Introduction: Heart failure (HF) related hospitalizations contribute to the ever-increasing financial burden of chronic disease. There are approximately 6.5 million individuals in the US with HF, with an estimated annual cost of $39 billion. Within the arsenal of strategies developed to curb this trend, pharmacological therapy has shown to be very effective. Whilst many drugs are favored for their ability to reduce mortality and morbidity, neprilysin-inhibitors (ARNI) have recently shown to reduce 30-day readmissions in patients with HF, presenting an expanded indication to favor its usage. Methods: A retrospective review of patients discharged from the Kings County Hospital Center from October 1 st 2017 to June 30 th 2018 with a diagnosis of heart failure was conducted. Inclusion required follow up in the Heart Health Clinic at Kings County Hospital and discharge therapy with a beta-blocker and either an ACE-I, ARB or ARNI. Patients were divided into 2 groups, those continued on an ACE-i/ARB versus those who were transitioned to an ARNI. The end outcome was a 30-day all-cause readmission for heart failure at any point after enrollment. Time to event was calculated using the date the drug was started. If the drug was started prior to being enrolled, we used the date that the patient was enrolled in the study. Demographic data was extracted via chart review and analyzed by descriptive statistics. A Kaplan-Meier survival analysis was done to compare the time-to-event between both study cohorts. Results: There were 101 patient discharges. There was no statistically significant age or gender difference between cohorts. The mean age in the ARNI group was 60.4 and in the ACE-i/ARB group was 64.7. A 30-day readmission occurred in 3 (10.7%) of the 28 patients in the intervention group, compared with 21 (28.8%) of the 73 patients with ACE-i/ARB therapy. The patients transitioned to ARNI therapy had a better event free survival with a 62.8% reduction in 30-day readmission events (log rank p=0.046). Conclusion: There is statistically significant reduction in 30-day all-cause readmission following the initiation of ARNI therapy in the treatment for HF. While this trend was shown in a prospective post-hoc analysis of the initial PARADIGM-HF trial, our study presents a unique patient benefit group. Kings County Hospital serves as a safety net hospital that has a large volume of uninsured, low socioeconomic status patients, with a large African American influence, and compounded social and environmental factors that make them highly prone to CHF readmissions. It underscores the need for clinically useful strategies to reduce the burden of CHF related readmissions especially for hospitals located in low socioeconomic areas at risk for penalties.