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Scribeable vs Doximity Scribe: A factual comparison, sourced to public sites and announcements.

Doximity Scribe is genuinely free for verified U.S. clinicians. That makes it a reasonable place to start if you need help drafting notes. This comparison looks at what its public page states, what it does not state, and what Scribeable adds on its paid tiers.

120+ clinicians · 2,600+ notes generated — real counters, no composites (scribeable.ai/transparency)

Why Physicians Switch from Doximity Scribe

Coding details such as ICD-10, HCC, and E&M are not stated on doximity.com as of Jul 2026

Multi-patient rounding is not stated on doximity.com as of Jul 2026

Documents beyond the note, including referral letters and AVS, are not stated on doximity.com as of Jul 2026

Free Is a Real Answer

Doximity Scribe is free for verified U.S. physicians, NPs, PAs, and medical students. If you need a straightforward draft and already have a Doximity account, that is a sensible place to begin. Scribeable also has a free tier, but it is capped at 5 notes each month after the trial.

When the Note Has More Work to Do

A note can carry more than the visit summary. Scribeable Pro includes ICD-10, HCC V28, and E&M support, plus MIPS measures and 236 code-scored calculators. These coding and quality details are not stated on Doximity Scribe's public page as of Jul 2026.

Clinic Does Not Stop at the Note

Some visits end with a referral letter, an AVS, a work note, or orders to review. Scribeable Pro includes 35+ document types and an orders review queue. It also has Rounding Mode for separating a continuous recording into notes for individual patients. These document and rounding features are not stated on Doximity Scribe's public page as of Jul 2026.

Note Quality

Same Patient. Same Encounter. Different AI.

See why physicians say Scribeable notes are “actually usable” — with integrated risk scores, billing codes, and clinical reasoning that typical AI scribes simply don’t generate.

Emergency Medicine
62-year-old male presenting with substernal chest pressure, diaphoresis, and exertional dyspnea
Typical AI Scribe

HPI

62 y/o male presents with chest pain for 2 hours. Substernal, pressure-like, radiating to left arm. Associated with diaphoresis and shortness of breath. Pain started while climbing stairs. Patient has history of HTN, DM2, and hyperlipidemia. Takes lisinopril, metformin, and atorvastatin. Denies recent illness or trauma.

Assessment & Plan

1.Chest pain — likely ACS vs GERD
Troponin, BMP, CBC
12-lead EKG
Chest X-ray
ASA 325mg PO
Nitroglycerin 0.4mg SL PRN
Cardiology consult if troponin elevated
2.HTN — continue home medications
3.DM2 — hold metformin, monitor glucose
Not included
—No risk stratification score
—No dangerous diagnosis exclusion
—No E&M level optimization
—No differential reasoning documented
Scribeable
AI-Enhanced

HPI

62 y/o male presents with 2 hours of substernal chest pressure, rated 8/10, radiating to left arm and jaw. Onset during exertion (climbing stairs). Associated with diaphoresis and exertional dyspnea. Pressure-like quality, unrelieved by rest. No pleuritic component, no positional variation, no reproducibility with palpation. Risk factors: HTN (10 years), DM2 (8 years), hyperlipidemia, 30-pack-year smoking history (quit 5 years ago), family history of MI (father at age 58). Current medications: lisinopril 20mg daily, metformin 1000mg BID, atorvastatin 40mg daily. Denies cocaine use, recent immobilization, or prior VTE.

Structured Risk Factors

Assessment & Plan

1.Acute Chest Pain — High-risk presentation
HEART Score: 7 (High Risk)
History: moderately suspicious (2), EKG: non-specific ST changes (1), Age: >65 (2), Risk factors: ≥3 (2), Troponin: pending initial (0)
Risk stratification: >12% 6-week MACE event rate → full ACS workup
Serial troponins q3h, 12-lead EKG (initial + repeat at 60 min)
ASA 325mg PO administered, heparin drip per ACS protocol
Cardiology consulted for probable cath lab activation
Dangerous Diagnosis Exclusion
STEMI: No ST elevation on initial EKG — serial monitoring
Aortic dissection: No tearing quality, no pulse differential, no mediastinal widening on CXR
PE: Low pretest probability (Wells PE: 1.5) — no immobilization, no prior VTE, no hemoptysis
2.Hypertension — BP 168/94 on arrival, improved to 142/88 post-NTG
Continue home lisinopril, recheck prior to disposition
3.DM2 — Glucose 186 on arrival
Hold metformin (contrast exposure risk), sliding scale insulin PRN
HEART Score: 7 (High Risk)Wells PE: 1.5 (Low Risk)Dangerous Dx ExclusionE&M: 99285 — MDM High
Scribeable
AI-Enhanced

