You Won't Find Anything Else Like Checkbook

  • Nonprofit and independent
  • Takes no advertising or referral fees
  • Ratings and reviews by surveyed Consumers' Checkbook and Consumer Reports local subscribers
  • Undercover price comparisons
  • Complaint counts from local consumer agencies and attorney general offices
  • Advice to help you get the best service and value

Subscribe and see 219 San Francisco Bay Area laboratory testing services


Page 1 of 14 results
BusinessDistanceRatingsMost Recent Comment

Mills Peninsula Hospital Laboratories

100 S San Mateo Dr
San Mateo, CA 94401 650-696-4510

Ratings:
?
?%    
?
Their service depends on the time of day and how busy the lab may be. - Mar 26, 2023

See all comments

Kaiser Permanente

1000 Franklin Pkwy
San Mateo, CA 94403 650-358-7105

Ratings:
?
?%    
?
VERY EFFICIENT AND I ALWAYS HAVE A SHORT WAIT FOR BLOOD TESTS. - Feb 15, 2020

See all comments

LabCorp

101 S San Mateo Dr
San Mateo, CA 94401 650-348-5224

Ratings:
?
?%    
?
Great location, they now take reservations, so no long waiting. We were... - May 04, 2019

See all comments

Quest Diagnostics

127 N San Mateo Dr
San Mateo, CA 94401 650-344-8143

Ratings:
?
?%    
?
No raters have left a written comment.

Take charge by selecting the best doctors and other providers and making decisions about your medical care. Here's how.

The most important thing you can do to assure yourself high-quality medical care is to form a strong relationship with a good primary care physician and, at times, together make informed decisions on specialty care.

We advise consumers to select physicians who are “board certified,” and we report on board certification status in our ratings tables. Here’s what board certification means and why it is important.

The feedback we’ve collected from surveying consumers and dentists will help you find a tip-top tooth doc. We found substantial differences in ratings from dentist to dentist.

When first confronted with an illness or injury, you must quickly decide whether the case is life threatening—whether there’s a risk of death or permanent disability if the patient does not receive immediate care (within 30 minutes or less).

The most difficult decisions about what to do come in cases that are “urgent” but not immediately threatening to life or the patient’s future ability to function.

Many cases are not even urgent, of course. These cases could await a visit to an urgent care clinic or a family doctor during regular hours.