Concierge Doctors in Miami Beach, FL
13 concierge and direct primary care practices — average membership:
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Frequently Asked Questions
How much does concierge medicine cost in Miami Beach?
Does Mount Sinai have concierge medicine in Miami Beach?
Is there DPC in Miami Beach?
How do I find a concierge doctor in Miami Beach?
Quick Facts: Concierge Medicine in Miami Beach
- Practices on NextMD: 13
- Doctors: 24
- Average membership: $416/mo
- Population: 82,000 (city)
- Ultra-premium market; among the highest average memberships of any sub-city
- Hospital: Mount Sinai Medical Center (on the Beach, concierge program)
- Part of the greater Miami metro
About Concierge Medicine in Miami Beach
Miami Beach is not Miami. That distinction matters for concierge medicine. Miami Beach is a barrier island. Crossing the causeways to the mainland can take 20 to 40 minutes in traffic. Patients here need a doctor on the Beach, not in Coral Gables or Brickell.
That geographic reality is why Miami Beach supports 13 concierge practices for a city of 82,000. The average membership is $416/mo per month, among the highest of any sub-city on NextMD.
The market is ultra-premium. Evolve Longevity ($6,000/year) focuses on longevity medicine. Concierge Pediatrics of Florida ($416/month or $5,000/year) serves families in South Beach and mid-Beach. Mount Sinai Medical Center Concierge Medicine brings hospital-affiliated concierge to the Beach within the Mount Sinai system, meaning your concierge physician can coordinate referrals, imaging, and hospitalizations without leaving the island.
The Agatston Center for Preventive Medicine has a pedigree few practices can match. Dr. Arthur Agatston created the South Beach Diet and pioneered the coronary artery calcium score, one of the most widely used cardiac risk assessment tools in the world. His center offers prevention-focused concierge with a cardiology foundation. Private Medical operates here with the same 100-patient-cap ultra-premium model as their Manhattan and Beverly Hills locations, serving the cross-coastal population that splits time between Miami Beach and New York.
The patient base is a three-part mix: year-round residents (South of Fifth, Sunset Harbour, Mid-Beach), seasonal snowbirds from the Northeast (typically November through April), and international patients from Latin America and the Caribbean. Baptist Health South Florida alone sees 12,000+ international patients annually from approximately 100 countries. Most practices are bilingual. No DPC options exist on the Beach. The entire market is concierge.
For context on how concierge medicine pricing works across the US, Miami Beach is one of the most expensive sub-city markets in the country.
How to Choose a Concierge Doctor in Miami Beach
- Mount Sinai Medical Center is on the Beach. This is Miami Beach's defining healthcare advantage. Mount Sinai Medical Center Concierge Medicine means you can get hospital-affiliated concierge care, specialist referrals, and hospitalizations without crossing to the mainland. No other barrier island community in the US has a hospital of this caliber.
- The Agatston Center is a unique pedigree. The creator of the South Beach Diet and the coronary calcium score runs a concierge practice here. If cardiovascular prevention is a priority, this is a distinctive option. Our guide on how to choose the right concierge or DPC doctor covers evaluation factors.
- If you split time between NYC and Miami Beach, Private Medical operates in both Manhattan and Miami Beach with the same 100-patient-cap model. Mount Sinai also has its concierge program in both NYC (Hudson Yards, Upper East Side) and Miami Beach.
- No DPC available. Miami Beach is entirely concierge. If you want flat-fee DPC, EmpowerMed in Miami proper ($110/month) is the nearest option. Understanding the key differences between concierge medicine and DPC clarifies the options.
- Seasonal availability matters. Miami Beach's population swells during season (November-April). Ask about panel management during peak months. Research shows why concierge patients visit the ER 40% less often when they have reliable access.