HPI

62 y/o male presents with 2 hours of substernal chest pressure, rated 8/10, radiating to left arm and jaw. Onset during exertion (climbing stairs). Associated with diaphoresis and exertional dyspnea. Pressure-like quality, unrelieved by rest. No pleuritic component, no positional variation, no reproducibility with palpation. Risk factors: HTN (10 years), DM2 (8 years), hyperlipidemia, 30-pack-year smoking history (quit 5 years ago), family history of MI (father at age 58). Current medications: lisinopril 20mg daily, metformin 1000mg BID, atorvastatin 40mg daily. Denies cocaine use, recent immobilization, or prior VTE.

Structured Risk Factors

Assessment & Plan

1.Acute Chest Pain — High-risk presentation
HEART Score: 7 (High Risk)
History: moderately suspicious (2), EKG: non-specific ST changes (1), Age: >65 (2), Risk factors: ≥3 (2), Troponin: pending initial (0)
Risk stratification: >12% 6-week MACE event rate → full ACS workup
Serial troponins q3h, 12-lead EKG (initial + repeat at 60 min)
ASA 325mg PO administered, heparin drip per ACS protocol
Cardiology consulted for probable cath lab activation
Dangerous Diagnosis Exclusion
STEMI: No ST elevation on initial EKG — serial monitoring
Aortic dissection: No tearing quality, no pulse differential, no mediastinal widening on CXR
PE: Low pretest probability (Wells PE: 1.5) — no immobilization, no prior VTE, no hemoptysis
2.Hypertension — BP 168/94 on arrival, improved to 142/88 post-NTG
Continue home lisinopril, recheck prior to disposition
3.DM2 — Glucose 186 on arrival
Hold metformin (contrast exposure risk), sliding scale insulin PRN
HEART Score: 7 (High Risk)Wells PE: 1.5 (Low Risk)Dangerous Dx ExclusionE&M: 99285 — MDM High
2Risk Scores Computed
3Dangerous Dx Excluded
99285E&M Level Captured

*Note examples are illustrative representations based on common AI documentation patterns. “Typical AI Scribe” represents composite characteristics of standard tools and does not depict any specific product. Patient scenarios are entirely fictional. Clinical notes should always be reviewed by a licensed provider.

AI Medical Scribe Note Quality Comparison

Scribeable produces clinically enriched notes with integrated risk calculators (HEART Score, CHA₂DS₂-VASc, Wells PE, PHQ-9, Caprini VTE), automated billing code optimization (E&M levels, HCC/RAF capture, CPT codes), dangerous diagnosis exclusion documentation, evidence-based prescribing citations, CMS compliance for operative reports, HEDIS care gap tracking, and MIPS quality measure documentation. Typical AI scribes produce basic notes without these advanced clinical features.

ED Chest Pain: 62-year-old male presenting with substernal chest pressure, diaphoresis, and exertional dyspnea

HPI: 62 y/o male presents with 2 hours of substernal chest pressure, rated 8/10, radiating to left arm and jaw. Onset during exertion (climbing stairs). Associated with diaphoresis and exertional dyspnea. Pressure-like quality, unrelieved by rest. No pleuritic component, no positional variation, no reproducibility with palpation. Risk factors: HTN (10 years), DM2 (8 years), hyperlipidemia, 30-pack-year smoking history (quit 5 years ago), family history of MI (father at age 58). Current medications: lisinopril 20mg daily, metformin 1000mg BID, atorvastatin 40mg daily. Denies cocaine use, recent immobilization, or prior VTE.

Assessment & Plan: 1. Acute Chest Pain — High-risk presentation HEART Score: 7 (High Risk) - History: moderately suspicious (2), EKG: non-specific ST changes (1), Age: >65 (2), Risk factors: ≥3 (2), Troponin: pending initial (0) - Risk stratification: >12% 6-week MACE event rate → full ACS workup - Serial troponins q3h, 12-lead EKG (initial + repeat at 60 min) - ASA 325mg PO administered, heparin drip per ACS protocol - Cardiology consulted for probable cath lab activation Dangerous Diagnosis Exclusion: - STEMI: No ST elevation on initial EKG — serial monitoring - Aortic dissection: No tearing quality, no pulse differential, no mediastinal widening on CXR - PE: Low pretest probability (Wells PE: 1.5) — no immobilization, no prior VTE, no hemoptysis 2. Hypertension — BP 168/94 on arrival, improved to 142/88 post-NTG - Continue home lisinopril, recheck prior to disposition 3. DM2 — Glucose 186 on arrival - Hold metformin (contrast exposure risk), sliding scale insulin PRN

