FORM 10-Q
                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             Washington, D.C. 20549

        [X]  QUARTERLY REPORT UNDER SECTION 13 OR 15(d)
               OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

                For the quarterly period ended     DECEMBER 31, 2009
                                                   -----------------

        [ ]  TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE
                         SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
             For the transition period from            to
                                            ----------    ----------
                          Commission file number    0-10248
                                                    -------

                                FONAR CORPORATION
             ------------------------------------------------------
             (Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)

           DELAWARE                                     11-2464137
--------------------------------           ------------------------------------
(State or other jurisdiction of            (I.R.S. Employer Identification No.)
incorporation or organization)

      110 Marcus Drive      Melville, New York                    11747
      ----------------------------------------                  ----------
      (Address of principal executive offices)                  (Zip Code)

Registrant's telephone number, including area code: (631) 694-2929
                                                    --------------

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required
to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during
the  preceding 12 months (or for such  shorter  period that the  registrant  was
required  to file  such  reports),  and  (2) has  been  subject  to such  filing
requirements for the past 90 days.  YES _X_  NO ___

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has submitted  electronically  and
posted on its corporate Web site, if any, every  Interactive  Data File required
to be submitted and posted  pursuant to Rule 405 of  Regulation  S-T (232.405 of
this  chapter)  during the  preceding 12 months (or for shorter  period that the
registrant was required to submit and post such files.  YES _X_  NO ___

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large  accelerated  filer, an
accelerated  filer, or a  non-accelerated  filer.  See definition of accelerated
filer and large accelerated filer in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act.(Check one):
Large accelerated filer___ Accelerated filer___ Non-accelerated filer___ Smaller
reporting company _X_

Indicate by check mark whether the  registrant is a shell company (as defined in
Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act). Yes ___ No _X_

Indicate the number of shares  outstanding  of each of the  issuer's  classes of
common stock, as of the close of the latest practicable date.

            Class                               Outstanding at January 31, 2010
-----------------------------------------       -------------------------------
Common Stock, par value $.0001                            4,916,275
Class B Common Stock, par value $.0001                          158
Class C Common Stock, par value $.0001                      382,513
Class A Preferred Stock, par value $.0001                   313,451


FONAR CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
INDEX



PART I - FINANCIAL INFORMATION                                  PAGE


Item 1.  Financial Statements

   Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheets - December 31, 2009
     (Unaudited) and June 30, 2009

   Condensed Consolidated Statements of Operations for
     the Three Months Ended December 31, 2009 and
     December 31, 2008 (Unaudited)

   Condensed Consolidated Statements of Operations for
     the Six Months Ended December 31, 2009 and
     December 31, 2008 (Unaudited)

   Condensed Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive
     (Loss) Income for the Three Months Ended
     December 31, 2009 and December 31, 2008 (Unaudited)

   Condensed Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive
     (Loss) Income for the Six Months Ended
     December 31, 2009 and December 31, 2008 (Unaudited)

   Condensed Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for
     the Six Months Ended December 31, 2009 and
     December 31, 2008 (Unaudited)


   Notes to Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements (Unaudited)

Item 2. Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial
        Condition and Results of Operations

Item 3. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About
        Market Risk

Item 4. Controls and Procedures

PART II - OTHER INFORMATION

Item 1. Legal Proceedings

Item 2. Changes in Securities

Item 3. Defaults Upon Senior Securities

Item 4. Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders

Item 5. Other Information

Item 6. Exhibits

Signatures



                       FONAR CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
                     CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
                                (000's OMITTED)

ASSETS
                                                        December 31,   June 30,
                                                            2009        2009
                                                         (UNAUDITED)
Current Assets:                                          ----------  ----------
  Cash and cash equivalents                              $    1,071  $    1,226

  Marketable securities                                          30          23

  Accounts receivable - net                                   5,922       5,392

  Accounts receivable - related parties - net                   119        -

  Medical receivables - net                                     224         374

  Management fee receivable - net                             3,112       3,274

  Management fee receivable - related medical
    practices - net                                           1,803       2,196

  Costs and estimated earnings in excess of
    billings on uncompleted contracts                         1,257       1,476

  Inventories                                                 2,839       3,172

  Current portion of advances and notes to related
    medical practices                                           173         165

  Current portion of notes receivable                            85         518

  Prepaid expenses and other current assets                     340         472
                                                         ----------  ----------
        Total Current Assets                                 16,975      18,288
                                                         ----------  ----------

Property and equipment - net                                  2,495       2,892

Advances and notes to related medical practices - net          -             89

Notes receivable - net                                          142       1,779

Other intangible assets - net                                 4,896       4,920

Other assets                                                    392         391
                                                         ----------  ----------
        Total Assets                                     $   24,900  $   28,359
                                                         ==========  ==========


See accompanying notes to condensed consolidated financial statements
(unaudited).


                       FONAR CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
                     CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
                                (000's OMITTED)


                                                        December 31,   June 30,
LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' DEFICIENCY                    2009         2009
                                                         (UNAUDITED)
Current Liabilities:                                     ----------  ----------
  Current portion of long-term debt and
    capital leases                                       $      314  $      277
  Current portion of long-term debt - related party              84          80
  Accounts payable                                            3,456       3,519
  Other current liabilities                                   8,558       8,460
  Unearned revenue on service contracts                       5,910       5,526
  Unearned revenue on service contracts - related parties       110          -
  Customer advances                                           7,240       9,238
  Billings in excess of costs and estimated
    earnings on uncompleted contracts                         3,114       2,026
                                                         ----------  ----------
      Total Current Liabilities                              28,786      29,126

Long-Term Liabilities:
  Accounts payable                                               89         184
  Due to related medical practices                              645         643
  Long-term debt and capital leases,
    less current portion                                        682         759
  Long-term debt less current portion - related party           117         160
  Other liabilities                                             459         428
                                                         ----------  ----------
      Total Long-Term Liabilities                             1,992       2,174
                                                         ----------  ----------
      Total Liabilities                                      30,778      31,300
                                                         ----------  ----------

See accompanying notes to condensed consolidated financial statements
(unaudited).


