Live Map

EMS Stations in United States

Interactive map of EMS and ambulance stations in United States. Search by address or GPS — get directions to any station. Not for emergencies.

🚨 Emergency in United States: call 911
Stations found
10 mi
Search radius
OSM
Data source
Free
No login needed

EMS coverage in United States

🚨 Emergency number: 911 — NOT a dispatch tool
🏥 EMS model: County/municipal 911 EMS, private transport, fire-based ALS

The U.S. has no single national EMS model — each state, and often each county, establishes its own system. Approximately 21,000 EMS agencies operate nationwide, ranging from large urban third-service systems to rural volunteer first responder groups. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) provides federal EMS guidance, but authority rests with states and localities. OpenStreetMap coverage of ambulance stations is strongest in well-mapped metro areas.

Use Search area or type an address above to find mapped ambulance stations. OSM coverage varies by region — increase the radius in areas with sparse results.


How to use the EMS Locator

Enter an address or click My location to center the map. Choose a radius — 10 miles works for urban areas, 30–50 miles for rural. Click Search area. EMS stations appear as blue markers and as a nearest-first list in the sidebar. Click any result to fly the map to that station, or tap Directions to open Google Maps navigation directly to it.

Important: OpenStreetMap is community-maintained. Not all EMS stations are mapped — rural areas in particular may have incomplete data. Verify station locations with official agency sources for operational planning. This tool does not contact dispatch and should never be used to request emergency help.


Frequently asked questions

Click 'My location' to center the map on your GPS position, choose a search radius, and click 'Search area'. EMS stations appear as markers on the map and sorted nearest-first in the sidebar. You can also type any address to jump to a different location.

All locations come from OpenStreetMap (OSM) via the Overpass API. The query targets amenity=ambulance_station and emergency=ambulance_station tags. Coverage depends on community mapping activity in each area.

This is a planning and familiarization aid, not a dispatch system. Always verify station location, current staffing, and service availability through your agency or official EMS directories before relying on this data for operational decisions.

Sparse results usually mean the area hasn't been fully mapped in OpenStreetMap, not that no stations exist. Try increasing the radius. You can contribute missing stations at openstreetmap.org.

In United States, call 911 for emergencies. This tool does not contact dispatch and should never be used to request emergency help.

Yes, if they are mapped in OpenStreetMap with an ambulance-station tag. Private, hospital-based, and volunteer EMS operations are all included when the appropriate OSM tags are present.

Call 911 for medical emergencies in United States. This tool does not contact emergency services — always call directly in an emergency.

United States uses the following EMS model: County/municipal 911 EMS, private transport, fire-based ALS. Station coverage and OSM mapping density vary by region.

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