Cardiology Consult: 71-year-old female with new-onset atrial fibrillation and decompensated heart failure

HPI: 71 y/o female with known HFrEF (EF 35% on TTE 6 months ago), HTN, DM2, and CKD Stage 3a (baseline Cr 1.4), consulted for new-onset atrial fibrillation with RVR. Progressive exertional dyspnea (NYHA II → IV over 2 weeks), 3-pillow orthopnea (new), PND, and 4+ pitting edema to knees bilaterally. Weight gain of 8 lbs over 2 weeks. Triggers explored: dietary indiscretion (holiday meals), medication non-adherence (ran out of furosemide 10 days ago). No prior AF history, no palpitations previously. Denies chest pain, syncope, or presyncope.

Assessment & Plan: Reason for Consult: New-onset atrial fibrillation with RVR in setting of acute decompensated HFrEF. Requesting Service: Internal Medicine (Dr. Patel) 1. New-onset Atrial Fibrillation with RVR CHA₂DS₂-VASc Score: 5 (Female sex, age ≥75, HTN, DM, HF) - Stroke risk: 6.7%/year → strong anticoagulation indication - Rate control: avoid diltiazem (negative inotropy in HFrEF) → amiodarone 150mg IV bolus then 1mg/min × 6h - Anticoagulation: apixaban 5mg BID (preferred over warfarin given age + fall risk) - TEE prior to any cardioversion attempt if AF duration uncertain - HAS-BLED: 2 (HTN, age) — acceptable bleeding risk 2. Acute Decompensated Heart Failure (ADHF) NYHA Functional Class: IV (dyspnea at rest) - IV furosemide 80mg BID (2.5× home oral dose), net negative 1-1.5L/day - Carvedilol held (acute decompensation), restart when euvolemic - Add sacubitril/valsartan when stable (PARADIGM-HF indication: EF ≤40% on ACEi) - BNP trend: 1,840 → monitor for response to diuresis 3. CKD Stage 3a — Cr 1.4 (baseline), monitor with aggressive diuresis - KDIGO risk: moderate — monitor Cr/K daily with diuresis

Operative Note: Right total knee arthroplasty in 68-year-old male with severe tricompartmental osteoarthritis

Operative Note: Preoperative Diagnosis: Right knee severe tricompartmental osteoarthritis (Kellgren-Lawrence Grade IV) Postoperative Diagnosis: Same Procedure: Right total knee arthroplasty Surgeon: Dr. James Morrison (attending — present and scrubbed for entire case) Assistant: Dr. Chen (PGY-4) Anesthesia: Spinal with sedation (Dr. Rivera) Implants: Smith & Nephew Legion CR, Size 5 femoral / Size 4 tibial / 10mm poly insert EBL: 150 mL Tourniquet Time: 62 minutes (pneumatic, 275 mmHg) Specimens: Femoral and tibial bone cuts — to pathology Complications: None Findings: Severe tricompartmental degenerative changes with exposed subchondral bone medially, grade III chondromalacia laterally, intact PCL

Post-Operative Plan: 1. Weight Bearing: WBAT right LE with front-wheeled walker 2. DVT Prophylaxis: Enoxaparin 40mg SQ daily × 14 days + mechanical (SCDs while inpatient) 3. Pain: Multimodal — scheduled acetaminophen 1g Q6h, meloxicam 15mg daily, tramadol 50mg Q6h PRN (max 14 days) 4. Antibiotics: Ancef 2g IV × 24h post-op 5. PT: Initiate POD0 PM — CPM machine, active/passive ROM, gait training 6. Follow-up: 2 weeks (staple removal + wound check), 6 weeks (X-ray + ROM assessment) 7. VTE Risk: Caprini Score 7 (High Risk) — extended pharmacologic prophylaxis indicated

Primary Care: 55-year-old female Medicare Advantage patient with DM2, HTN, depression, and overdue preventive care

HPI: 55 y/o female Medicare Advantage patient presenting for chronic disease management follow-up. Last visit 3 months ago. Diabetes (DM2, 8 years): A1c 8.2% (up from 7.6%), reports adherence but dietary indiscretion during holidays. Home glucose logs show fasting 140-180 range. No hypoglycemic episodes. Denies polyuria, polydipsia, vision changes, or foot numbness. Last diabetic eye exam: 14 months ago (overdue). Last podiatry visit: never. Hypertension (12 years): Home BP readings averaging 135-145/85-90. Taking lisinopril 20mg daily consistently. Depression (MDD, recurrent): PHQ-9 score today: 14 (moderately severe). Persistent low mood, anhedonia, poor sleep (initial insomnia), decreased concentration. On sertraline 50mg × 6 months with partial response. Denies SI/HI, denies alcohol or substance use. Columbia Suicide Severity: negative for ideation and behavior.

