INTRODUCTION: Spontaneous non-traumatic intracranial hemorrhage causes high morbidity and mortality. Clinical pathways for the management of acute ischemic stroke are well established but fall short in identifying intracranial hemorrhage, preventing early therapy. METHODS: Using Class 1 recommendations from the AHA/ASA Spontaneous Intracranial Hemorrhage Guidelines, our multi-disciplinary stroke team developed a hyper-acute clinical pathway. Once the hemorrhagic stroke patient was identified, protocolized measures were immediately initiated to lower systolic blood pressure to 140 mmHg, institute factor replacement therapies in coagulopathic patients and anti-platelet reversal when appropriate. Key performance indicators and quality metrics were established to compare post-intervention groups to the baseline cohort. RESULTS: Of 180 patients, 113 and 67 patients were treated pre- and post-protocol, respectively. From pre- to post-protocol, diagnosis of hemorrhagic stroke using the alert increased from 59% to 81%. Anti-hypertensive initiation within 60 minutes increased from 79.5% to 88.7%, with the average time from CT result decreasing from 32.7 to 21.7 minutes. Time to reversal agent decreased from 53 to 23 minutes for pro-coagulation agents and 106 to 55 minutes for DDAVP. Reversal agent initiation within 60 minutes of CT result increased from 66.6% to 100% for pro-coagulation agents and 28.5% to 84.6% for DDAVP. CONCLUSIONS: The initiation of this management protocol for hemorrhagic stroke resulted in a higher proportion of patients being rapidly identified and earlier initiation of anti-hypertensive and hemostatic therapies. These processes are the key to important interventions designed to reduce injury extension associated with intracranial hemorrhage, like “time to thrombolysis” measures for acute ischemic stroke.