Social risks (e.g., food insecurity) are adverse social/economic conditions associated with poor health outcomes. Among patients with cancer, presence of social risks is associated with increased late-stage diagnoses, care delays, and mortality. The purpose of this project was to assess the perspectives and practices regarding social risk screening within a large NCI-designated cancer center. Email invitations to complete a secure, online survey were distributed to oncology healthcare staff (e.g., oncologists, nurses, pharmacists, medical assistants, social workers, and patient navigators) at Moores Cancer Center between June 1, 2022 and July 31, 2022. The 6-item survey collected information on clinical role, current practices and perceived barriers to screening for social risks as part of routine care. Respondents were categorized as MD-trained providers versus non-MD clinical staff. Descriptive statistics were used, including Fisher's exact test to compare responses by respondent type (MD vs non-MD). All analyses were conducted using data management and decision management software. This project was approved by the UCSD Institutional Review Board. A total of 59 respondents completed the survey, including 20 MDs (34%) and 39 non-MD staff (66%). Overall, most respondents reported asking patients about their social risks (75%) and communicating information about patients' social risks with other healthcare staff when clinically relevant (84%). MDs were significantly more likely to agree that they ask patients about social risks when clinically relevant than non-MDs (95% vs 64%, p = 0.024). MDs were also more likely to communicate, review and use social risk information than their non-MD colleagues. The most reported barriers to integrating social risk information into clinical care, overall, included insufficient time (73%), uncertainty about who is responsible (70%), and lack of knowledge about existing tools (75%) for asking patients about social risks, as well as lack of resources to address social risks (76%). Non-MDs were more likely to cite concern that patients and families will feel uncomfortable answering questions about social risks (67% vs 20% of MDs, p = 0.003) as a barrier. Only 30% of MDs and 46% of non-MDs agreed that "asking about social risks is outside of the scope of my role" was a barrier. Most oncology providers and staff agree that obtaining social risk information is important for patient care. Developing clinic-based solutions that integrate social risk screening and referral workflows within the oncology setting is imperative to reduce cancer health disparities. Future efforts that leverage the use of electronic health records to conduct social risk screening and streamline referrals to community-based resources in oncology may improve cancer health equity.