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Side-by-Side Comparison

Doximity vs Vitals: Side-by-Side Comparison

Doximity is a physician professional network; Vitals is a consumer doctor-rating site. They serve entirely different audiences and purposes, though both index provider profiles. The comparison matters most for teams deciding which platform's data to rely on for provider identity or quality signal.

Dimension by dimension

Doximity vs Vitals, across 8 dimensions

DimensionDoximityVitals
Data typePhysician professional network — credentials, peer connections, NPI cross-referenceConsumer ratings — patient reviews, provider self-submitted profiles
Coverage~80% of U.S. physicians, 2M+ total clinicians (publicly disclosed)~1 million+ provider profiles
Refresh cadenceSelf-maintained by clinicians— (not publicly disclosed)
License / CostFree for clinicians; pharma/industry — pricing not publicFree for patients; provider plans — pricing not public
API accessPartner EHR integrations; not a public open APINo public API
Source provenanceNPI cross-reference for identity; self-attested credentialsConsumer-submitted reviews; field-level provenance not documented
Primary use caseClinician networking, referrals, pharma outreachPatient discovery, review reading
PricingFree for clinicians; industry licensing — pricing not publicFree for patients; provider plans — pricing not public

Cells marked “—” indicate values not publicly documented by the respective platform. No data has been estimated or fabricated.

Honest fit

Which platform fits your team

When to use Doximity

Use Doximity when reaching clinicians directly — for referral workflows, pharma outreach, or professional credential lookups. Doximity's NPI cross-reference makes it useful for identity resolution in professional contexts.

https://www.doximity.com →

When to use Vitals

Use Vitals for consumer-facing applications that need patient review sentiment on a provider. It is a smaller platform than Healthgrades but covers the same review-aggregation use case.

https://www.vitals.com →

FAQ

Common questions

Is Doximity or Vitals more useful for provider identity data?
Doximity cross-references clinician profiles with NPI, making it more reliable for identity than Vitals, which relies on self-submitted profiles. For the authoritative federal identity record, CMS NPPES is the primary source — publicly downloadable, weekly-refreshed, and free.
Can data from Doximity or Vitals be used in AI pipelines?
Neither platform publishes a public open API or bulk data export. For AI and data pipelines that need provenance-grade provider records, federal sources (NPPES, PECOS, OIG LEIE) are the appropriate inputs — they are open, citable, and carry no redistribution restrictions.
Do Doximity or Vitals publish their data methodology?
Neither platform publishes a formal, versioned methodology document for how provider data is collected, resolved, or scored. Federal sources like CMS NPPES publish their data dictionaries and collection methodology publicly, which allows independent confirmation and reproduction.
Which platform covers more providers?
Doximity reports coverage of approximately 80% of U.S. physicians and 2M+ total clinicians across professions. Vitals is smaller in reported coverage. CMS NPPES covers all 8M+ active NPI holders — the broadest federal provider universe available.

Last updated 2026-05-31. See all comparisons at /compare →

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The substrate, by the numbers

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