Healthcare

Texas Health plans $50 million expansion next to Frisco hospital

Texas Health is adding a $50 million project beside its Frisco hospital, with opening targeted for 2028. The move signals another bet on Frisco’s fast growth.

Sadie Brennan··2 min read
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Texas Health plans $50 million expansion next to Frisco hospital
Source: texashealth.org

Texas Health Resources announced a $50 million development next to Texas Health Hospital Frisco, with the project expected to open in 2028.

For patients, the money points to a campus that is still growing rather than settling into place. The Frisco hospital opened in 2019, then added a $25 million sixth-floor buildout in 2023 that brought 30 medical-surgical beds and two operating suites. In October 2024, Texas Health opened a third gastroenterology suite at the campus, extending services tied to digestive care.

Texas Health describes the site as a 20-acre medical and hospital campus developed with UT Southwestern Medical Center. That partnership has made the Frisco location a major medical draw on the north side of the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex, and the new project suggests the system expects more demand for inpatient care, outpatient visits and specialty services as the city keeps adding residents.

A recent construction filing points to a four-story medical office building at the Frisco campus, which would fit Texas Health’s pattern of layering more services onto the site over time. The exact mix of services in the new project has not been laid out publicly, but the scale alone makes clear this is a significant capital investment, not a routine refresh.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

The timing lines up with Frisco’s growth. The city’s population jumped 10.2% from 2023 to 2024, and Texas Health has been expanding elsewhere in Collin County as well. In February 2026, the system announced plans for a new hospital and medical campus in north McKinney, also expected to open in 2028.

Taken together, the projects show Texas Health continuing to place long-term bets on northern Collin County. For Frisco, that means more construction, more hiring and a larger medical footprint built around a campus that has already become one of the city’s biggest health-care anchors.

This article was produced by Prism’s automated news system from verified source data, official records, and press releases, then run through automated quality and moderation checks before publishing. The system is built and supervised by the people who set the standards it runs under. Read our full AI policy.

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