Compare 812 physical therapists in Columbus, OH. Check ratings, insurance, and availability.
812
Physical Therapists
100%
Accepting patients
41%
Most common: DPT
Ranked by Clarity Score, based on profile detail, verification, and patient activity.
Columbus is Ohio's fastest-growing city, and its healthcare system reflects that momentum. Ohio State's Wexner Medical Center is the academic anchor, while OhioHealth and Mount Carmel run the community hospital networks that most residents use day to day. Nationwide Children's Hospital gives the city one of the strongest pediatric programs in the country.
Columbus has 812 physical therapists. The most common credential is DPT (41%). 100% are currently accepting new patients.
Columbus is built on a highway grid. I-71, I-70, and the I-270 outerbelt connect most medical corridors within 20 to 30 minutes. The Wexner Medical Center and Nationwide Children's are clustered near downtown, while OhioHealth and Mount Carmel have outpatient campuses spread across the suburbs. COTA buses reach major hospitals, but most patients drive.
Providers practice throughout Columbus. Short North is a vibrant arts district adjacent to the Ohio State University medical campus. German Village is a historic brick neighborhood near Nationwide Children's Hospital and Grant Medical Center. Clintonville is a tree-lined neighborhood with family practices and OhioHealth facilities along High Street. Victorian Village is a walkable area near downtown with proximity to OhioHealth Riverside Methodist Hospital.
Nearby hospitals include Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, Nationwide Children's Hospital, and OhioHealth Riverside Methodist Hospital. Local training programs run through Ohio State University College of Medicine and Ohio University Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine (Columbus). Nationwide Children's Hospital is one of the largest and top-ranked pediatric hospitals in the United States.
The first visit (about 45 to 60 minutes) includes a thorough evaluation of your movement, strength, flexibility, and pain. Your PT will ask about your daily activities and goals. They will put together a treatment plan with exercises and hands-on techniques, and teach you what to do at home between visits. Follow-up sessions are typically two to three times per week.
Physical therapy and rehab providers are plentiful in the suburbs, especially along the Sawmill Road and Polaris corridors in north Columbus. Many offer evening hours.
See a physical therapist for back or neck pain, joint pain, recovery after surgery (knee replacement, ACL repair, rotator cuff), sports injuries, balance problems or fall prevention, chronic pain, reduced mobility, or any musculoskeletal condition your doctor recommends therapy for. In most states, you can see a PT directly without a doctor's referral.
Session copay: $20-75 · Session (out-of-pocket): $75-200 · Initial evaluation: $100-250
Columbus winters can limit outdoor rehab activities. Many PT clinics have indoor facilities for gait training and balance work, and some offer aquatic therapy through hospital-affiliated wellness centers.
After joint replacement, ACL repair, rotator cuff surgery, or other procedures, physical therapy is essential for regaining strength, range of motion, and function.
Physical therapists design sport-specific rehabilitation programs that get you back to your activity safely and help you prevent the same injury from recurring.
Physical therapists use manual therapy, targeted exercises, and movement education to treat back and neck pain at its root cause rather than masking symptoms.
Balance training reduces fall risk in older adults and people with neurological conditions. Physical therapists assess your balance, identify deficits, and build a program to improve stability.
Joint pain often responds to targeted exercise and manual therapy before surgery becomes necessary. Physical therapists strengthen the muscles that support the joint and improve how it moves.
Columbus, OH has 812 licensed physical therapists. 100% are currently accepting new patients, so finding an available provider should be straightforward.
Yes. 100% of physical therapists in Columbus, OH are currently accepting new patients. You can filter your search on FindClarity to show only providers who are taking new patients.
Medical Mutual of Ohio, Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield, and UnitedHealthcare are the most common commercial carriers in Columbus. Ohio Medicaid (managed through CareSource and Molina) is accepted at most OhioHealth and Wexner facilities.
Session copays range from $20 to $75. Out-of-pocket sessions cost $75 to $200 each. An initial evaluation runs $100 to $250. Actual costs in Columbus, OH depend on the provider and your insurance plan. Many plans cap the number of covered sessions per year, commonly 20 to 60. Ask your PT's office to verify your specific benefit limits and any authorization requirements before starting.
Columbus healthcare is split between three main systems: OhioHealth, Mount Carmel, and Ohio State Wexner Medical Center. Your insurance network will often determine which system is most affordable. For specialized or complex care, Wexner is the academic referral center.
DPT stands for Doctor of Physical Therapy and PT stands for Physical Therapist. Both are equivalent qualifications. In Columbus, OH, 41% hold the DPT credential and 27% hold PT. The difference is in training pathway, not quality of care.
19% of physical therapists in Columbus, OH accept Medicare. Medicare covers physical therapy when medically necessary. There is no hard annual cap, but a threshold amount triggers additional documentation requirements. Your therapist will handle the paperwork. You can filter for Medicare-accepting providers on FindClarity.
For routine primary care and community hospital services, OhioHealth is convenient with locations throughout the suburbs. For academic medicine, clinical trials, or complex specialty cases, Wexner Medical Center is the stronger option. Check your insurance network first.
Yes. It consistently ranks among the top 10 pediatric hospitals nationally and is the primary referral center for pediatric specialty care across Ohio. Most pediatric insurance plans in the area include it.
Top accepted carriers in Columbus, OH include unitedhealthcare, qhp-54192, medicare, qhp-31981, and qhp-44228.
Most health insurance plans cover physical therapy with a copay per session, typically $20 to $75. Many plans limit the number of covered sessions per year (commonly 20 to 60). Some require prior authorization or a doctor's referral for coverage. Ask your PT's office to verify your benefits before starting, including any visit caps or annual limits.