Assessment & Plan: 1. DM2, Uncontrolled (A1c 8.2%) — HCC 19 - Add empagliflozin 10mg daily (SGLT2i — CV and renal benefit, EMPA-REG OUTCOME indication) - Continue metformin 500mg BID (not escalating given GI intolerance history) - Diabetic eye exam referral (overdue 2 months — HEDIS measure) - Podiatry referral for initial foot exam - Recheck A1c in 3 months, target <7% 2. Hypertension, Suboptimally Controlled — HCC (when with CKD/DM) - BP today 138/86 — above target of <130/80 (ACC/AHA for DM patients) - Increase lisinopril to 40mg daily - Home BP log review in 4 weeks 3. Major Depressive Disorder, Recurrent, Moderate — HCC 59 - PHQ-9: 14 (moderately severe) — partial response to sertraline 50mg - Increase sertraline to 100mg daily - Safety plan reviewed, crisis line provided (988) - Follow-up in 4 weeks, recheck PHQ-9 - If inadequate response → consider augmentation or psychiatry referral 4. Preventive Care Gaps Addressed: - Mammogram ordered (last: 26 months ago — HEDIS BCS measure) - Colonoscopy referral (age 55, average risk, never screened — HEDIS COL) - Tobacco screening: former smoker, quit 3 years — MIPS measure 226 - Annual flu vaccine administered today — MIPS measure 110

Feature-by-Feature Comparison

Pricing & Access

FeatureScribeableDoximity Scribe
Free accessDoximity Scribe is free for U.S. physicians, NPs, PAs, and medical students with a verified Doximity account. Scribeable has a free tier with 5 notes per month.
Published note limits or capsNot stated on doximity.com as of Jul 2026

Clinical Intelligence

FeatureScribeableDoximity Scribe
ICD-10, HCC V28, and E&M supportNot stated on doximity.com as of Jul 2026
MIPS quality measures scored in the noteNot stated on doximity.com as of Jul 2026
Verification pass surfaced to the clinicianNot stated on doximity.com as of Jul 2026

Beyond the Note

FeatureScribeableDoximity Scribe
Multi-patient Rounding ModeNot stated on doximity.com as of Jul 2026
Ancillary documents such as AVS and referral lettersNot stated on doximity.com as of Jul 2026

Competitor facts on this page are sourced to each company's own public site and verified as of 2026-07-17; see page source for the full citation list. Competitor capabilities and pricing may change after that date.

See What You're Missing

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Pricing Comparison

Scribeable

Free tier, then $39-79/month, published

Start free, upgrade when ready. No contracts.

Doximity Scribe

Free for verified U.S. clinicians

Contact for pricing

Doximity Scribe is genuinely free for eligible clinicians with a verified account. Scribeable has a 5-note monthly free tier, then paid tiers for coding, calculators, documents, and rounding.

Scott Kohlhepp, DO, founder of Scribeable

Built and owned by a practicing physician

Scott Kohlhepp, DO

Why I built this · Security and BAA

Other AI scribes optimize for time to first draft. Scribeable optimizes for time to signed note, with a verification pass built in before you sign.

5.0 on the App Store

120+

Clinicians on board

2,600+

Patient notes generated

Which Should You Choose?

Choose Scribeable if you...

  • Clinicians who need ICD-10, HCC V28, E&M support, and MIPS measures in the note
  • Clinicians who want code-scored calculators and a separate verification pass
  • Clinicians who need rounding, orders review, or documents beyond the note

Choose Doximity Scribe if you...

  • Verified U.S. clinicians who want a free tool for basic note drafting
  • Physicians, NPs, PAs, and medical students who already have a verified Doximity account
  • Clinicians who do not need the additional coding, rounding, or document features stated on Scribeable's paid tiers

Frequently Asked Questions

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vs Abridge

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Start Your 14-Day Free Trial — No Credit Card

Compare Scribeable to Doximity Scribe on your own terms. Generate your first note in under 5 minutes.