                       FONAR CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
                     CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
                       (000's OMITTED, except share data)

                                                        December 31,   June 30,
LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' DEFICIENCY                    2009        2009
  (continued)                                            (UNAUDITED)
                                                         ----------  ----------
STOCKHOLDERS' DEFICIENCY:

Class A non-voting preferred stock $.0001 par value;
1,600,000 authorized, 313,451 issued and outstanding
at December 31, 2009 and June 30, 2009                         -           -

Preferred stock $.001 par value;
2,000,000 shares authorized, issued
and outstanding - none                                         -           -

Common Stock $.0001 par value; 30,000,000 shares
authorized at December 31, 2009 and June 30, 2009,
4,927,918 and 4,917,918 issued at December 31, 2009
and June 30, 2009, respectively; 4,916,275 and
4,906,275 outstanding at December 31, 2009
and June 30, 2009, respectively                                   1           1

Class B Common Stock $ .0001 par value; 800,000
shares authorized, (10 votes per share), 158 issued
and outstanding at December 31, 2009 and June 30, 2009         -           -

Class C Common Stock $.0001 par value; 2,000,000 shares
authorized, (25 votes per share), 382,513 issued
and outstanding at December 31, 2009 and June 30, 2009         -           -

Paid-in capital in excess of par value                      172,298      172,280
Accumulated other comprehensive loss                       (     15)   (     21)
Accumulated deficit                                        (177,292)   (174,259)
Notes receivable from employee stockholders                (    195)   (    267)
Treasury stock, at cost - 11,643 shares of common stock
  at December 31, 2009 and June 30, 2009                   (    675)   (    675)
                                                         ----------  ----------
      Total Stockholders' Deficiency                       (  5,878)   (  2,941)
                                                         ----------  ----------
      Total Liabilities and Stockholders' Deficiency     $   24,900  $   28,359
                                                         ==========  ==========

See accompanying notes to condensed consolidated financial statements
(unaudited).


                       FONAR CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
          CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS (UNAUDITED)
                     (000's OMITTED, except per share data)

                                                      FOR THE THREE MONTHS ENDED
                                                               DECEMBER 31,
                                                         ----------------------
                                                            2009        2008
REVENUES                                                 ----------  ----------
  Product sales - net                                    $    2,961  $    4,407
  Service and repair fees - net                               2,629       2,624
  Service and repair fees - related parties - net                55          55
  Management and other fees - net                             1,738       1,735
  Management and other fees - related medical
    practices - net                                             830         714
  License fees and royalties                                   -          1,755
                                                         ----------  ----------
     Total Revenues - Net                                     8,213      11,290
                                                         ----------  ----------
COSTS AND EXPENSES
  Costs related to product sales                              2,279       2,824
  Costs related to service and repair fees                      978       1,027
  Costs related to service and repair
    fees - related parties                                       20          22
  Costs related to management and other fees                  1,384       1,074
  Costs related to management and other
    fees - related medical practices                            745         698
  Research and development                                      777         928
  Selling, general and administrative                         3,100       3,471
  Provision for bad debts                                       197         545
                                                         ----------  ----------
     Total Costs and Expenses                                 9,480      10,589
                                                         ----------  ----------
(Loss) Income From Operations                               ( 1,267)        701

Interest Expense                                            (    90)    (    40)
Interest Expense - Related Party                            (     5)          -
Investment Income                                                66         113
Interest Income - Related Party                                   3           6
Other Income                                                      1           1
                                                         ----------  ----------
NET (LOSS) INCOME                                        $  ( 1,292) $      781
                                                         ==========  ==========


Basic Net (Loss) Income Per Common Share                 $    (0.26) $     0.16
                                                         ==========  ==========
Diluted Net (Loss) Income Per Common Share               $    (0.26) $     0.16
                                                         ==========  ==========

Weighted Average Basic Shares Outstanding                 4,916,275   4,904,275
                                                         ==========  ==========
Weighted Average Diluted Shares Outstanding               4,916,275   4,904,275
                                                         ==========  ==========

See accompanying notes to condensed consolidated financial statements
(unaudited).


                       FONAR CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
          CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS (UNAUDITED)
                     (000's OMITTED, except per share data)

                                                        FOR THE SIX MONTHS ENDED
                                                              DECEMBER 31,
                                                        ------------------------
                                                            2009        2008
REVENUES                                                 ----------  ----------
  Product sales - net                                    $    4,524  $    5,819
  Service and repair fees - net                               5,386       5,170
  Service and repair fees - related parties - net               110         110
  Management and other fees - net                             3,473       3,782
  Management and other fees - related medical
    practices - net                                           1,625       1,439
  License fees and royalties                                    585       1,755
                                                         ----------  ----------
     Total Revenues - Net                                    15,703      18,075
                                                         ----------  ----------
COSTS AND EXPENSES
  Costs related to product sales                              3,936       4,265
  Costs related to service and repair fees                    1,919       2,038
  Costs related to service and repair
    fees - related parties                                       39          43
  Costs related to management and other fees                  2,651       2,277
Costs related to management and other
    fees - related medical practices                          1,505       1,354
  Research and development                                    1,631       1,809
  Selling, general and administrative                         6,333       6,735
  Provision for bad debts                                       377         700
                                                         ----------  ----------
     Total Costs and Expenses                                18,391      19,221
                                                         ----------  ----------
Loss From Operations                                        ( 2,688)    ( 1,146)

Interest Expense                                            (   169)    (   119)
Interest Expense - Related Party                            (    19)       -
Investment Income                                               153         145
Interest Income - Related Party                                   6          12
Other Income                                                     34           2
Minority Interest in Income of Partnerships                    -       (    11)
Gain on Sale of Consolidated Subsidiary                        -          1,448
Loss on Note Receivable                                      (  350)       -
                                                         ----------  ----------
NET (LOSS) INCOME                                        $   (3,033) $      331
                                                         ==========  ==========

Basic Net (Loss) Income Per Common Share                 $    (0.62) $     0.07
                                                         ==========  ==========
Diluted Net (Loss) Income Per Common Share               $    (0.62) $     0.07
                                                         ==========  ==========

Weighted Average Basic Shares Outstanding                 4,912,108   4,904,275
                                                         ==========  ==========
Weighted Average Diluted Shares Outstanding               4,912,108   4,904,275
                                                         ==========  ==========


See accompanying notes to condensed consolidated financial statements
(unaudited).


                       FONAR CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
        CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF COMPREHENSIVE (LOSS) INCOME
                                  (UNAUDITED)
                                (000'S OMITTED)

                                                      FOR THE THREE MONTHS ENDED
                                                             DECEMBER 31,
                                                         ----------------------
                                                            2009        2008
                                                         ----------  ----------
Net (loss) income                                        $   (1,292) $      781

Other comprehensive income (losses), net of tax:
    Unrealized gains (losses) on marketable securities,
      net of tax                                                  2      (    6)
                                                         ----------  ----------
Total comprehensive (loss) income                        $   (1,290) $      775
                                                         ==========  ==========

See accompanying notes to condensed consolidated financial statements
(unaudited).


