FLORIDA'S ONLY JOINT COMMISSION-ACCREDITED URGENT CARE
FLORIDA'S ONLY JOINT COMMISSION-ACCREDITED URGENT CARE · ONE OF JUST 8 NATIONWIDE
Medically reviewed by Uri Gedalia, MD, FACS
Chief Medical Officer, TrufaMED Urgent Care & Concierge Medicine
Board-Certified, General Surgery
Last reviewed: June 2026
When you wake up with a sore throat, twist an ankle, or need a same-day visit and your primary care doctor is booked for two weeks, you have two convenient options: an urgent care center or a retail health clinic tucked inside a pharmacy or big-box store. They look similar from the outside (walk in, no appointment, quick visit), but they are built for very different problems. Knowing the difference saves you a wasted trip, and sometimes a second copay when the first place sends you somewhere else.
Here is the honest, physician-reviewed breakdown so you can pick the right setting the first time.
This is not a close call in the data. According to 2024 figures from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 27.6% of Americans had at least one urgent care visit that year, compared with 19% who visited a retail health clinic. Urgent care has become the default setting for on-demand care, and it skews younger: recent analysis of 2025 urgent care visit data found that Gen Z and Millennials together account for more than half of all urgent care visits despite making up about 43% of the population. The reason is simple. Urgent care can handle far more of what actually walks through the door.
Retail clinics (the kind you find inside a chain pharmacy or supermarket) are designed for a short, predictable menu of minor needs. Think routine vaccinations, a rapid strep or flu swab, a TB test, blood-pressure checks, and uncomplicated issues like a mild cold or a simple rash. They are typically staffed by a single mid-level provider, with no physician on site and no imaging or on-site lab beyond a few rapid tests. For the narrow list of things they do, they are fast and inexpensive. The problem starts the moment your issue falls outside that list.
Urgent care is built for the much wider middle ground between “this can wait for my doctor” and “this is a 911 emergency.” That includes cuts that need stitches, sprains and possible fractures, deeper infections, dehydration, abdominal pain, asthma flares, and illnesses that need more than a rapid swab to sort out. The difference is capability: a physician on shift, on-site X-ray, an on-site lab, and ultrasound, all under one roof. When something turns out to be more serious than it looked, the urgent care team can image it, test it, and treat it on the spot instead of sending you elsewhere.
At TrufaMED, there is an MD on shift every single day we are open, and we are the only Joint Commission–accredited urgent care in Florida, the same accreditation standard hospitals are held to. That is the practical reason urgent care wins for anything beyond the simplest complaint: you are not gambling on whether the visit can actually resolve your problem.
| Retail Clinic | Urgent Care (TrufaMED) | |
|---|---|---|
| Who treats you | Typically a single mid-level provider, no physician on site | Physician (MD) on shift every day we are open |
| On-site imaging & labs | A few rapid tests only; no X-ray or ultrasound | On-site X-ray, lab, and ultrasound |
| What it handles | Minor colds, vaccines, simple screenings and swabs | Cuts and stitches, sprains and fractures, infections, dehydration, abdominal pain, and more |
| Accreditation | Varies; generally none | Joint Commission accredited, Florida’s only accredited urgent care |
| Best for | Quick, routine, low-complexity needs | Anything that might need imaging, testing, or a physician’s judgment |
If you already know exactly what you need and it is on the short list (a flu shot, a TB test, a rapid strep swab), a retail clinic is a perfectly good, fast choice. If there is any chance the visit needs an X-ray, a real lab workup, stitches, or a physician to weigh in, go straight to urgent care. You will avoid the all-too-common scenario where a retail clinic takes one look, says “you need imaging we do not have,” and sends you to urgent care anyway, costing you a second visit and a second wait. When in doubt, urgent care covers both the simple and the complicated.
Our Surfside clinic is open seven days a week with extended evening hours, an MD on shift every day, and on-site X-ray, lab, and ultrasound so most problems are diagnosed and treated in a single visit. We accept most insurance, and walk-ins are welcome. You can read more about our services on our urgent care page, or, if you are nearby, our Miami Beach urgent care page.
A retail clinic, usually located inside a pharmacy or store, handles a narrow list of minor needs like vaccines, simple swabs, and basic screenings, typically with a single mid-level provider and no on-site imaging. Urgent care handles a much broader range (injuries, fractures, infections, and illnesses that need a physician, X-ray, lab, or ultrasound), all in one visit.
A retail clinic visit can be cheaper for very simple needs, but if your issue requires imaging or labs the clinic does not have, you will end up paying for a second visit at urgent care anyway. For anything beyond the basics, urgent care is usually the more cost-effective choice because it resolves the problem in one stop. TrufaMED accepts most insurance.
Choose a retail clinic when you know exactly what you need and it is simple: a flu shot, a TB test, a rapid strep or flu swab, or a routine blood-pressure check. For anything that might need a physician’s judgment, imaging, stitches, or a fuller lab workup, urgent care is the better setting.
Yes. TrufaMED has on-site X-ray, lab testing, and ultrasound, with an MD on shift every day we are open. That means sprains, possible fractures, and many other problems can be imaged and treated during the same visit rather than referred out.
No. TrufaMED is walk-in friendly and open seven days a week with extended evening hours. You can also reserve your spot online ahead of time if you prefer to minimize your wait.
Yes. TrufaMED is Joint Commission accredited, the only Joint Commission-accredited urgent care in Florida. It is the same accreditation standard applied to hospitals, and it reflects a higher bar for safety and quality than most walk-in clinics meet.