Compare 33 rheumatologists in Jacksonville, FL. Check ratings, insurance, and availability.
33
Rheumatologists
100%
Accepting patients
85%
Most common: MD
Ranked by Clarity Score, based on profile detail, verification, and patient activity.
Jacksonville is where Mayo Clinic meets a sprawling Southern city. The Mayo campus gives Jacksonville a national reputation for complex specialty care, but the day-to-day healthcare experience for most residents is shaped by Baptist Health, the region's largest system, and UF Health Jacksonville, which serves as the safety-net hospital for the urban core.
Jacksonville has 33 rheumatologists. The most common credential is MD (85%). 100% are currently accepting new patients.
Jacksonville covers over 875 square miles, which means healthcare access depends heavily on which part of the city you live in. The Southbank medical district near downtown, the Mayo Clinic campus off San Pablo Road on the east side, and the Baptist South campus in Mandarin form three distinct hubs. Bridges over the St. Johns River create bottlenecks, so crossing the river for appointments adds real time.
Providers practice throughout Jacksonville. Riverside is a walkable urban neighborhood near Baptist Medical Center's downtown campus with a growing medical office district. San Marco is a charming neighborhood south of downtown with independent practices and proximity to Baptist and Nemours. Avondale is a residential area adjacent to Riverside, sharing access to Baptist and St. Vincent's medical facilities. Jacksonville Beach is beaches communities served by Baptist Beaches hospital and Mayo Clinic's main campus nearby.
Nearby hospitals include Mayo Clinic Jacksonville, UF Health Jacksonville, and Baptist Medical Center Jacksonville. Local training programs run through University of Florida College of Medicine-Jacksonville and Mayo Clinic School of Medicine (Jacksonville campus). Mayo Clinic Jacksonville is one of three Mayo Clinic campuses and a nationally ranked destination for specialty care.
The first visit takes 45 to 60 minutes. The rheumatologist will perform a detailed joint exam (checking for swelling, warmth, and tenderness in every joint), review your blood work, and take a thorough history of your symptoms including when they started, what triggers them, and how they have progressed. They may order additional labs, X-rays, or ultrasound. Treatment plans often involve medication adjustments over several visits to find the right combination.
Jacksonville is growing fast, and many primary care practices in new communities like Nocatee and the Town Center area are actively accepting new patients. If your first choice is full, ask about satellite offices.
See a rheumatologist for persistent joint pain or swelling in multiple joints, morning stiffness lasting more than 30 minutes, unexplained rashes combined with joint pain, positive autoimmune blood tests (ANA, rheumatoid factor), gout attacks, chronic widespread pain or fatigue your PCP suspects is fibromyalgia, or any condition where your immune system appears to be causing inflammation.
Office visit copay: $30-75 · Rheumatoid factor/ANA panel: $100-300 · Biologic infusion: $1,000-5,000 per treatment · Joint ultrasound: $200-500
Northeast Florida's hot, humid summers and abundant outdoor recreation drive high rates of heat-related illness and skin cancer. The St. Johns River and coastal proximity also mean seasonal mosquito-borne disease awareness is important.
Rheumatoid arthritis is an autoimmune condition that attacks the joints. Rheumatologists prescribe disease-modifying drugs early to prevent joint damage and manage the condition long-term.
Lupus can affect the skin, joints, kidneys, brain, and other organs. Rheumatologists manage flares, monitor organ involvement, and adjust treatment to keep the disease under control.
Wear-and-tear arthritis causes joint pain and stiffness that worsens over time. Rheumatologists help distinguish it from inflammatory arthritis and develop management plans that keep you active.
Sudden, intense joint pain (often in the big toe) may be gout. Rheumatologists confirm the diagnosis, treat acute flares, and prescribe long-term uric acid-lowering therapy to prevent future attacks.
Widespread pain, fatigue, and brain fog that cannot be explained by other conditions may be fibromyalgia. Rheumatologists diagnose it, rule out other causes, and create a multifaceted treatment plan.
Jacksonville, FL has 33 licensed rheumatologists. 100% are currently accepting new patients, so finding an available provider should be straightforward.
Yes. 100% of rheumatologists in Jacksonville, FL are currently accepting new patients. You can filter your search on FindClarity to show only providers who are taking new patients.
Florida Blue has the largest market share in the Jacksonville area for both employer and individual plans. On the ACA marketplace, Ambetter and Molina offer lower-cost options. Many military families use TRICARE, and Baptist Health accepts most TRICARE plans.
An office visit copay is $30 to $75. A rheumatoid factor/ANA panel costs $100 to $300. Biologic infusions cost $1,000 to $5,000 per treatment. Joint ultrasound runs $200 to $500. Actual costs in Jacksonville, FL depend on the provider and your insurance plan. Biologic medications are the biggest cost driver in rheumatology. Biosimilars (generic-equivalent biologics) can significantly reduce costs. Manufacturer copay programs can bring patient costs down to $5 to $25 per month. Ask your rheumatologist about all financial assistance options.
Baptist Health dominates primary care in Jacksonville, with the most locations and the largest physician network. Mayo Clinic Jacksonville is primarily a referral center for complex cases, not a place most residents go for routine care. UF Health Jacksonville is the main safety-net hospital for uninsured and underinsured patients.
MD stands for Doctor of Medicine and DO stands for Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine. Both are equivalent qualifications. In Jacksonville, FL, 85% hold the MD credential and 6% hold DO. The difference is in training pathway, not quality of care.
85% of rheumatologists in Jacksonville, FL accept Medicare. Medicare covers rheumatology visits and medically necessary treatments, including biologic infusions administered in the office (Part B). Oral biologic medications are covered under Part D. You can filter for Medicare-accepting providers on FindClarity.
For most departments, yes. Mayo Clinic Jacksonville operates primarily as a referral center for complex or rare conditions. Your primary care physician or specialist can initiate a referral. Some departments accept self-referrals, but calling ahead to check is recommended.
It depends on your location. UF Health Jacksonville downtown is the region's primary Level I trauma center. Baptist Medical Center downtown and Baptist South in Mandarin also have emergency departments. The Beaches community is served by Baptist Beaches.
Top accepted carriers in Jacksonville, FL include medicare, unitedhealthcare, qhp-16842, qhp-19898, and centene.
Rheumatology visits are covered as specialist visits. Biologic medications (Humira, Enbrel, Rinvoq, etc.) are expensive, often $2,000 to $6,000 per month before insurance. Most are covered under specialty pharmacy benefits with prior authorization. Manufacturer copay assistance programs can dramatically reduce out-of-pocket costs. Your rheumatologist's office typically handles authorization paperwork.