🏥 Official CMS Medicare Data 2025

Find the Safest Hospital
Near You

Compare 5,426 U.S. hospitals using official government safety data — mortality, infections, patient experience, and more.

Chicago, ILHouston, TXLos Angeles, CANew York, NYPhoenix, AZ
📊 5,426 Hospitals Rated
🏙 3,820 Cities
🗺 50 States
🏛 Source: CMS Medicare 2025

Top 10 Safest Hospitals in the USA

Ranked by composite Safety Score using official CMS Medicare 2025 data across 6 quality measures.

1
Mayo Clinic Hospital Rochester
📍 Rochester, MN  ·  🚨 ER
8.8
A
2
Mayo Clinic Hospital
📍 Phoenix, AZ  ·  🚨 ER
8.2
B
3
Houston Methodist Hospital
📍 Houston, TX  ·  🚨 ER
8.1
B
4
St Lukes Hospital Bethlehem
📍 Bethlehem, PA  ·  🚨 ER
8.0
B
5
Peninsula Medical Center
📍 Burlingame, CA  ·  🚨 ER
8.0
B
6
Mayo Clinic
📍 Jacksonville, FL  ·  🚨 ER
8.0
B
7
Intermountain Health Utah Valley Hospital
📍 Provo, UT  ·  🚨 ER
8.0
B
8
Virginia Mason Medical Center
📍 Seattle, WA  ·  🚨 ER
7.9
B
9
Lancaster General Hospital
📍 Lancaster, PA  ·  🚨 ER
7.9
B
10
Northwestern Memorial Hospital
📍 Chicago, IL  ·  🚨 ER
7.9
B

ℹ️ Safety Score calculated from CMS mortality, safety, readmissions, infections, complications, and patient experience data. How we calculate →

Why Hospital Safety Scores Matter to Every American

After more than a decade working in acute care hospital settings across the United States, one thing has become abundantly clear: most Americans walk into a hospital with virtually no information about how that facility actually performs on the metrics that matter most. They choose based on proximity, insurance networks, or a friend's recommendation. Rarely do they ask the questions that could genuinely affect their outcomes: What is this hospital's surgical infection rate? How does it perform on mortality measures compared to the national benchmark? Does it have 24-hour intensivist coverage in the ICU?

SafeHospitals USA exists to change that. We collect and analyze official data directly from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) — the federal agency that regulates every Medicare-certified hospital in the country — and translate six distinct quality measures into a single, clear Safety Score. Our mission is simple: give every American the information they need before they or a loved one requires hospital care.

The Six Measures Behind Every Safety Score

Our composite Safety Score (0–10) draws from six official CMS quality domains, each weighted by its clinical significance:

  • Mortality Performance (40%): How often patients survive expected-mortality conditions including heart failure, pneumonia, and hip fracture. A hospital that consistently outperforms the national average here demonstrates the kind of clinical excellence that is difficult to fake.
  • Patient Safety (15%): Rates of serious complications including post-surgical injuries, hospital-acquired blood clots, and sepsis developing after elective procedures — all conditions that should not happen with proper protocols.
  • 30-Day Readmission Rate (10%): The percentage of patients readmitted within 30 days of discharge. A high readmission rate often signals problems with care quality, discharge planning, or both.
  • Hospital-Acquired Infections (5%): Rates of preventable infections including MRSA, C. difficile, catheter-associated UTIs, and central line bloodstream infections. These infections are largely preventable — variation across hospitals reflects real differences in hygiene culture and protocols.
  • Complication Rates (10%): Rates of adverse events during hospitalization including falls, pressure injuries, and medication-related complications.
  • Patient Experience (20%): HCAHPS survey scores measuring staff communication quality, responsiveness, pain management, and care coordination. Poor patient experience often correlates with systemic safety problems.

How to Use This Data Wisely

Hospital safety scores are powerful tools — but they work best as a starting point, not a final verdict. A hospital with an "A" grade excels across most safety measures on average. But a facility with a lower aggregate score may still be the best regional option for a specific specialty, or for a condition where procedure volume and surgical team expertise matter more than aggregate metrics.

Our recommendation: use safety scores to narrow your options to the top two or three facilities in your area, then ask your primary care physician for procedure-specific guidance. For non-emergency planned procedures, researching hospital safety before admission is one of the highest-impact decisions you can make for your health outcomes.

💡 Pro Tip from Our Clinical Team:

Before any planned hospital admission, prepare three specific questions for your care team: (1) How many times per year does this hospital perform my procedure? (2) What is this facility's infection rate for this procedure type? (3) Will a board-certified specialist be directly overseeing my care? A hospital that welcomes these questions — and answers them directly — is one with a genuine commitment to patient safety.

What Is Hospital Safety?Know Your Patient Rights

Find Hospitals by State

Select your state to browse all hospitals with official safety scores, patient ratings, and contact information.

Texas465California378Florida222Ohio196Illinois194New York190Pennsylvania188Michigan148North Carolina120Georgia148Tennessee122Missouri121Indiana150Virginia95Wisconsin142Kentucky102Louisiana161Alabama102Mississippi106Arkansas90
Browse All 5,426 Hospitals →

Know Your Rights Before Entering Any U.S. Hospital

Federal law protects every patient under HIPAA, EMTALA, and the Patient Self-Determination Act — but only if you know how to use them.

Read: Your Patient Rights in the USA →