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Insights · Concierge Medicine

How Much Does a Concierge Doctor Cost in Florida?

What concierge medicine costs in Tampa and Florida, what the fee includes, and how it compares to direct primary care.

Reviewed by Dr. Rishi Seth, MDBoard-Certified Internal Medicine

Published June 1, 2026 · 2 min read

The exterior of the Seth Premier Medical concierge practice in Tampa, Florida

The short answer

Concierge doctor fees in Florida typically range from about $150 to $400 per month for an individual, depending on the practice and what is included. At Seth Premier Medical in Tampa, individual membership is $299 per month, which covers 24/7 physician access, same or next-day visits, an executive-style annual, and care coordination.

What the fee covers

A concierge fee buys access and time, not a la carte visits. At Seth Premier Medical the monthly membership includes direct 24/7 contact with your physician, fast appointments, longer visits, an executive-style annual, messaging and telehealth, and coordination of your labs, imaging, and referrals.

The practice is in-network and bills your insurance for visits, including telehealth, just like a traditional practice, so standard plan copays apply, and your insurance also covers labs, imaging, medications, and outside specialists. The monthly membership is a separate concierge fee for the access and time insurance does not pay for.

Is it worth it?

For people who value time with their doctor and want prevention handled properly, the math is straightforward: predictable cost, fast access, and a physician who knows your history. Families can add members at a discounted rate.

How Much Does a Concierge Doctor Cost in Florida?, answered.

The membership fee itself is a separate concierge fee and is not billed to insurance. The practice is in-network and bills your insurance for the actual visits, including telehealth, and your insurance also covers labs, imaging, medications, and specialists.
Yes. We are in-network and bill your insurance for visits, including telehealth, so standard plan copays apply. Medications and certain programs like GLP-1 are billed separately at cost.
Medicare does not cover the membership fee, which pays for access and services beyond billable care. You keep Medicare for covered services elsewhere and pay the membership out of pocket.
Many members are able to use HSA or FSA funds toward membership, though rules vary by plan. We provide documentation to help, so confirm with your plan administrator.
You are paying for a small panel, 24/7 access, and long visits rather than per-visit insurance billing. The fee buys the physician's time and availability, which volume-based care cannot offer.