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Best Indian Doctors in Boston (2026)

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Best Indian Doctors in Boston (2026)

Boston has one of the most educated, tight-knit South Asian communities on the East Coast — and when it comes to healthcare, many Desi families quietly prefer a doctor who just gets it: the ghee in the diet, the joint-family stress, the aunty who refuses to admit her blood pressure is high. Finding an Indian or South Asian physician in Boston is easier than you might think, and this guide makes it even easier.

TL;DR

  • 🏥 Boston's top academic medical centers — MGH, Beth Israel Deaconess, Boston Medical Center, and Boston Children's — are home to dozens of excellent Indian-origin physicians.
  • 🩺 South Asian doctors often bring cultural fluency that makes conversations about diet, family history, and lifestyle genuinely more comfortable.
  • 📍 Most of these physicians practice along the Longwood Medical Area corridor or at MGH on Fruit Street — both easily reachable by the MBTA.
  • 💬 Always call ahead to confirm your insurance and availability; appointment wait times at academic centers can run several weeks.
  • 🌟 This list covers a range of specialties — cardiology, gastroenterology, pediatrics, internal medicine, and more — so you can find the right fit for your whole family.

Why It Matters to Find a Culturally Attuned Doctor

For many South Asians, the doctor's office is a place where things get lost in translation — not linguistically, but culturally. Explaining that you eat rice twice a day, that your family has a deep history of diabetes, or that stress-related illness runs in your lineage can feel exhausting when you're starting from scratch every appointment. A physician who shares your background — or has extensive experience treating South Asian patients — already understands the baseline. That shared context can genuinely improve your care.

Boston is extraordinarily lucky in this regard. The city's concentration of world-class academic hospitals has attracted South Asian physicians across nearly every specialty. Here is a neighborhood-by-neighborhood, specialty-aware look at who is practicing where.


At Massachusetts General Hospital (55 Fruit St, Boston)

MGH is one of the most storied hospitals in the United States, and its South Asian physician community is deep. Several verified Indian-origin doctors practice here across different specialties.

Dr. Darshali Vyas and Dr. Alisha Sharma are both reachable through the main MGH line at 617-726-2000. Dr. Ajit Vyas can be reached directly at 617-643-3726, and Dr. Anoop Prasad at 617-726-2784. Dr. Amita Sharma practices at the same Fruit Street address and can be contacted at 617-724-4254.

Cardiology is particularly well represented: Dr. Pradeep Natarajan is a cardiologist at MGH reachable at 617-726-2677 — an important name for a community that carries elevated cardiovascular risk. Dr. Neil Gupta (617-724-3874) and Dr. Nikhil Gupta (617-726-2000) also practice at the Fruit Street campus, and Dr. Pooja Kumar can be reached at 617-724-4184. Dr. Vikram Kumar is available at 617-726-3030, and Dr. Madhuri Rao at 617-889-8580.

The MGH campus sits right on the Red Line's Charles/MGH stop, making it highly accessible from Cambridge, Somerville, and the South Shore.


In the Longwood Medical Area (Brookline Ave & Harrison Ave)

The Longwood corridor — home to Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Brigham and Women's, and Boston Children's — is arguably the most medically dense square mile in New England. South Asian physicians are well represented here too.

At 330 Brookline Ave (the E/Shapiro Building at Beth Israel Deaconess), Dr. Nikita Shah practices and can be reached at 617-754-9600. Also at 330 Brookline Ave, Dr. Surabhi Agarwal is reachable at 617-667-7000, and Dr. Anupam Desai at 617-667-2100.

Dr. Maitreyi Sharma practices at 133 Brookline Ave and can be contacted at 617-421-5950 — a convenient location if you're coming from Coolidge Corner or the Green Line's D branch.

At 300 Longwood Ave — Boston Children's Hospital — Dr. Sonal Shah is reachable at 617-355-6624 and Dr. Tajinder Singh at 617-355-6793. For Desi parents, having a pediatrician who understands South Asian family dynamics and dietary traditions is a genuine comfort.


At Boston Medical Center (Albany St & Harrison Ave)

Boston Medical Center is the city's safety-net hospital and serves one of the most diverse patient populations in Massachusetts. Its South Asian physicians bring both world-class training and a mission-driven approach to care.