                       FONAR CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
        CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF COMPREHENSIVE (LOSS) INCOME
                                  (UNAUDITED)
                                (000'S OMITTED)

                                                        FOR THE SIX MONTHS ENDED
                                                                DECEMBER 31,
                                                         ----------------------
                                                            2009        2008
                                                         ----------  ----------
Net (loss) income                                        $  ( 3,033) $      331

Other comprehensive income, net of tax:
    Unrealized gains on marketable securities,
      net of tax                                                  6          49
                                                         ----------  ----------
Total comprehensive (loss) income                        $   (3,027) $      380
                                                         ==========  ==========


                       FONAR CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
                 CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
                                  (UNAUDITED)
                                (000'S OMITTED)
                                                        FOR THE SIX MONTHS ENDED
                                                               DECEMBER 31,
                                                         -----------------------
                                                            2009        2008
                                                         ----------  ----------
Cash Flows from Operating Activities:
 Net (loss) income                                       $  ( 3,033) $      331
 Adjustments to reconcile net (loss) income to
  net cash used in operating activities:
    Minority interest in income of partnerships                -             11
    Depreciation and amortization                               732         867
    Abandoned patents written off                                62        -
    Provision for bad debts                                     377         700
    Discount on note receivable                                 350        -
    Gain on sale of consolidated subsidiary                    -        ( 1,448)
    Compensatory element of stock issuances                      18        -
 (Increase) decrease in operating assets, net:
     Accounts, management fee and medical receivable(s)     (   321)    ( 1,063)
     Notes receivable                                           139         263
     Costs and estimated earnings in excess of
       billings on uncompleted contracts                        219     (   211)
     Inventories                                                334     (   601)
     Prepaid expenses and other current assets                  132     (   111)
     Other assets                                           (     1)    (    17)
     Advances and notes to related medical practices             81         126
Increase (decrease) in operating liabilities, net:
     Accounts payable                                       (   157)        256
     Other current liabilities                                  592         637
     Customer advances                                      ( 1,998)    ( 1,442)
     Billings in excess of costs and estimated
       earnings on uncompleted contracts                      1,087     ( 1,850)
     Other liabilities                                           31     (    72)
     Due to related medical practices                             1     (     3)
                                                         ----------  ----------
Net cash used in operating activities                       ( 1,355)    ( 3,627)
                                                         ----------  ----------

See accompanying notes to condensed consolidated financial statements
(unaudited).


                       FONAR CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
                CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
                                  (UNAUDITED)
                                (000'S OMITTED)

                                                        FOR THE SIX MONTHS ENDED
                                                              DECEMBER 31,
                                                         ----------------------
                                                            2009        2008
                                                         ----------  ----------
Cash Flows from Investing Activities:
  Sales of marketable securities                              -           1,098
  Purchases of property and equipment                       (    10)    (     8)
  Costs of capitalized software development                 (   223)    (   259)
  Cost of patents                                           (   140)    (   135)
  Proceeds from note receivable                               1,581       2,000
  Proceeds from sale of consolidated subsidiary                -          2,293
                                                         ----------  ----------
Net cash provided by investing activities                     1,208       4,989
                                                         ----------  ----------

Cash Flows from Financing Activities:
  Distributions to holders of minority interest                -        (    23)
  Repayment of borrowings and capital
    lease obligations                                       (    80)    (   205)
  Repayment of notes receivable from employee
    stockholders                                                72          123
                                                         ----------  ----------
Net cash used in financing activities                       (     8)     (  105)
                                                         ----------  ----------

Net (Decrease) Increase in Cash and Cash Equivalents        (   155)      1,257

Cash and Cash Equivalents - Beginning of Period               1,226       1,326
                                                         ----------  ----------
Cash and Cash Equivalents - End of Period                $    1,071  $    2,583
                                                         ==========  ==========

See accompanying notes to condensed consolidated financial statements
(unaudited).


                       FONAR CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
              NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                DECEMBER 31, 2009
                                   (UNAUDITED)


NOTE 1 - BASIS OF PRESENTATION & LIQUIDITY & CAPITAL RESOURCES

Basis of Presentation
---------------------

The accompanying unaudited condensed consolidated financial statements have been
prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles for interim
financial  information and with the  instructions to Form 10-Q and Article 10 of
Regulation  S-X.  Accordingly,  they do not include all of the  information  and
footnotes  required by accounting  principles  generally  accepted in the United
States  of  America  for  complete  financial  statements.  In  the  opinion  of
management, all adjustments (consisting of normal recurring accruals) considered
necessary for a fair presentation have been included.  Operating results for the
three and six months ended December 31, 2009 are not  necessarily  indicative of
the results that may be expected  for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2010.  For
further  information,   refer  to  the  consolidated  financial  statements  and
footnotes  thereto included in the Company's Annual Report on Form 10-K filed on
October 5, 2009 and as  amended  on Form  10-K/A on  November  10,  2009 for the
fiscal year ended June 30, 2009.

Liquidity and Going Concern
---------------------------

At December 31, 2009, the Company had a working capital deficit of approximately
$11.8 million and a stockholders'  deficiency of approximately $5.9 million. For
the six months  ended  December  31,  2009,  the Company  incurred a net loss of
approximately  $3.0 million,  which included  non-cash  charges of approximately
$1.5  million.  The Company has funded its cash flow  deficit for the six months
ended  December 31, 2009 through cash provided by operations  and 1.6 million of
proceeds from the collection of principal on a note receivable.

The Company continues to focus its efforts on increased  marketing  campaigns to
strengthen the demand for its products and services. Management anticipates that
its capital  resources  will improve if Fonar's MRI scanner  products gain wider
market  recognition  and acceptance  resulting in increased  product sales.  The
Company's  subsidiary,  Health  Management  Corporation  ("HMCA") will focus its
efforts to market the  scanning  services  of its  customers  (related  and non-
related professional  corporations or "PCs") and to expand the number of PCs for
which it performs management  services.  Current economic credit conditions have
contributed to a slowing business  environment.  Given such liquidity and credit
constraints in the markets, the business has and may continue to suffer,  should
the credit  markets not improve in the near future.  The direct  impact of these
conditions  is not fully  known.  However,  there can be no  assurance  that the
Company  would be able to secure  additional  funds if  needed  and that if such
funds were available, whether the terms or conditions would be acceptable to the
Company.  In such case, the further  reduction in operating  expenses as well as
possible sale of other  operating  subsidiaries  might need to be substantial in
order for the Company to generate  positive cash flow to sustain the  operations
of the Company.

In January  2010,  the Company  was  required to  implement a  substantial  cost
reduction which consisted in a reduction in personnel and significant reductions
in the remaining employees compensation and other costs.

