Redmond, WA private-pay medical transportation
Medical Transportation in Redmond, WA
Request private-pay non-emergency medical transportation in Redmond for wheelchair, stretcher, hospital discharge, dialysis, and Eastside-to-Seattle medical rides. Redmond bookings often depend on exact campus access, SR 520 corridor timing, and provider confirmation before the ride is final.
Common local routes
- Wheelchair appointments to local Redmond clinics and Eastside hospital campuses
- Discharge rides back to Redmond homes, condos, or family addresses
- Dialysis schedules into Bellevue
Start here
Book or request provider quotes
Enter pickup, drop-off, timing, mobility, stairs, and contact details once. Eligible rides start as booking requests; urgent or complex rides may move through provider quote review first.
Provider coverage near Redmond
Current live MedicalRide data shows 22 Redmond or King County-linked provider records, including 21 wheelchair-capable, 3 stretcher-capable, and 2 explicit long-distance-capable records. The Washington-linked slice is slightly broader at 25 provider records overall. Only a small active subset appears to be positioned for immediate higher-acuity work, so some Redmond requests still need broader Eastside review before the booking can be confirmed. That is still strong enough for indexable local pages because Redmond has real care anchors, real Eastside route patterns, verified transit-access realities, and a current demand signal. The important guardrail is staying conservative: provider confirmation, route review, and access details still decide whether a ride is actually accepted.
What affects price and availability in Redmond
Redmond price and availability are shaped by more than mileage. A trip may stay local on Redmond Way, head west toward Bellevue over SR 520, move north into Kirkland, or continue farther into Seattle. Wheelchair and stretcher requests do not price the same. Apartment elevators, same-day discharge timing, station handoffs, and whether a caregiver is receiving the rider also change whether a trip can be matched quickly. The city's transit landmarks create real logistical differences. RedLink only serves a limited local zone. Redmond Technology Station uses a one-way pickup loop on Northeast 36th Street. Downtown Redmond Station uses curbside access on westbound NE 76th Street. Redmond Transit Center works well as a landmark, but it is not the same loading pattern as a hospital entrance or private residence.
Common medical ride needs in Redmond
The most practical Redmond use cases are wheelchair transportation to local clinics and Eastside hospitals, discharge rides from EvergreenHealth Redmond or Overlake Medical Center back to Redmond homes or senior communities, recurring dialysis transportation into Bellevue, route-reviewed stretcher moves when the rider cannot sit upright, and longer Washington medical rides when the care plan does not stay local. Current MedicalRide demand already includes a Redmond-to-Kirkland senior-living route, which matches the broader Eastside pattern: the pickup city may be Redmond, but the actual care or receiving destination often sits in another nearby market.
Local guide
What to know before booking in Redmond
Request medical transportation in Redmond
Redmond has enough real local and regional care infrastructure to justify a substantial city hub, but it is still an Eastside routing market rather than a one-campus town. Local rides often start near Bella Bottega, Education Hill, Downtown Redmond, or Willows Road and then move toward EvergreenHealth Redmond, Overlake clinics on Redmond Way, Bellevue hospital campuses, dialysis in Factoria, or specialty care farther west. This page is for private-pay non-emergency medical transportation in Redmond.
The passenger or caregiver submits ride details once. MedicalRide uses those details to help match the request with providers who may be able to handle the route, vehicle type, timing, stairs, assistance level, and passenger needs. A ride is not final until a provider confirms availability and booking details.
For some rides, the customer may start with a booking request or deposit. For urgent, complex, stretcher, bariatric, or long-distance rides, provider confirmation or a quote may be needed first. Final availability and pricing depend on provider review.
- Private-pay non-emergency rides only
- Wheelchair, stretcher, discharge, dialysis, and longer Eastside or Seattle medical routes
- No ride is final until a provider confirms it
Local medical transportation reality in Redmond
Redmond is useful because it has true local medical anchors at EvergreenHealth Redmond and Overlake clinics, but it is also part of a larger Eastside care web. Many higher-value routes do not stay inside city limits. Surgery, specialist, pediatric, dialysis, and post-acute trips often run from Redmond into Bellevue or Kirkland, and longer specialty trips may continue into Seattle after route review.