Scribeable vs Doximity Scribe - AI Medical Scribe Comparison

Doximity Scribe is genuinely free for verified U.S. clinicians. That makes it a reasonable place to start if you need help drafting notes. This comparison looks at what its public page states, what it does not state, and what Scribeable adds on its paid tiers.

Why Physicians Switch from Doximity Scribe

  • Coding details such as ICD-10, HCC, and E&M are not stated on doximity.com as of Jul 2026
  • Multi-patient rounding is not stated on doximity.com as of Jul 2026
  • Documents beyond the note, including referral letters and AVS, are not stated on doximity.com as of Jul 2026

Why Choose Scribeable Over Doximity Scribe

  • Coding engine with ICD-10, HCC V28, and E&M support included at Pro for $79/month
  • MIPS quality measures scored in the note, plus 236 code-scored and validated clinical calculators
  • A two-stage AI pipeline with a separate verification pass that asks a clarification question instead of guessing
  • Rounding Mode that separates one continuous recording into a note for each patient
  • 35+ ancillary document types at Pro, including AVS, referral letters, work and school notes, and disability and FMLA support letters
  • A free tier with 5 notes each month after the trial

Free Is a Real Answer

Doximity Scribe is free for verified U.S. physicians, NPs, PAs, and medical students. If you need a straightforward draft and already have a Doximity account, that is a sensible place to begin. Scribeable also has a free tier, but it is capped at 5 notes each month after the trial.

When the Note Has More Work to Do

A note can carry more than the visit summary. Scribeable Pro includes ICD-10, HCC V28, and E&M support, plus MIPS measures and 236 code-scored calculators. These coding and quality details are not stated on Doximity Scribe's public page as of Jul 2026.

Clinic Does Not Stop at the Note

Some visits end with a referral letter, an AVS, a work note, or orders to review. Scribeable Pro includes 35+ document types and an orders review queue. It also has Rounding Mode for separating a continuous recording into notes for individual patients. These document and rounding features are not stated on Doximity Scribe's public page as of Jul 2026.

Feature Comparison: Scribeable vs Doximity Scribe

Pricing & Access

FeatureScribeableDoximity Scribe
Free accessYesYes
Published note limits or capsYesPartial

Clinical Intelligence

FeatureScribeableDoximity Scribe
ICD-10, HCC V28, and E&M supportYesPartial
MIPS quality measures scored in the noteYesPartial
Verification pass surfaced to the clinicianYesPartial

Beyond the Note

FeatureScribeableDoximity Scribe
Multi-patient Rounding ModeYesPartial
Ancillary documents such as AVS and referral lettersYesPartial

Pricing Comparison

Scribeable: Free tier, then $39-79/month, published

Doximity Scribe: Free for verified U.S. clinicians

Doximity Scribe is genuinely free for eligible clinicians with a verified account. Scribeable has a 5-note monthly free tier, then paid tiers for coding, calculators, documents, and rounding.

Which Should You Choose?

If you need a free drafting tool and have a verified Doximity account, Doximity Scribe is a reasonable place to start. When the note needs to carry coding, quality measures, rounding, or paperwork beyond the note, that is what Scribeable's paid tiers are for. You can try full Pro for 14 days or 15 notes with no card, then keep a free tier with 5 notes per month.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Doximity Scribe really free?

Yes. Doximity states that Scribe is free for all U.S. physicians, NPs, PAs, and medical students with a verified Doximity account.

Does Doximity Scribe include medical coding?

Its public Scribe page does not state ICD-10, HCC, or E&M coding as of Jul 2026. Scribeable Pro includes ICD-10, an HCC V28 crosswalk (8,400+ entries), and E&M support for $79/month.

Does Doximity Scribe support rounding or documents beyond the note?

Multi-patient rounding, referral letters, and AVS are not stated on doximity.com as of Jul 2026. Scribeable Pro includes Rounding Mode and 35+ document types.

Can I try Scribeable before paying?

Yes. The trial includes full Pro features for 14 days or 15 notes, whichever comes first, with no credit card. After that, the free tier includes 5 notes each month.

Compare Other AI Medical Scribes

  • Scribeable vs Dragon Copilot
  • Scribeable vs Nabla
  • Scribeable vs Abridge

Sources

Doximity Scribe is free for all U.S. physicians, NPs, PAs, and medical students with a verified Doximity account.

Scribeable pricing: Lite $39/mo, Pro $79/mo.

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