The accompanying unaudited condensed consolidated financial statements have been
prepared in accordance  with  accounting  principles  generally  accepted in the
United  States of America ("US GAAP") and assume that the Company will  continue
as a going concern. These conditions raise substantial doubt about the Company's
ability to continue as a going concern.  The  accompanying  unaudited  condensed
consolidated  financial  statements  do not include any  adjustments  that might
result from the outcome of this uncertainty.


                       FONAR CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
              NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                DECEMBER 31, 2009
                                   (UNAUDITED)


NOTE 2 - SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES

Principles of Consolidation
---------------------------

The unaudited condensed  consolidated  financial statements include the accounts
of  FONAR   Corporation,   its  majority  and   wholly-owned   subsidiaries  and
partnerships (collectively the "Company"). All significant intercompany accounts
and transactions have been eliminated in consolidation.

Earnings (Loss) Per Share
-------------------------

Basic earnings  (loss) per share ("EPS") is computed  based on weighted  average
shares outstanding and excludes any potential  dilution.  In accordance with ASC
topic 260-10,  "Participating Securities and the Two-Class method, the Company's
participating  convertible  securities,  which  include Class B common stock and
Class C common stock,  are not included in the  computation of basic EPS for the
six months and three months ended December 31, 2009,  because the  participating
securities  do not have a  contractual  obligation to share in the losses of the
Company.  For the six months and three  months  ended  December  31,  2008,  the
Company used the Two-Class  method for calculating  basic earnings per share and
applied the if converted method in calculating diluted earnings per share.

Diluted EPS reflects the  potential  dilution from the exercise or conversion of
all dilutive  securities  into common stock based on the average market price of
common  shares  outstanding  during  the  period.  The  number of common  shares
potentially  issuable  upon the  exercise  of certain  options  and  warrants or
conversion of the participating  convertible  securities that were excluded from
the  diluted  EPS  calculation  was  approximately  224,000  because  they  were
antidilutive  as a result  of net  losses  for the three  and six  months  ended
December 31, 2009.  For the three and six months  ended  December 31, 2008,  the
number of common  shares  potentially  issuable  upon the  exercise  of  certain
options of 138,000  have not been  included  in the  computation  of diluted EPS
since the effect would be antidilutive.

Recent Accounting Pronouncements
--------------------------------

In September  2006, the Financial  Accounting  Standard  Board  ("FASB")  issued
Accounting  Standards  Codification  ("ASC")  topic 820  (formerly  Statement of
Financial  Accounting  Standards  ("SFAS") No. 157, "Fair Value  Measurements").
This  statement  provides a single  definition  of fair value,  a framework  for
measuring  fair  value,   and  expanded   disclosures   concerning  fair  value.
Previously,  different  definitions  of fair  value  were  contained  in various
accounting   pronouncements   creating   inconsistencies   in  measurement   and
disclosures.  ASC topic 820 applies under those previously issued pronouncements
that prescribe fair value as the relevant measure of value,  except SFAS No. 123
(revised  2004),   "Share-Based  Payment",   and  related   interpretations  and
pronouncements  that require or permit measurement similar to fair value but are
not intended to measure fair value. The Company adopted ASC topic 820 on July 1,
2008, as required for its financial assets and financial  liabilities.  However,
the FASB deferred the effective date of ASC topic 820 for one year as it relates
to fair value measurement  requirements for nonfinancial assets and nonfinancial
liabilities  that are not  recognized  or disclosed at fair value on a recurring
basis.  The  adoption  of the  provisions  of ASC  topic  820 for the  Company's
financial assets and financial liabilities did not have a material impact on its
condensed  consolidated  financial  statements.  The Company is  evaluating  the
effect  the  implementation  of ASC topic 820 for its  nonfinancial  assets  and
nonfinancial  liabilities  will  have on the  Company's  condensed  consolidated
financial statements.



                       FONAR CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
              NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                DECEMBER 31, 2009
                                   (UNAUDITED)


NOTE 2 - SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED)

Recent Accounting Pronouncements (Continued)
--------------------------------

On February 15,  2007,  the FASB issued ASC topic 820  (formerly  SFAS No. 159),
entitled "The Fair Value Option for Financial Assets and Financial Liabilities".
The guidance in ASC topic 820 "allows" reporting entities to "choose" to measure
many financial  instruments and certain other items at fair value. The objective
underlying the development of this literature is to improve financial  reporting
by providing  reporting  entities with the  opportunity to reduce  volatility in
reported  earnings that results from measuring  related  assets and  liabilities
differently without having to apply complex hedge accounting  provisions,  using
the guidance in SFAS No. 133, as amended,  entitled  ``Accounting for Derivative
Instruments  and  Hedging  Activities.''  The  provisions  of ASC  topic 820 are
applicable  to all  reporting  entities and are effective as of the beginning of
the first fiscal year that begins  subsequent to November 15, 2007.  The Company
adopted ASC topic 820 effective July 1, 2008. Upon adoption, the Company did not
elect the fair value option for any items within the scope of ASC topic 820 and,
therefore, the adoption of ASC topic 820 did not have an impact on the Company's
condensed consolidated financial statements.

In March 2007,  the FASB ratified ASC topic 715  (formerly  the Emerging  Issues
Task Force ("EITF")  consensus on Issue No. 06-10).  "Accounting  for Collateral
Assignment  Split Dollar Life  Insurance".  This ASC topic 715 indicates that an
employer should  recognize a liability for  postretirement  benefits  related to
collateral assignment split-dollar life insurance arrangements. In addition, the
ASC topic 715 provides  guidance for the  recognition  of an asset  related to a
collateral assignment split-dollar life insurance arrangement. The ASC topic 715
is effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2007. The Company has
adopted  the ASC  topic  715 as  required  and it did not have an  impact on the
Company's  results  of  operations,  financial  condition  and  liquidity.  . In
December 2007, the FASB issued ASC topic 805 (formerly SFAS No. 141R), "Business
Combinations",  which replaces SFAS No. 141, "Business Combinations".  ASC topic
805 establishes  principles and  requirements  for determining how an enterprise
recognizes  and  measures  the fair  value of  certain  assets  and  liabilities
acquired  in  a  business  combination,   including  noncontrolling   interests,
contingent consideration, and certain acquired contingencies. ASC topic 805 also
requires  acquisition-related  transaction  expenses and restructuring  costs be
expensed as incurred  rather than  capitalized  as a component  of the  business
combination.  ASC  topic  805  will  be  applicable  prospectively  to  business
combinations  for which the acquisition date is on or after the beginning of the
first annual reporting period beginning on or after December 15, 2008. ASC topic
805 would have an impact on accounting  for any  businesses  acquired  after the
effective date of this pronouncement.  The Company believes that the adoption of
ASC  topic  805  could  have  an  impact  on  the   accounting  for  any  future
acquisitions, if one were to occur.

