How to Get a Family Doctor for Seniors in Ontario (2025 Guide)

Why seniors need consistent primary care

As Ontarians age, access to a family doctor becomes even more important. Seniors often manage multiple conditions, require regular prescriptions, and need referrals to specialists. Without a family doctor, older adults risk delayed care, fragmented services, and higher use of emergency departments.

Step 1: Use Health Care Connect with senior priority

Ontario’s Health Care Connect program allows seniors to register for placement with a family doctor. Older adults with chronic illnesses or urgent needs are often given priority in matching. Families helping parents or grandparents should include detailed health history when completing the intake form to improve placement chances.

Step 2: Explore city-specific options for seniors

Many clinics in Ontario cities open limited spots for seniors, given their need for continuity of care. Check your region’s guide:

These pages outline local strategies, including hospital-affiliated clinics and community health centres.

Step 3: Check Community Health Centres

Community Health Centres (CHCs) are often strong resources for seniors, offering not just primary care but also programs like:

  • Chronic disease management
  • Nutrition counseling
  • Social work and mental health support
  • Falls prevention programs

Many CHCs specifically prioritize older adults, especially those without a doctor.

Step 4: Transfer records carefully

If a senior is changing doctors, transferring medical records is essential. This ensures continuity for medications, test results, and referrals. See How to transfer medical records in Ontario for step-by-step instructions.

Step 5: Use DOKTR for faster placement

DOKTR offers a direct way for seniors and their families to connect with family doctors who are accepting new patients. By registering online, older adults can be matched based on their city and health needs, helping reduce wait times.

👉 Begin now at doktr.ca/register.

What to do while waiting

While searching for a family doctor, seniors can:

  • Use walk-in clinics for urgent needs and prescription refills
  • Ask pharmacists about eligible prescription renewals
  • Explore virtual care for episodic issues

For additional ideas, see No family doctors accepting patients: 7 options that work.

Conclusion

Seniors in Ontario face unique challenges when looking for a family doctor, but resources exist to help. Health Care Connect, local city guides, CHCs, and careful record transfers are key steps. For families who want a faster solution, DOKTR provides direct access to family doctors accepting new patients.

👉 Begin now at doktr.ca/register.