The current MedicalRide provider slice supports that pattern. It shows 22 Redmond or King County-linked provider records, with much stronger wheelchair depth than stretcher depth. That means Redmond is workable, but the confirming operator may still be based in Bellevue, Bothell, Auburn, Tacoma, or another nearby market rather than inside Redmond itself.
- Real local anchor care exists in Redmond, but many medically important trips still leave the city
- Current provider depth is strongest for wheelchair transportation and thinner for stretcher and long-distance work
- Eastside-to-Seattle corridor timing and provider positioning still affect final availability
Common medical ride needs in Redmond
The most practical Redmond use cases are wheelchair transportation to local clinics and Eastside hospitals, discharge rides from EvergreenHealth Redmond or Overlake Medical Center back to Redmond homes or senior communities, recurring dialysis transportation into Bellevue, route-reviewed stretcher moves when the rider cannot sit upright, and longer Washington medical rides when the care plan does not stay local.
Current MedicalRide demand already includes a Redmond-to-Kirkland senior-living route, which matches the broader Eastside pattern: the pickup city may be Redmond, but the actual care or receiving destination often sits in another nearby market.
- Wheelchair appointments to local Redmond clinics and Eastside hospital campuses
- Discharge rides back to Redmond homes, condos, or family addresses
- Dialysis schedules into Bellevue
- Route-reviewed stretcher and longer regional medical transportation
Medical facilities and care destinations near Redmond
Redmond has local care touchpoints at EvergreenHealth Emergency Department, Redmond, Overlake Clinics Redmond Primary Care, and Overlake Redmond Medical Imaging. Nearby regional anchors include Overlake Medical Center in Bellevue, EvergreenHealth Kirkland, Seattle Children's Bellevue Clinic and Surgery Center, UW Medicine Eastside Specialty Center in Bellevue, and DaVita Bellevue Dialysis Center.
That mix matters because a family may say “Redmond ride,” but the actual job may be a local emergency-department discharge, a Redmond Way imaging visit, a Bellevue surgery appointment, a Kirkland transfer, or a recurring Bellevue dialysis run. The useful planning question is not only where the rider lives. It is where the full care path begins and ends.
- EvergreenHealth Emergency Department, Redmond
- Overlake Clinics Redmond Primary Care
- Overlake Redmond Medical Imaging
- Overlake Medical Center Bellevue
- DaVita Bellevue Dialysis Center
Common route patterns from Redmond
Common Redmond medical routes include homes and condos to EvergreenHealth Redmond for discharge returns or urgent follow-up; neighborhood pickups to Overlake primary care or imaging on Redmond Way; corridor rides to Overlake Medical Center in Bellevue for surgery or specialist care; trips to Kirkland-area hospitals when the rider needs a broader hospital campus; recurring transportation to DaVita Bellevue Dialysis Center; and station-adjacent pickups near Redmond Technology Station or Downtown Redmond for longer Eastside and Seattle medical itineraries.
Those are not interchangeable. A local discharge from EvergreenHealth Redmond to Education Hill has different timing and access needs than a wheelchair dialysis ride into Factoria or a long specialist trip that starts near Redmond Technology Station.
- Redmond homes, Bella Bottega apartments, and Education Hill pickups to EvergreenHealth Emergency Department, Redmond for discharge returns, urgent follow-up, and private-pay rides when a standard car is not realistic.
- Redmond neighborhoods to Overlake Clinics Redmond Primary Care or Overlake Redmond Medical Imaging on Redmond Way for primary care, imaging, and outpatient follow-up appointments.
- Redmond to Overlake Medical Center in Bellevue for surgery check-ins, specialist appointments, and discharge transportation back across the Eastside.
- Redmond to EvergreenHealth Kirkland or other Kirkland-area care destinations when the rider needs a broader hospital campus than the Redmond emergency department.