In  December  2007,  the FASB  issued  ASC topic 810  (formerly  SFAS No.  160),
"Noncontrolling Interests in Consolidated Financial Statements - An Amendment of
ARB No. 51". ASC topic 810  establishes  accounting and reporting  standards for
the noncontrolling  interest in a subsidiary (previously referred to as minority
interests).  ASC topic 810 also requires that a retained noncontrolling interest
upon the  deconsolidation  of a  subsidiary  be  initially  measured at its fair
value.  Upon  adoption of ASC topic 810,  the Company will be required to report
its noncontrolling  interests as a separate  component of stockholders'  equity.
The  Company  will also be  required  to  present  net income  allocable  to the
noncontrolling  interest and net income  attributable to the stockholders of the
Company separately in its consolidated statements of income. Currently, minority
interests  are reported as a liability  in the  Company's  consolidated  balance
sheets  and  the  related  income  attributable  to the  minority  interests  is
reflected as an expense in arriving at net loss.  ASC topic 810 is effective for
fiscal years,  and interim  periods  within those fiscal years,  beginning on or
after  December 15, 2008.  ASC topic 810  requires  retroactive  adoption of the
presentation and disclosure  requirements for existing minority  interests.  All
other requirements of ASC topic 810 shall be applied prospectively.  The Company
adopted  ASC topic 810 for our  fiscal  year  beginning  July 1,  2009,  and the
adoption did not have any material impact on the Company's  financial  position,
results of operations or cash flows


                       FONAR CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
              NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                DECEMBER 31, 2009
                                   (UNAUDITED)


NOTE 2 - SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED)

Recent Accounting Pronouncements (Continued)
--------------------------------

In October 2008, the FASB issued ASC topic 820 (formerly FASB Staff Position No.
FAS 157-3), "Determining the Fair Value of a Financial Asset in a Market That Is
Not Active",  which  clarifies the  application of ASC topic 820 when the market
for a financial asset is inactive. Specifically, ASC topic 820 clarifies how (1)
management's  internal  assumptions should be considered in measuring fair value
when observable data are not present,  (2) observable market information from an
inactive  market should be taken into account,  and (3) the use of broker quotes
or  pricing  services  should  be  considered  in  assessing  the  relevance  of
observable  and  unobservable  data to measure  fair value.  The guidance in ASC
topic 820 is  effective  immediately  and did not have a material  impact on the
Company's condensed consolidated financial statements.

In June 2008, the FASB issued ASC topic 815 (formerly  Emerging Issue Task Force
07-5), "Determining Whether an Instrument (or an Embedded Feature) is Indexed to
an Entity's Own Stock". ASC topic 815 provides framework for determining whether
an  instrument  is indexed to an entity's own stock.  ASC topic 815 is effective
for fiscal years  beginning  after  December 15, 2008. The adoption of ASC topic
815 did not have a material impact on its  consolidated  financial  position and
results of operations.

In April 2009,  the FASB issued ASC topic 270 (formerly FAS 107-1 and APB 28-1),
Interim Disclosures about Fair Value of Financial Instruments. SFAS 107-1 amends
FASB No. 107, Disclosures about Fair Value of Financial Instruments,  to require
disclosures  about fair value of  financial  instruments  for interim  reporting
periods of publicly traded companies as well as in annual financial  statements.
SFAS also amends APB Opinion No. 28,  Interim  Financial  Reporting,  to require
those  disclosures  in summarized  financial  information  at interim  reporting
periods.  ASC topic 270 is effective for interim  reporting periods ending after
June 15, 2009.  The adoption of this standard did not have a material  impact on
the Company's  consolidated  financial position,  results of operations and cash
flows.  The carrying value of our cash and cash  equivalents  approximates  fair
value because  these  instruments  have  original  maturities of three months or
less.

The Company adopted a new accounting  standard included in ASC 855,  "Subsequent
Events," which  requires an entity to recognize in the financial  statements the
effects  of  all  subsequent  events  that  provide  additional  evidence  about
conditions  that existed at the date of the balance  sheet.  For  non-recognized
subsequent  events that must be disclosed to keep the financial  statements from
being misleading, an entity will be required to disclose the nature of the event
as well as an  estimate of its  financial  effect,  or a statement  that such an
estimate  cannot be made.  In  addition,  this  standared  requires an entity to
disclose the date through which subsequent events have been evaluated.

In June  2009,  the FASB  issued  ASC 105  (formerly  SFAS No.  168),  "The FASB
Accounting  Standards  Codification  and the  Hierarchy  of  Generally  Accepted
Accounting  Principles".  ASC 105 will become the single source of authoritative
nongovernmental   U.S.  generally  accepted  accounting   principles   ("GAAP"),
superseding  existing FASB,  American  Institute of Certified Public Accountants
("AICPA"),  EITF, and related  accounting  literature.  ASC 105  reorganizes the
thousand of GAAP  pronouncements  into roughly 90 accounting topics and displays
them using a consistent  structure.  Also  included is relevant  Securities  and
Exchange  Commission  guidance  organized  using the same  topical  structure in
separate sections. ASC 105 will be effective for financial statements issued for
reporting periods that end after September 15, 2009. As the codification was not
intended to change or alter  existing U.S.  GAAP, it does not have any impact on
our consolidated financial position, results of operations and cash flows.

In April  2008,  the  FASB  issued  ASC  topic  350  (formerly  FSP FAS  142-3),
"Determination  of the Useful Life of Intangible  Assets".  ASC topic 350 amends
the  factors  that  should be  considered  in  developing  renewal or  extension
assumptions  used to determine the useful life of an intangible asset under SFAS
No. 142,  "Goodwill  and Other  Intangibles"  (SFAS 142).  ASC topic 350 aims to
improve  the  consistency  between  the useful  life of an  intangible  asset as
determined  under SFAS 142 and the period of expected cash flows used to measure
the fair value of the asset under SFAS No.  141,  "Business  Combinations",  and
other  applicable  accounting  literature.  ASC topic 350 will be effective  for
financial  statements issued for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2008,
and  interim   periods   within  those  fiscal  years.   The  adoption  of  this
pronouncement  did  not  have  a  material  impact  on the  Company's  condensed
consolidated financial statements.


