Patient base
Trade-area population and household counts test the size of the addressable patient base without treating demographic composition as destiny.
Clinic location due diligence
Vantlens produces source-cited clinic location reports for US and Canadian commercial addresses. A $149 Location Reportchecks patient-base demographics, site conditions, and the trade area's cited concerns, with LODES daytime jobs for US sites and the Canadian gap disclosed.
Before a 5-year personal guarantee, the unresolved questions are practical: referral proximity, parking and accessibility, insured-demographic fit, and whether demand remains after daytime workers leave. The report separates what public evidence can score from what must be checked at the unit.
Every number cited.
Read the methodology firstClinic profile
Trade-area population and household counts test the size of the addressable patient base without treating demographic composition as destiny.
For US sites, LODES workplace jobs are set beside nearby population and households. Canadian reports mark daytime jobs unavailable because no public source meets the licensing bar.
Median age and nearby schools provide age and family-density context for the care model. They do not estimate insurance coverage or payer mix.
Ambient noise and the reported-safety index flag conditions that can affect patient comfort. Source limits remain printed beside the figures.
Census and StatCan demographics · LEHD LODES daytime jobs · source and vintage cited per figure
On-site checks
Referral routes, accessible parking and entrances, signage, lease restrictions, and payer mix require local records or a physical inspection. The report keeps those items visible as questions for the landlord, broker, and clinical team instead of turning missing evidence into a favourable score.
Location Report
Commission the full clinic document for $149, with the concern beside the favourable signal and every figure tied to a source vintage.
Questions
It scores trade-area population and households, median age, US daytime jobs, ambient noise, a reported-safety index, and nearby schools as a family-density proxy. Canadian reports mark daytime jobs unavailable because no public source meets the licensing bar.
No. Public datasets cannot verify a referral agreement, an accessible route through the unit, or the parking spaces available at a particular hour. The report documents nearby demand and access context, then lists the on-site questions that still need an answer.
It is $149 as a one-time purchase. The report does not project clinic revenue; it shows break-even conditions from the rent, visit volume, and margin assumptions you provide.