Direct Primary Care (DPC) offers New Jersey residents an alternative to traditional insurance-based healthcare. With 23 providers across 21 cities, patients can find affordable monthly membership plans that cover primary care services without copays or deductibles. Monthly membership plans range from $79 to $299, with an average of $116 per month. DPC practices typically offer longer appointments, same-day or next-day availability, direct physician access via phone or text, and transparent pricing without insurance billing.
Across the 23 practices we track in New Jersey, the average DPC membership runs $116 per month, with plans ranging from $79 to $299. 27 of those practices (117%) are currently accepting new patients. 9 offer telehealth visits, useful for residents in rural counties or for follow-up care between in-person appointments. Coverage now reaches 21 New Jersey cities, so most patients can find a DPC option within driving distance. At $116/mo, the typical New Jersey DPC membership sits above the national average of $93/mo.
Regulatory note for New Jersey: New Jersey does not currently have a DPC-specific statute; practices operate under the state's general medical practice framework.
Find direct primary care providers in every city across New Jersey:
Across the 23 DPC practices we track in New Jersey, the average membership is about $116 per month. Plans range from $79 to $299 per month. The fee covers unlimited primary care with no copays.
Connectedly Health lists 23 Direct Primary Care providers across 23 practices in 21 cities in New Jersey.
Yes — 27 of the DPC practices we track in New Jersey are currently accepting new patients. Each listing shows its current status so you can find one taking members near you.
Yes. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (H.R.1, 119th Congress), signed July 4, 2025, made Direct Primary Care memberships HSA-eligible starting January 1, 2026. Monthly fees under $150 per individual (or $300 per family) qualify as tax-deductible medical expenses, so you can pay with pre-tax HSA or FSA dollars.
Direct Primary Care covers everyday primary care, but most members still keep a high-deductible or catastrophic insurance plan (or a health sharing plan) for emergencies, hospitalizations, and specialist care. DPC handles routine and preventive visits; insurance covers the big, unexpected costs.
All 23 direct primary care providers in New Jersey are verified against the U.S. federal NPPES (National Provider Identifier) registry maintained by CMS.
Our direct primary care guidance draws on the American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP) and DPC Frontier.
Reviewed by the Connectedly Health Editorial Team · Last updated July 2, 2026. Editorial standards & how we verify providers.