                       FONAR CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
              NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                DECEMBER 31, 2009
                                   (UNAUDITED)


NOTE 2 - SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED)

Recent Accounting Pronouncements (Continued)
--------------------------------

In June 2009, the FASB issued ASC 860 (formerly SFAS No. 166),  "Accounting  for
Transfers of Financial  Assets - an amendment of FASB Statement No. 140, ASC 860
requires additional disclosures concerning a transferor's continuing involvement
with  transferred  financial  assets.  ASC  860  eliminates  the  concept  of  a
"qualifying   special-purpose   entity"  and  changes   the   requirements   for
derecognizing  financial assets. ASC 860 is effective for fiscal years beginning
after November 15, 2009. The Company is currently evaluating the impact that the
adoption  of  ASC  860  will  have  on  its  condensed   consolidated  financial
statements.

In June 2009,  the FASB issued ASC 810 (formerly  SFAS No. 167),  "Amendments to
FASB  Interpretation  ("FIN") No.  46(R)," which changes how a reporting  entity
determines  when  an  entity  that  is  insufficiently  capitalized  or  is  not
controlled  through  voting (or  similar  rights)  should be  consolidated.  The
determination of whether a reporting  entity is required to consolidate  another
entity is based on, among other things,  the other  entity's  purpose and design
and the reporting  entity's ability to direct the activities of the other entity
that most significantly impact the other entity's economic performance.  ASC 810
will  require a reporting  entity to provide  additional  disclosures  about its
involvement with variable interest entities and any significant  changes in risk
exposure  due to that  involvement.  A  reporting  entity  will be  required  to
disclose  how its  involvement  with a  variable  interest  entity  affects  the
reporting entity's financial  statements.  ASC 810 is effective for fiscal years
beginning  after  November 15,  2009,  and interim  periods  within those fiscal
years.  Management is currently  evaluating the  requirements of ASC 810 and has
not yet determined the impact on the Company's condensed  consolidated financial
statements.


                       FONAR CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
              NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                DECEMBER 31, 2009
                                   (UNAUDITED)


NOTE 2 - SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED)

Recent Accounting Pronouncements (Continued)
--------------------------------

In September 2009, the FASB reached final consensus on a new revenue recognition
standard,  ASC topic 815 (formerly EIFT Issue No. 08-1),  "Revenue  Arrangements
with Multiple Deliverables". ASC topic 815 addresses how to determine whether an
arrangement  involving  multiple  deliverables  contains  more  than one unit of
accounting,  and how the arrangement consideration should be allocated among the
separate units of accounting. This Issue is effective for fiscal years beginning
after June 15, 2010 and may be applied  retrospectively or prospectively for new
or materially modified arrangements.  In addition,  early adoption is permitted.
The Company is currently evaluating the potential impact of ASC topic 815 on its
condensed consolidated financial statements.

In September 2009, the EITF reached final consensus on a new revenue recognition
standard, ASC topic 350 (formerly EITF 09-3),  "Applicability of AICPA Statement
of Position 97-2 to Certain  Arrangements That Contain Software  Elements".  ASC
topic 350 amends the scope of AICPA Statement of Position 97-2, Software Revenue
Recognition to exclude tangible  products that include software and non-software
components   that  function   together  to  deliver  the   product's   essential
functionality.  This Issue shall be applied on a  prospective  basis for revenue
arrangements entered into or materially modified in fiscal years beginning on or
after June 15, 2010.  Earlier  application is permitted as of the beginning of a
company's  fiscal year provided the company has not previously  issued financial
statements  for any period  within  that year.  An entity  shall not elect early
application of this Issue unless it also elects early application of Issue 08-1.
The Company is currently evaluating the potential impact of ASC topic 350 on its
condensed consolidated financial statements.

In January  2010,  the FASB  issued  Accounting  Standards  Update  No.  2010-0,
Improving  Disclosures  about  Fair  Value  Measurements.  The  Update  provides
amendments to FASB ASC 820-10 that require  entities to disclose  separately the
amounts of  significant  transfers  in and out of Level 1 and Level 2 fair value
measurements and describe the reasons for the transfers.  In addition the Update
requires  entities to present  separately  information  about purchases,  sales,
issuances,  and settlements in the  reconciliation  for fair value  measurements
using  significant  unobservable  inputs (Level 3). The  disclosures  related to
Level 1 and Level 2 fair value  measurements  are  effective  for the Company in
2010  and the  disclosures  related  to  Level  3 fair  value  measurements  are
effective for the Company in 2011. The Update requires new disclosures only, and
will have no impact on the Company's condensed  consolidated financial position,
results of operations, or cash flow.

Reclassifications
-----------------

Certain prior year amounts have been reclassified to conform to the current year
presentation.   The  reclassifcations  did  not  have  any  effect  on  reported
consolidated net losses for any periods presented.


                       FONAR CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
              NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                DECEMBER 31, 2009
                                   (UNAUDITED)


NOTE 3 - MEDICAL RECEIVABLES, ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE AND MANAGEMENT FEE RECEIVABLE

Medical Receivables
-------------------

The  Company  was  assigned  medical  receivables  valued  at  $11,775,000,   in
connection with the  satisfaction  of the management  fees and termination  fees
related to a  Termination  and  Replacement  Agreement  dated May 23, 2005.  The
balance of the net medical receivables as of December 31, 2009 and June 30, 2009
was $224,000 and  $374,000,  respectively.  As of December 31, 2009 and June 30,
2009, the allowance for doubtful  accounts  totaled  $1,440,500 and  $1,343,500,
respectively, on these receivables.

Accounts Receivable and Management Fee Receivable
-------------------------------------------------

Receivables, net is comprised of the following at December 31, 2009:
                                 (000's Omitted)

                                   Gross      Allowance for doubtfu
                                   Receivable      accounts            Net

Receivables from equipment
sales and service contracts        $   8,345        $   2,423        $   5,922
                                   =========        =========        =========

Receivables from equipment
sales and service contracts-
related parties                    $     119        $    -           $     119
                                   =========        =========        =========

Management fee receivables         $   8,445        $   5,333        $   3,112
                                   =========        =========        =========

Management fee receivables from
related medical practices ("PC's") $   2,908      $   1,105        $   1,803
                                   =========        =========        =========

The Company's customers are concentrated in the healthcare industry.

The  Company's  receivables  from  the  related  and  non-related   professional
corporations (PC's) substantially  consists of fees outstanding under management
agreements.  Payment of the  outstanding  fees is dependent on collection by the
PC's of fees from third party medical reimbursement  organizations,  principally
insurance companies and health management organizations.