- Redmond to DaVita Bellevue Dialysis Center for recurring dialysis schedules that depend on exact chair times, return-ride planning, and wheelchair-friendly pickup coordination.
- Redmond pickups near Redmond Technology Station, Marymoor Village, or Downtown Redmond Station for longer specialist trips into Seattle or other Puget Sound medical corridors after route review.
What affects price and availability in Redmond
Redmond price and availability are shaped by more than mileage. A trip may stay local on Redmond Way, head west toward Bellevue over SR 520, move north into Kirkland, or continue farther into Seattle. Wheelchair and stretcher requests do not price the same. Apartment elevators, same-day discharge timing, station handoffs, and whether a caregiver is receiving the rider also change whether a trip can be matched quickly.
The city's transit landmarks create real logistical differences. RedLink only serves a limited local zone. Redmond Technology Station uses a one-way pickup loop on Northeast 36th Street. Downtown Redmond Station uses curbside access on westbound NE 76th Street. Redmond Transit Center works well as a landmark, but it is not the same loading pattern as a hospital entrance or private residence.
- Redmond pricing changes depending on whether the ride stays local on Redmond Way or 161st Avenue NE or runs into Bellevue, Kirkland, Seattle, or farther Puget Sound destinations.
- Wheelchair, stretcher, discharge, dialysis, and long-distance requests do not price the same because equipment, crew time, transfer help, wait time, and return-ride planning vary.
- Same-day emergency-department discharges, uncertain release windows, apartment or condo elevators, and station-area handoffs can push a Redmond ride into provider-review or quote-first handling instead of quick confirmation.
- Longer Washington routes from Redmond may depend on provider deadhead, SR 520 or Eastside corridor timing, and whether the provider can handle both outbound and return legs.
Provider coverage near Redmond
Current live MedicalRide data shows 22 Redmond or King County-linked provider records, including 21 wheelchair-capable, 3 stretcher-capable, and 2 explicit long-distance-capable records. The Washington-linked slice is slightly broader at 25 provider records overall. Only a small active subset appears to be positioned for immediate higher-acuity work, so some Redmond requests still need broader Eastside review before the booking can be confirmed.
That is still strong enough for indexable local pages because Redmond has real care anchors, real Eastside route patterns, verified transit-access realities, and a current demand signal. The important guardrail is staying conservative: provider confirmation, route review, and access details still decide whether a ride is actually accepted.
- 22 Redmond or King County-linked provider records
- 21 wheelchair-capable records
- 3 stretcher-capable records
- 2 long-distance-capable records
- 25 Washington-linked provider records
How to request a Redmond medical ride
Start with the exact pickup and drop-off, not just “Redmond” or “the station.” Include the actual campus, building, entrance, date, discharge or appointment window, whether the rider is ambulatory, wheelchair, or stretcher, whether there are stairs or an elevator, and whether the route stays local or continues into Bellevue, Kirkland, Seattle, or another Washington destination.
The passenger or caregiver submits ride details once. MedicalRide uses those details to help match the request with providers who may be able to handle the route, vehicle type, timing, stairs, assistance level, and passenger needs. A ride is not final until a provider confirms availability and booking details.
For some rides, the customer may start with a booking request or deposit. For urgent, complex, stretcher, bariatric, or long-distance rides, provider confirmation or a quote may be needed first. Final availability and pricing depend on provider review.
MedicalRide is for private-pay non-emergency medical transportation. It is not an ambulance service. If the passenger has a medical emergency or needs medical monitoring during transport, call 911 or the appropriate emergency service.
