Compare 1207 pharmacists in Baltimore, MD. Check ratings, insurance, and availability.
1,207
Pharmacists
100%
Accepting patients
36%
Most common: PHARMD
Ranked by Clarity Score, based on profile detail, verification, and patient activity.
Baltimore's healthcare story begins and ends with Johns Hopkins, which has defined American medicine for over a century. But the city is more than one institution. The University of Maryland Medical Center, MedStar, and Sinai Hospital each serve distinct communities, and the gap between nationally ranked research hospitals and neighborhood clinics that serve Baltimore's underserved areas remains one of the city's defining healthcare tensions.
Baltimore has 1,207 pharmacists. The most common credential is PHARMD (36%). 100% are currently accepting new patients. Practitioners see patients in neighborhoods including Fell's Point, Federal Hill, Mount Vernon, and Canton.
Johns Hopkins Hospital sits in East Baltimore, with the main campus along Broadway. The University of Maryland Medical Center is downtown near the Inner Harbor. MedStar facilities are spread across the south and east sides. The city's Light Rail and bus lines connect major hospital campuses, but most patients drive. Parking near Hopkins can be expensive and limited, so plan for the Hopkins shuttle or rideshare.
Nearby hospitals include Johns Hopkins Hospital, University of Maryland Medical Center, and MedStar Harbor Hospital. Local training programs run through Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and University of Maryland School of Medicine. Johns Hopkins Hospital is consistently ranked the number one or two hospital in the nation and is a pioneer in modern medicine.
CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield dominates the Baltimore insurance market on both the individual and employer-sponsored sides. Kaiser Permanente has a growing mid-Atlantic presence. Maryland's Medicaid program covers a large share of the city's population, with managed care through CareFirst, Priority Partners, and Jai Medical Systems.
A conversation with a pharmacist can happen at the pharmacy counter or in a private consultation area. For a medication review, the pharmacist will go through all your prescriptions and over-the-counter products to check for interactions, duplications, and appropriate dosing. Vaccine appointments take 15 to 20 minutes including a brief health screening and observation period after the shot. Some pharmacists provide chronic disease management services (diabetes education, blood pressure monitoring) under collaborative practice agreements with your doctor.
Talk to your pharmacist when starting a new medication (ask about side effects, food interactions, and timing), when you take multiple medications and want a medication review, when you need a vaccine (flu, COVID, shingles, pneumonia), when you have questions about over-the-counter products, when you need emergency contraception, when you are having trouble affording your medications (pharmacists know about discount programs and generic alternatives), or when you have a minor health concern that a pharmacist can help triage (cough, allergies, minor infections in some states).
Pharmacist consultation: free · Vaccination: $0 copay (most insured) · Medication review (MTM): covered by Medicare Part D · Generic medication: $4-20/month · Compounded medication: $20-200+/month
Baltimore, MD has 1,207 licensed pharmacists. 100% are currently accepting new patients, so finding an available provider should be straightforward.
Yes. 100% of pharmacists in Baltimore, MD are currently accepting new patients. You can filter your search on FindClarity to show only providers who are taking new patients.
Maryland Health Connection is the state ACA marketplace, with plans from CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield (the dominant carrier), Kaiser Permanente, and Aetna. Maryland's unique all-payer hospital rate system means hospital charges are the same regardless of insurer, which is unusual nationally. Medicaid is also administered through Maryland Health Connection.
A pharmacist consultation is free. Vaccinations are $0 copay for most insured patients. MTM is covered by Medicare Part D. Generic medications cost $4 to $20 per month. Compounded medications cost $20 to $200+ per month. Actual costs in Baltimore, MD depend on the provider and your insurance plan. Ask your pharmacist about generic alternatives, manufacturer coupons, and patient assistance programs. GoodRx and similar discount cards can reduce self-pay medication costs by 50% or more. Using one pharmacy for all medications ensures safety through interaction screening.
Baltimore's healthcare is dominated by Johns Hopkins Health System and the University of Maryland Medical System. MedStar and Sinai/LifeBridge Health serve additional communities. If you want access to Hopkins specialists, confirm your insurance includes the Johns Hopkins network. Many plans in Maryland have tiered networks that charge more for Hopkins and UMMC.
Some pharmacists in Baltimore, MD accept Maryland Medicaid, the state's Medicaid program. Medicaid covers prescription medications and pharmacist-administered vaccines. MTM services are increasingly covered by state Medicaid programs. Contact the provider's office directly to confirm Maryland Medicaid participation before scheduling.
You see a pharmacist each time you fill a prescription. Medication therapy management (MTM) reviews happen annually for qualifying Medicare patients. Vaccinations are walk-in. Chronic disease management visits (where available) are typically monthly. With 1,207 pharmacists in Baltimore, MD, you can search on FindClarity to find a provider who fits your schedule.
Maryland is the only state where hospital rates are set by a state commission (the Health Services Cost Review Commission) rather than negotiated between hospitals and insurers. This means all insurers pay the same rate for the same service at a given hospital. It does not apply to physician offices or outpatient clinics outside of hospitals.
For primary care at Hopkins, new patient wait times can run several weeks to a few months depending on the location. Specialty referrals move faster if you are already in the Hopkins system. If you need care sooner, Hopkins also operates community practices and urgent care locations with shorter wait times.
Top accepted carriers in Baltimore, MD include unitedhealthcare, qhp-63474, qhp-38344, and qhp-11512.
Pharmacy services like medication dispensing are covered under your prescription drug benefit (separate from medical insurance). Vaccine administration by pharmacists is covered under most medical plans and Medicare Part D or Part B. Medication therapy management (MTM) services are covered by Medicare Part D for qualifying patients (multiple chronic conditions, multiple medications, high drug costs). Pharmacist consultations at the counter are free. For pharmacist-provided chronic disease management, check your plan for coverage of clinical pharmacist services.