Confirm the visit type
Ask whether the slot is for a new patient, follow-up, procedure consult, urgent concern, telehealth visit, or a specific location. The wrong slot can waste weeks.
New Jersey appointment path
A urology appointment is not just a calendar slot. The useful question is which visit type fits your concern, which records need to arrive before the visit, and whether the office can handle the issue safely at that location.
Confirm with the practice
FindAUrologist does not guarantee availability, rank doctors, or replace a practice triage process. Use this page to choose the right route, then confirm visit type, urgency, insurance, referrals, records, and clinical fit directly with the office.
Use this if the concern is stable and the key question is which office may see new patients.
Open pathUse this if location, online scheduling, phone scheduling, and city routing are the main questions.
Open pathUse this if the main question is copay, deductible, self-pay rate, facility fee, or same-day testing cost.
Open pathUse this if symptoms feel urgent enough that waiting for an ordinary slot may be the wrong move.
Open pathUse this if you are comparing fit, credentials, subspecialty focus, and public records before booking.
Open pathBrowse public professional profiles and practice-location links.
Open pathSearch public practice-location records by name, city, ZIP, address, or phone.
Open pathStart from BPH, kidney stones, prostate cancer and PSA, ED, or bladder concerns.
Open pathAppointment pages usually push patients toward the fastest visible slot. A safer search asks what the visit is supposed to accomplish first.
| Route | Best fit | Ask before booking |
|---|---|---|
| Routine new-patient appointment | Stable urinary symptoms, BPH questions, elevated PSA follow-up, vasectomy consults, erectile dysfunction, recurrent UTI questions, and other non-emergency urology concerns. | Is this a new-patient slot for my concern, and what records should I send before the visit? |
| Same-day or urgent office access | Symptoms that feel too pressing for the next routine appointment but may still be office-appropriate after the practice confirms it. | Can your office safely evaluate this today, or should I use urgent care or an emergency department? |
| Procedure or condition consult | BPH procedure decisions, prostate biopsy or MRI follow-up, kidney stone treatment, vasectomy, cystoscopy, prostate cancer, or recurrent complex symptoms. | Which clinician handles this specific problem, and does the appointment need labs, imaging, referral notes, or prior records first? |
| Second opinion | A major surgery decision, cancer diagnosis, repeated symptoms without clarity, conflicting recommendations, or a procedure recommendation you want explained before moving forward. | What records do you need to review before the visit so the appointment can be useful? |
| Telehealth triage or phone-first routing | Questions about whether a urologist is the right next step, whether records are enough for a useful visit, or which office location should handle the concern. | Is telehealth appropriate for this concern, or does this need an in-person exam, urine testing, imaging, or procedure planning? |
Ask whether the slot is for a new patient, follow-up, procedure consult, urgent concern, telehealth visit, or a specific location. The wrong slot can waste weeks.
A general urologist may be the right first stop, but prostate cancer, complex stones, reconstruction, female pelvic medicine, infertility, or pediatric concerns may need a focused specialist.
Confirm whether your plan requires a primary-care referral, prior authorization, a specific office location, or an in-network facility before you book.
PSA history, urine culture results, imaging reports, pathology reports, operative notes, medication lists, catheter paperwork, and referral notes can make the first visit more productive.
Inability to urinate, sudden severe testicular pain, fever with flank pain, heavy bleeding, major trauma, severe uncontrolled pain, or rapidly worsening symptoms should not wait for routine scheduling.
Before ending the call, ask whether the first visit is likely to include testing, a procedure discussion, a medication review, record collection, or a referral to another setting.
These are public practice-location records, not appointment availability claims. Open a listing for public office details, then call the practice to confirm the right visit type and next step.
Perth Amboy, NJ 08861
View public office detailsEdison, NJ 08837
View public office detailsEdison, NJ 08820
View public office detailsPrinceton, NJ 08540
View public office detailsClifton, NJ 07013
View public office detailsMorristown, NJ 07960
View public office detailsVoorhees, NJ 08043
View public office detailsToms River, NJ 08755
View public office detailsAppointment route
Use the phone or appointment link to confirm the right clinician, location, records, referrals, insurance, and urgency. Do not send private medical details through public forms.