Low-cost health and dental coverage for uninsured children and pregnant women in Colorado families whose income is too high for Medicaid but still within program limits. Serves income-eligible Coloradans statewide. Apply online at Colorado PEAK or at your county human services office; bring a photo ID, Social Security numbers for household members, proof of income such as pay stubs, and proof of Colorado residency to the application.
Healthcare for fathers without insurance is accessible through Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs — also called community health centers), free clinics, hospital financial assistance programs, and Medicaid. FQHCs exist in every state and charge on a sliding scale; they provide primary care, dental, behavioral health, and prescription services. The HRSA health center locator lists all FQHCs. Free clinics (typically run by volunteer medical professionals) operate in most major cities. Medicaid eligibility expanded to adults without dependent children in states that adopted Medicaid expansion under the ACA — eligibility is generally up to 138% of the Federal Poverty Level. For uninsured emergencies, every hospital must stabilize regardless of ability to pay under EMTALA, and all nonprofit hospitals are required to offer financial assistance for qualifying patients. This directory includes FQHCs, free clinics, state Medicaid offices, and state ACA marketplaces.
Healthcare in Colorado
Colorado uses 'allocation of parental responsibilities' instead of 'custody' and handles cases in district courts. The Child Support Services division runs enforcement statewide. Denver, Colorado Springs, Aurora, and Fort Collins anchor the major metros. Colorado Legal Services (the statewide LSC program), Rocky Mountain Immigrant Advocacy Network, and numerous county self-help centers support fathers statewide.
More Healthcare in Colorado
Health First Colorado (Medicaid) — Colorado's Medicaid program providing health coverage including doctor visits, hospital care, mental health, and prescriptions to low-income
Connect for Health Colorado (ACA Marketplace) — Colorado's state-based health insurance marketplace where residents compare and enroll in ACA plans, often with tax credits and cost-sharing
Denver Health Community Health Services — Denver's safety-net health system with nine community health centers providing primary care, dental, behavioral health, and specialty servic
Sunrise Community Health (Greeley/Northern CO) — Federally Qualified Health Center serving northern Colorado with primary care, dental, pharmacy, and behavioral health services on a sliding
Salud Family Health (Northern/Western CO) — Federally Qualified Health Center network serving northern and western Colorado with primary care, dental, and behavioral health at 13 locat
Healthcare — Common Questions
I don't have insurance — where do I go for primary care?
A Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC) — every state has them, they charge on sliding-scale based on income, and they cover primary care, dental, mental health, and often pharmacy. Find one at findahealthcenter.hrsa.gov.
Do I qualify for Medicaid as a single dad?
In Medicaid expansion states, any adult with income up to 138% of the Federal Poverty Level qualifies regardless of dependents. In non-expansion states, a custodial parent of a minor may qualify under lower thresholds. Apply at your state's Medicaid agency or through healthcare.gov.
What about an emergency with no insurance?
EMTALA requires every US hospital with an ER to stabilize any emergency regardless of ability to pay. Nonprofit hospitals must offer financial assistance (often free care up to 200% FPL). Never skip a real emergency over cost — ask about charity care when you arrive.
Is there help with prescriptions?
Patient assistance programs from drug manufacturers provide free or low-cost meds for uninsured patients. NeedyMeds and RxAssist list them. GoodRx and SingleCare provide discount pricing for uninsured buyers. FQHCs often include 340B pharmacy discounts on-site.