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Can Urgent Care Diagnose a Kidney Infection?

March 3, 2026


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TL;DR

• Yes, most urgent care centers can diagnose a kidney infection using a urinalysis, urine culture, and a physical exam to assess your symptoms.

• Urgent care is a good option for mild to moderate kidney infections, but if you have a high fever, severe vomiting, signs of dehydration, or are pregnant, go to emergency room instead.

• Treatment usually starts with oral antibiotics for 7 to 14 days, and urgent care providers can prescribe these on spot and refer you for follow-up if needed.

What Happens When You Go to Urgent Care for Kidney Symptoms?

If you walk into an urgent care clinic with symptoms like back or side pain, fever, painful urination, and cloudy or foul-smelling urine, provider will start by asking about your symptoms and medical history. They will want to know how long you have been feeling this way, whether you have had urinary tract infections before, and whether you are taking any medications.

The next step is a urinalysis. This is a quick in-office test where you provide a urine sample, and provider checks it for white blood cells, red blood cells, nitrites, and bacteria. These findings can indicate an infection in urinary tract. Most urgent care locations can run a urinalysis on site and get results within minutes.

If urinalysis suggests an infection, provider will often send same sample for a urine culture. This test takes one to three days to come back, but it identifies exact type of bacteria causing infection and which antibiotics will work best against it. If you have ever been curious about what those lab results actually mean, this guide on how to read a urine culture report breaks it down in plain language.

The provider may also do a basic physical exam, checking for tenderness in your lower back or sides (called costovertebral angle tenderness), which is a classic sign that infection has reached your kidneys. In some cases, they may order blood work to check your white blood cell count and kidney function, though not all urgent care locations have full lab capabilities.

People also ask

A urinalysis is highly effective for detecting signs of inflammation and bacteria in the urinary tract. While it flags the presence of an infection quickly, it does not always confirm the infection has reached the kidneys without a physical exam.

Blood tests are not required for every patient and are usually reserved for cases where the doctor suspects the infection is affecting your general systemic health. They are primarily used to check your white blood cell count and how well your kidneys are functioning.

How Do Doctors Tell Difference Between a UTI and a Kidney Infection?

A kidney infection (pyelonephritis) is actually a type of UTI, but it is more serious because infection has moved beyond bladder and into one or both kidneys. The symptoms overlap, but there are key differences that help providers distinguish between two.

A lower UTI (bladder infection) typically causes burning during urination, a frequent urge to pee, and cloudy or strong-smelling urine. You might feel uncomfortable, but you generally do not feel sick overall.

A kidney infection adds systemic symptoms on top of those. Fever (often 101°F or higher), chills, nausea, vomiting, and pain in back or side (flank pain) are hallmarks. According to National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, kidney infections can also cause bloody or cloudy urine and a general feeling of being unwell. If a UTI goes untreated, bacteria can travel up ureters (tubes connecting bladder to kidneys) and establish an infection in kidney tissue itself.

The combination of a positive urinalysis plus systemic symptoms like fever and flank pain is usually enough for an urgent care provider to diagnose a kidney infection and start treatment.

People also ask

Yes, bacteria from an untreated bladder infection can travel up the ureters and settle into the kidney tissue. This transition often causes the symptoms to shift from localized burning to systemic issues like fever and flank pain.

Flank pain or tenderness in the lower back is a classic symptom of a kidney infection, but it can also be caused by muscle strain or other issues. A provider distinguishes this by checking for specific tenderness in the area where your kidneys are located.

What Treatment Will Urgent Care Prescribe?

For mild to moderate kidney infections, urgent care providers will prescribe oral antibiotics. The most commonly used antibiotics for kidney infections include ciprofloxacin, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, and sometimes cephalosporins like cephalexin. The course typically lasts 7 to 14 days, depending on severity.

Your provider will likely start you on antibiotics right away based on urinalysis results, even before urine culture comes back. Once culture results are available (usually within a few days), your provider or a follow-up doctor may adjust antibiotic if bacteria turns out to be resistant to first choice.

You will also be advised to drink plenty of fluids, rest, and take over-the-counter pain relievers like acetaminophen to manage fever and discomfort. Ibuprofen may be used for pain, but check with your provider first since it can sometimes affect kidney function.

If you have been prescribed a UTI antibiotic before and want to understand more about dosing, this article on nitrofurantoin dosage for UTI covers a common antibiotic used for lower UTIs, though keep in mind that nitrofurantoin is typically not used for kidney infections because it does not reach adequate levels in kidney tissue.

When Should You Skip Urgent Care and Go to ER?

Urgent care can handle a lot, but there are situations where a kidney infection needs emergency-level care. You should go to emergency room if you experience any of following.

A fever above 103°F or one that does not respond to acetaminophen or ibuprofen warrants ER evaluation. High fevers with a kidney infection can indicate bacteria are entering bloodstream (a condition called sepsis), which requires IV antibiotics and close monitoring.

Severe nausea and vomiting that prevent you from keeping food or fluids down are another reason to go to ER. If you cannot stay hydrated, you may need IV fluids. And if you cannot swallow or keep down oral antibiotics, you will need IV antibiotics to treat infection.

Pregnant women with suspected kidney infections should go directly to ER. Kidney infections during pregnancy carry a higher risk of complications, including preterm labor, and typically require IV antibiotics and hospital monitoring.

People with diabetes, weakened immune systems, or a single functioning kidney should also seek ER care. These conditions increase risk of infection progressing quickly or causing lasting kidney damage.

If your symptoms do not improve within 48 to 72 hours of starting antibiotics prescribed by urgent care, go back to urgent care or head to ER. Persistent symptoms may mean bacteria is resistant to antibiotic you were given, or there may be a structural issue like a kidney stone or abscess blocking drainage and trapping infection.

People also ask

A fever of 103°F or higher is generally considered a red flag that requires immediate emergency room evaluation. High fevers with these infections can be a sign of sepsis, which is a dangerous systemic response that needs hospital-grade treatment.

Pregnancy causes physiological changes in the urinary tract that make it easier for bacteria to reach the kidneys. Infections during this time also carry a higher risk of complications for both the mother and the developing fetus.

Can Urgent Care Do Imaging for Kidney Infections?

Most standard urgent care centers do not have CT scanners or ultrasound machines on site. This means that if your provider suspects a complication like a kidney abscess, an obstructing kidney stone, or a structural abnormality, they will refer you to a hospital or imaging center.

Some larger urgent care facilities and freestanding emergency rooms do have imaging capabilities, so this varies by location. If your provider thinks imaging is needed, they will help you figure out best next step.

For straightforward kidney infections where diagnosis is clear from urinalysis and physical exam, imaging is not usually necessary. It becomes important when symptoms are severe, when infection does not respond to antibiotics, or when there is concern about an underlying cause.

Conclusion

Urgent care can absolutely diagnose a kidney infection. With a urinalysis, urine culture, and physical exam, most providers can identify infection and start you on antibiotics same day. For mild to moderate cases, urgent care is a convenient and effective option. But if your symptoms are severe, if you are pregnant, or if you have underlying health conditions that raise stakes, emergency room is safer choice. Either way, do not wait on kidney infection symptoms. The earlier you get treated, lower your risk of complications.

Medical Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider for diagnosis and treatment decisions. If you are experiencing a medical emergency, call 911 or go to the nearest emergency room immediately.

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