To integrate a parenting assessment into primary care and assess pediatric providers' time needed to review it and their perceptions of the process. The Quick Parenting Assessment (QPA) is a validated, 13 item parent support tool that assesses for healthy and unhealthy parenting practices. Higher QPAs indicate more unhealthy parenting being used. In a clinic serving low-income parents, the QPA was integrated into the 15month, 30month, 5year, and 8year well child visits. After each well child visit in which the QPA was administered, providers were invited to complete a one-page survey-315 surveys were included in the analysis. Most QPAs (78.7%) were low risk (QPA < = 2), 14.6% were medium risk (QPA = 3-4), and 6.7% were high risk (QPA > 4). The median time was 15-30s to review low risk QPAs and 30s to 1min to review high risk QPAs. For most QPA reviews, health care providers reported that the QPA increased their objectivity in determining the level of support needed (68%), facilitated communication about parenting (77%), and increased the value of the visit (68%). A validated parenting assessment tool, integrated into pediatric primary care, appears to work for pediatric health care providers. These findings have implications for supporting parents in pediatrics, value-based care, and disease prevention.