Dr. Avneesh Gupta practices at 840 Harrison Ave and can be reached at 617-638-6610. Dr. Shimul Shah is at 725 Albany Street, Suite 7A (617-638-8430), and Dr. Sonali Desai is at 725 Albany St., Suite 8A (617-638-7460). Dr. Nidhi Lal practices at 850 Harrison Ave and is reachable at 617-414-2080.

BMC is on the Silver Line and easily accessible from Roxbury, Dorchester, and the South End — neighborhoods with growing South Asian populations.


More Practices Across Boston

Not every great South Asian physician practices inside a mega-hospital system. A few worth noting:

Dr. Satish Singh sees patients at 150 S Huntington Ave, Suite GI-111 — a gastroenterology practice reachable at 857-364-4327. Given the prevalence of GI issues in South Asian diets (hello, spicy everything), having a GI specialist with cultural context is genuinely useful.

Dr. Surya Singh practices at 1620 Tremont Street in the Mission Hill neighborhood (617-732-8003), situated near Brigham and Women's and the Longwood area.

Dr. Sameer Gupta is at 243 Charles St in Beacon Hill (617-573-3789), a convenient option if you live or work near downtown Boston or the North End.

Dr. Animesh Shah lists 65 E India Row in the waterfront neighborhood; note that the contact number on file (952-595-1100) may be an out-of-state line, so call ahead to confirm Boston availability.


💡 Desi Insider Tip: When you call to book your first appointment, it is completely okay to ask the scheduler whether the doctor has significant experience treating South Asian patients, or whether they speak Hindi, Gujarati, Punjabi, or Tamil. Many academic medical centers also have language services. Don't be shy — this is your health, and that context genuinely matters for things like explaining a vegetarian diet, family history of early-onset diabetes, or the specific stressors of navigating immigration paperwork while managing a chronic condition.


What to Know Before You Book

A few practical notes before you pick up the phone:

Most of these physicians practice within large academic systems, which means referrals and insurance networks matter. Always confirm that your plan — whether MassHealth, Blue Cross, Tufts Health, Harvard Pilgrim, or a marketplace plan — is accepted before scheduling.

Wait times for new patients at MGH, BIDMC, and other major centers can range from a few weeks to several months for non-urgent appointments. If you need care sooner, ask to be placed on a cancellation list or inquire about urgent-care slots within the same system.

Many of these offices offer MyChart or a similar patient portal for messaging, prescription refills, and telehealth appointments — a huge convenience for working Desi families juggling jobs, kids, and elderly parents.


FAQ

Q: Do I need a referral to see a specialist on this list? A: It depends on your insurance plan. Many HMO plans require a primary care referral before seeing a specialist. PPO plans often allow direct booking. Check your card or call your insurer first.

Q: Are there South Asian doctors in Boston who speak languages other than English? A: Many South Asian physicians are multilingual, but language ability isn't publicly listed in most hospital directories. Call the practice directly and ask — you may be pleasantly surprised.

Q: How do I find a South Asian OB-GYN in Boston specifically? A: This guide covers a broad range of specialties. For OB-GYN, search the BIDMC, BWH, or MGH online physician directories and filter by name or use patient community boards — the Desi.Net community forums are a great place to ask.

Q: Is Boston Medical Center a good option if I'm on MassHealth? A: BMC is the largest safety-net hospital in New England and is a primary MassHealth provider. Several South Asian physicians verified here practice at BMC.

Q: What if I want a female South Asian doctor specifically? A: This list includes Dr. Darshali Vyas, Dr. Alisha Sharma, Dr. Amita Sharma, Dr. Maitreyi Sharma, Dr. Nikita Shah, Dr. Sonal Shah, Dr. Surabhi Agarwal, Dr. Sonali Desai, Dr. Pooja Kumar, Dr. Madhuri Rao, and Dr. Nidhi Lal, among others — so you have strong options across multiple specialties and locations.


The Bottom Line

Boston's South Asian community deserves healthcare that feels as culturally fluent as everything else we've built here — from the Diwali melas in the suburbs to the cricket leagues in Cambridge. The physicians on this list represent a remarkable cross-section of specialties and hospital affiliations, all within a city you can navigate by T. Whether you're looking for a cardiologist who understands South Asian genetic risk, a pediatrician for your kids, or a GI specialist who won't blink at a biryani-heavy food diary, Boston has you covered.

Have a recommendation we missed, or a personal experience with a South Asian doctor in Boston who made a real difference? Share it with the community on Desi.Net — because the best referrals always come from people who actually live here.

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Best Indian Doctors in Boston (2026)