- Exact campus, building, and entrance
- Wheelchair vs stretcher vs ambulatory fit
- Stairs, elevator, and receiving-party details
- Return-ride timing if needed
Related pages
More MedicalRide pages for Redmond
- Wheelchair Transportation in Redmond, WA
- Stretcher Transportation in Redmond, WA
- Hospital Discharge Transportation in Redmond, WA
- Dialysis Transportation in Redmond, WA
- Long-Distance Medical Transportation from Redmond, WA
- Wheelchair Transportation in Redmond, WA
- Stretcher Transportation in Redmond, WA
- Hospital Discharge Transportation in Redmond, WA
- Dialysis Transportation in Redmond, WA
- Long-Distance Medical Transportation from Redmond, WA
- Browse Washington medical transportation cities
- Wheelchair Transportation in Redmond, WA
- Hospital Discharge Transportation in Redmond, WA
- Long-Distance Medical Transportation from Redmond, WA
Sources and local signals
Where this page gets its local context
These sources support the local facilities, routes, provider markets, and access notes used on this page. MedicalRide still uses provider confirmation for every actual ride request.
- EvergreenHealth Emergency Department, Redmond
Official Redmond emergency-department location page supporting the 8980 161st Ave NE anchor and discharge-route examples.
- Overlake Clinics Redmond Primary Care
Official Overlake page supporting the Redmond Creekside Crossing primary-care anchor at 17181 Redmond Way.
- Overlake Redmond Medical Imaging
Official Overlake imaging page supporting Redmond imaging and follow-up route examples at 17209 Redmond Way.
- Overlake Medical Center Bellevue
Official Bellevue hospital page supporting Eastside regional-hospital routes from Redmond.
- Seattle Children's Bellevue Clinic and Surgery Center
Official specialty-care anchor supporting pediatric and surgery-focused Eastside routes from Redmond.
- UW Medicine Eastside Specialty Center
Official Eastside specialty-care page supporting Bellevue specialist-route examples from Redmond.
- DaVita Bellevue Dialysis Center
Official dialysis-center page supporting recurring dialysis transportation examples from Redmond into Bellevue.
- Redmond Senior Services and Resources
Official city page supporting the local reality that Redmond seniors often rely on transportation-resource planning.
- RedLink City of Redmond
Official city page supporting the microtransit coverage zone in Downtown Redmond, Southeast Redmond, and Education Hill.
- Sound Transit Downtown Redmond service opening
Official Sound Transit page supporting regional Redmond-Bellevue-Seattle connection language and station references.
- Redmond Technology Station
Official station page supporting the one-way pickup loop access detail on Northeast 36th Street.
- Downtown Redmond Station
Official station page supporting curbside pickup and NE 76th Street / Railroad Avenue access language.
- Redmond Transit Center
Official Metro page supporting Redmond Transit Center as a real handoff and landmark location.
- MedicalRide provider coverage data
Internal provider-record snapshot used for conservative Redmond, King County, and Washington provider-coverage counts.
FAQ
Questions about Redmond medical rides
- Can I request medical transportation in Redmond for EvergreenHealth Redmond?
- Yes. EvergreenHealth Emergency Department, Redmond is a real local use case, but availability still depends on provider confirmation, the rider's mobility needs, and the actual pickup entrance or discharge timing.
- Can Redmond rides go to Bellevue or Kirkland hospitals?
- Yes. Many Redmond medical rides leave Redmond for Bellevue or Kirkland care destinations, but the route still needs to be reviewed and accepted by a provider.
- Are wheelchair and stretcher rides both realistic in Redmond?
- Wheelchair depth is much stronger than stretcher depth in the current Redmond provider slice. Higher-acuity requests may need broader Eastside provider review before a ride can be confirmed.
- Can I book dialysis transportation from Redmond into Bellevue?
- Yes. Recurring dialysis transportation is a practical Redmond use case when chair times, mobility needs, and the return-ride plan are submitted clearly.
- Is MedicalRide an ambulance service in Redmond?
- MedicalRide is for private-pay non-emergency medical transportation. It is not an ambulance service. If the passenger has a medical emergency or needs medical monitoring during transport, call 911 or the appropriate emergency service.
- Does MedicalRide take Medicare or Medicaid for Redmond rides?
- MedicalRide is private-pay. Insurance, Medicaid, or Medicare should not be assumed unless a transportation provider separately confirms something specific outside the MedicalRide booking flow.