                       FONAR CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
              NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                DECEMBER 31, 2009
                                   (UNAUDITED)


NOTE 3 - MEDICAL RECEIVABLES, ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE AND MANAGEMENT FEE RECEIVABLE
(CONTINUED)

Collection by the Company of its management fee  receivables  may be impaired by
the  uncollectibility  of  the  PC's  medical  fees  from  third  party  payors,
particularly   insurance  carriers  covering  automobile  no-fault  and  workers
compensation  claims due to longer  payment  cycles and  rigorous  informational
requirements and certain other disallowed  claims.  Approximately 47% and 49% of
the PC's net  revenues  for the six months  ended  December  31,  2009 and 2008,
respectively,  were derived from no-fault and personal injury protection claims.
The Company  considers the aging of its accounts  receivable in determining  the
amount of  allowance  for  doubtful  accounts and  contractual  allowances.  The
Company  generally takes all legally available steps to collect its receivables.
Credit losses  associated with the receivables are provided for in the condensed
consolidated financial statements and have historically been within management's
expectations.

Net revenues from management and other fees charged to the related PCs accounted
for  approximately  10.3% and 8.0% of the  consolidated net revenues for the six
months ended December 31, 2009 and 2008, respectively.

Effective June 30, 2009,  Tallahassee  Magnetic Resonance Imaging,  PA, Stand Up
MRI of Boca Raton,  PA and Stand Up MRI &  Diagnostic  Center,  PA (all  related
medical  practices)  entered in a guaranty  for all  management  fees which were
indebted to the Company. Each entity will jointly and severally guarantee to the
Company all payments due to the Company which have arisen under each  individual
management agreement.


NOTE 4 - INVENTORIES

Inventories included in the accompanying condensed consolidated balance sheet
consist of the following:
                               (000's omitted)

                                   December 31,         June 30,
                                       2009              2009
                                   ------------         -------
Purchased parts, components
   and supplies                       $ 1,939           $ 2,065
Work-in-process                           900             1,107
                                      -------           -------
                                      $ 2,839           $ 3,172
                                      =======           =======


                       FONAR CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
              NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                DECEMBER 31, 2009
                                   (UNAUDITED)


NOTE 5 - COSTS AND ESTIMATED EARNINGS ON UNCOMPLETED CONTRACTS AND CUSTOMER
ADVANCES


      1)  Information relating to uncompleted contracts as of December 31, 2009
      is as follows:
                                           (000's omitted)

      Costs incurred on uncompleted
            contracts                      $ 8,033
      Estimated earnings                     4,300
                                           --------
                                            12,333
      Less: Billings to date                14,190
                                           --------
                                           $(1,857)
                                           ========

Included in the accompanying  condensed  consolidated  balance sheet at December
31, 2009 under the following captions:

         Costs and estimated earnings in excess of
        billings on uncompleted contracts              $ 1,257
Less: Billings in excess of costs and estimated
        earnings on uncompleted contracts                3,114
                                                       --------
                                                       $(1,857)
                                                       ========

2)  Customer advances consist of the following as of December 31, 2009:


                                                   Related
                                          Total     Party     Other
                                         --------  --------  --------
Total Advances                           $ 21,430  $   -     $ 21,430
Less: Advances
       on contracts under construction     14,190      -       14,190
                                         --------  --------  --------
                                         $  7,240  $   -     $  7,240
                                         ========  ========  ========


                       FONAR CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
              NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                DECEMBER 31, 2009
                                   (UNAUDITED)


NOTE 6 - STOCKHOLDERS DEFICIENCY

Common Stock

During the six months ended December 31, 2009:

a)   The  Company   issued  10,000  shares  of  common  stock  to  employees  as
     compensation valued at $18,200 under a stock bonus plan.


NOTE 7 - OTHER CURRENT LIABILITIES

Other current  liabilities in the accompanying  condensed  consolidated  balance
sheet consist of the following:

                                 (000's omitted)

                                        December 31,                  June 30,
                                            2009                        2009
                                        ------------                ------------
Royalties                                $      623                  $     623
Accrued salaries, commissions
   and payroll taxes                            765                        882
Accrued interest                                989                        901
Litigation accruals                             193                        193
Sales tax payable                             2,544                      2,434
Legal and other professional fees               789                        675
Accounting fees                                 292                        480
Insurance premiums                               60                         30
Penalty - Sales tax                             682                        682
Penalty  - 401k plan  (see Note 11)             250                        250
Purchase scanners                               590                        440
Other                                           781                        870
                                        ------------                ------------
                                              8,558                 $    8,460
                                        ============                ============


                       FONAR CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
              NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                DECEMBER 31, 2009
                                   (UNAUDITED)


NOTE 8 - SALE OF CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARY AND INVESTMENT

Sale of Consolidated Subsidiary
-------------------------------

On September 30, 2008,  the Company sold its 92.3% interest (to a related party)
in an  entity  that  provided  management  services  to a  diagnostic  center in
Bensonhurst, NY. The Company continues to manage other diagnostic centers in the
New York region.

The related third party  purchased all assets and assumed all liabilities of the
diagnostic center which included cash, the management fee receivable,  furniture
and fixtures and other  miscellaneous  assets.  The purchase price for the 92.3%
interest was $2,307,500 all of which was paid in cash at the time of closing.

The following is the  calculation of the gain on sale of the 92.3% interest in a
consolidated subsidiary:

                                 (000's omitted)
      Selling Price - Net cash paid:                   $ 2,307

      Assets and liabilities sold:
            Cash                         $    14
            Management fee
                receivable -net              917
            Property and
                 equipment - net               1
            Other assets                      34
            Accounts payable             (    16)
            Minority interest            (    91)
      Subtotal                           -------           859
                                                       -------
      Gain on sale of consolidated subsidiary          $ 1,448
                                                       =======


                       FONAR CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
              NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                DECEMBER 31, 2009
                                   (UNAUDITED)


NOTE 9 - SEGMENT AND RELATED INFORMATION

The Company operates in two industry  segments - manufacturing and the servicing
of medical equipment and management of diagnostic imaging centers.

The accounting  policies of the segments are the same as those  described in the
summary of significant accounting policies as disclosed in the Company's 10-K as
of June  30,  2009.  All  inter-segment  sales  are  market-based.  The  Company
evaluates performance based on income or loss from operations.

