model with a 350-patient cap. Includes early cancer screening. Also provides medical services for film and TV productions.
- Persona Healthcare (Austin). $250 per month. Hybrid model combining primary care with aesthetic services. Accepts Aetna, Cigna, and Humana.
- Austin Medical Partners (Austin). $350 per month. Hybrid model with sports performance testing and VO2 max testing. Single physician.
Concierge and MDVIP:
- ATX Wellness Co. (Austin). $100 to $289 per month. Concierge with tiered membership levels. Single physician.
- Austin Medicine (Austin). $199 to $299 per month. Functional medicine and longevity protocols. Multi-state telehealth.
- Victory Medical Center (MDVIP) (Austin). $537.50 to $2,150 per year. MDVIP-affiliated concierge.
- Paul E. Bristol, MD (Austin). $575 to $2,300 per year. Concierge.
- Tuyet Fannin, DO (Austin). $525 to $2,100 per year. MDVIP-affiliated. Currently accepting new patients.
Performance and longevity (premium):
- Oubre Medical (Austin). $300 to $1,000 per month. Functional medicine specialty with IV therapy and ketamine-assisted therapy.
- RiverRock Medical (Austin). $25,000 per year. 50-patient cap. Longevity optimization with metabolic mapping and neurofeedback. The most exclusive and expensive practice in Austin.
Other Notable Practices
- One Medical (Austin, 4 locations). $29+ per month. Hybrid model with 14 physicians. The largest practice in Austin by physician count. Drop-in labs and mental health services included.
- MD2 Austin. Two physicians. 50 families per doctor. The MD2 model operates nationally with the smallest panels in concierge medicine.
- Apeiron Center (Austin). 12-month performance health membership with two physicians. Customized pricing.
Types of Concierge and DPC Practices in Austin
Concierge medicine and MDVIP make up the largest share of Austin's market. MDVIP has a particularly strong presence, with multiple affiliated physicians offering concierge memberships in the $525 to $2,300 per year range. Independent concierge practices range from $100 to $350 per month. Patient panels are typically 150 to 350 per doctor. Nationally, 99% of concierge and DPC practices offer same-day or next-day appointments.
Direct primary care (DPC) is growing in Austin. Understanding the key differences between concierge medicine and DPC helps when evaluating options, starting with Arbor Family Medicine ($59/month), Texas Direct Medical Care ($90/month), and Hill Country Family Clinic ($100/month) offering flat monthly fees with no copays. DPC appeals to Austin's younger professional population who want better access without a large annual retainer. 89% of DPC practices nationwide charge no additional fee for covered services.
Hybrid practices are more common in Austin than in most metros. Practices like METSI Care, Persona Healthcare, and Austin Medical Partners combine insurance billing or aesthetic services with enhanced primary care access. Several Austin hybrids include services like body composition testing, sports performance analysis, and medical aesthetics in the membership.
Performance and longevity medicine is where Austin stands out nationally. RiverRock Medical ($25,000/year, 50-patient cap) offers metabolic mapping and neurofeedback. Oubre Medical ($300 to $1,000/month) combines functional medicine with IV therapy. Austin Medicine focuses on longevity protocols. The tech-forward, optimization-minded population in Austin drives more demand for this category than most comparably sized metros.
Concierge Medicine in Austin, Westlake, Dripping Springs, and the Hill Country
Central Austin has the highest concentration of practices, with the majority of concierge, DPC, and hybrid options located in the urban core.
East Austin is served by METSI Care ($125/month, 350-patient cap), which has carved out a niche combining primary care with early cancer screening and entertainment industry medical services.
Westlake and West Austin are among the most affluent areas in the metro and a natural market for premium concierge. Several practices serve this corridor.
Dripping Springs and the Hill Country have Hill Country Family Clinic ($100/month DPC), extending membership-based primary care to the growing communities west of Austin.
Buda and South Austin round out the metro's southern coverage.
Round Rock, Cedar Park, and Georgetown to the north are part of the broader Austin metro. Check those city pages for additional practice options in the northern suburbs.
You can filter by sub-city on the listings above.
How to Choose a Concierge Doctor in Austin
- Decide if you want traditional medicine or optimization. Austin has a stronger performance health and longevity market than most cities. If you want a traditional doctor with better access, concierge or DPC is the right model. If you want metabolic testing, hormone optimization, and advanced biomarkers, look at performance health practices like RiverRock or Oubre Medical.
- Consider MDVIP if you want a national network. Austin has one of the stronger MDVIP presences in Texas. MDVIP practices operate under a consistent model ($1,800 to $2,300/year nationally) with access to MDVIP's wellness program and physician network. If you travel frequently or want a standardized concierge experience, MDVIP is worth comparing.
- DPC is the value entry point. At $59 to $100 per month, Austin's DPC practices offer same-day access, no copays, and direct physician communication. Our guide on how to choose the right concierge or DPC doctor covers what to ask. Arbor Family Medicine ($59/month) is one of the most affordable DPC practices in any major metro, though its panel is currently full.
- Check panel availability. Several Austin practices are not accepting new patients, including Arbor Family Medicine and some MDVIP physicians. Ask about current openings and waitlists before committing.
- Factor in the growth. Austin is adding population faster than most US metros. Practices that are accepting new patients today may have waitlists in six months. If you find a practice you like, joining sooner rather than later may matter.