Summarized financial information concerning the Company's reportable segments is
shown in the following table:

                                 (000's omitted)

                                                          Management
                                                         of Diagnostic
                                               Medical      Imaging
                                              Equipment     Centers     Totals
                                              ---------  ------------  ---------
For the three months ended December 31, 2009:

Net revenues from external customers          $  5,645     $  2,568    $  8,213
Inter-segment net revenues                    $    233     $   -       $    233
Loss from operations                          $   (756)    $   (511)   $ (1,267)
Depreciation and amortization                 $    229     $    137    $    366
Capital expenditures                          $    170     $      3    $    173

For the three months ended December 31, 2008:

Net revenues from external customers          $  8,840     $  2,450    $ 11,290
Inter-segment net revenues                    $    245     $   -       $    245
Income (Loss) from operations                 $  1,252     $   (551)   $    701
Depreciation and amortization                 $    264     $    168    $    432
Capital expenditures                          $    188     $      4    $    192


                       FONAR CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
              NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                DECEMBER 31, 2009
                                   (UNAUDITED)

                                                          Management
                                                         of Diagnostic
                                               Medical      Imaging
                                              Equipment     Centers     Totals
                                              ---------  ------------  ---------
For the six months ended December 31, 2009:

Net revenues from external customers          $ 10,605     $  5,098    $ 15,703
Inter-segment net revenues                    $    465     $   -       $    465
Loss from operations                          $ (1,658)    $ (1,030)   $ (2,688)
Depreciation and amortization                 $    458     $    274    $    732
Capital expenditures                          $    365     $      8    $    373
Identifiable assets                           $ 16,861     $  8,039    $ 24,900

For the six months ended December 31, 2008:

Net revenues from external customers          $ 12,854     $  5,221    $ 18,075
Inter-segment net revenues                    $    517     $   -       $    517
Loss from operations                          $   (608)    $   (538)   $ (1,146)
Depreciation and amortization                 $    531     $    336    $    867
Capital expenditures                          $    398     $      4    $    402
Identifiable assets - June 30, 2009           $ 17,302     $ 11,057    $ 28,359



NOTE 10 - SUPPLEMENTAL CASH FLOW INFORMATION

During the six months ended December 31, 2009 and December 31, 2008, the Company
paid $88,000 and $238,000 for interest, respectively.


NOTE 11 - COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES

Litigation
----------

The Company is subject to legal proceedings and claims arising from the ordinary
course  of its  business,  including  personal  injury,  customer  contract  and
employment  claims. In the opinion of management,  the aggregate  liability,  if
any, with respect to such actions,  will not have a material  adverse  effect on
the consolidated financial position or results of operations of the Company.

Other Matters
-------------

In March 2007,  the Company and New York State  taxing  authorities  conducted a
conference  to  discuss  a sales  tax  matter  to  determine  if  certain  sales
transactions are subject to sales tax withholdings.  In fiscal 2007, the Company
recorded a provision of $250,000 to cover any potential tax liability  including
interest. This matter was settled in May of 2009 with no payment required by the
Company.  The Company  reversed the accrual for this matter in the quarter ended
June 30, 2009.



                       FONAR CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
              NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                DECEMBER 31, 2009
                                   (UNAUDITED)


NOTE 11 -  COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES (CONTINUED)

Other Matters (Continued)
-------------

The Company is also  delinquent in filing sales tax returns for certain  states,
for which the Company has  transacted  business.  As of December 31,  2009,  the
Company has recorded tax obligations of  approximately  $2,080,000 plus interest
and  penalties  of  approximately  $1,460,000.  The Company is in the process of
determining the regulatory requirements in order to become compliant.

The Company has determined  they may not be in compliance with the Department of
Labor and Internal  Revenue Service  regulations  concerning the requirements to
file Form 5500 to report  activity  of its 401(k)  Employee  Benefit  Plan.  The
filings do not require the  Company to pay tax,  however  they may be subject to
penalty  for  non-compliance.  The  Company  has  recorded  provisions  for  any
potential  penalties  totaling  $250,000.  Such  amount  is the  Company's  best
estimate of potential  penalties.  Management is unable to determine the outcome
of this  uncertainty.  The Company has  engaged  outside  counsel to handle such
matters to determine  the  necessary  requirements  to ensure  compliance.  Such
non-compliance could impact the eligibility of the plan.

The  Company's  management  fees are  dependent on collection by the PCs of fees
from reimbursements  from Medicare,  Medicaid,  private insurance,  no fault and
workers'  compensation  carriers,  self-pay and other  third-party  payors.  The
health  care  industry  is  experiencing  the  effects of the  federal and state
governments' trend toward cost containment,  as government and other third-party
payors seek to impose lower  reimbursement  and utilization  rates and negotiate
reduced  payment  schedules  with  providers.  The  cost  containment  measures,
consolidated   with  the  increasing   influence  of  managed-care   payors  and
competition for patients,  have resulted in reduced rates of  reimbursement  for
services  provided  by the  Company  from  time to time.  The  Company's  future
revenues  and  results  of  operations  may  be  adversely  impacted  by  future
reductions in reimbursement rates.

In 2009, the Obama administration announced its intentions for healthcare reform
in the United States. The plan includes providing  healthcare  coverage for some
40 million uninsured Americans. The plan calls for, among other things, reducing
costs  through  more  vigilant  control  of  healthcare  utilization,  including
diagnostic  imaging services.  There are presently bills passed by the House and
the Senate which differ in certain respects. It is unknown whether the bills can
be  reconciled,  what the forms of any  reconciliation  will be or even  whether
healthcare reform will pass. The use of radiology benefit managers, or RBMs, has
increased in recent years. It is common practice for health  insurance  carriers
to contract with RBMs to manage utilization of diagnostic imaging procedures for
their  insureds.  In many  cases,  this  leads to lower  utilization  of imaging
procedures based on a determination of medical  necessity.  The efficacy of RBMs
is still a highly  controversial  topic.  The Company cannot predict whether the
current  administration's  healthcare  plan and the use of RBMs will  negatively
impact its business,  but it is possible that the Company's  financial  position
and results of operations could be negatively affected by increased  utilization
of RBMs.




                              FONAR CORPORATION AND
                                  SUBSIDIARIES
              NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                DECEMBER 31, 2009
                                   (UNAUDITED)

NOTE 11 - COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES (CONTINUED)

Other Matters (Continued)
-------------

While the  Company has  prepared  certain  estimates  of the impact of the above
discussed  changes and proposed  changes,  it is not possible to fully  quantify
their impact on its business. There can be no assurance that the impact of these
changes  will not be  greater  than  estimated  or that any future  health  care
legislation  or  reimbursement  changes will not adversely  affect the Company's
business.

NASDAQ Continued Listing
------------------------

The Company's stockholder's deficiency was $11.8 million as of December 31, 2009
and $2.9 million as of June 30, 2009.  As a result of the  Company's  failure to
meet the minimum stockholders equity requirement of $2.5 million,  NASDAQ issued
a notice of  non-compliance  but granted the Company an  extension to October 5,
2009 to evidence compliance with the minimum stockholders' equity requirement or
minimum  net income  requirement  for  continued  listing on the NASDAQ  Capital
Market.  Following the filing of the Company's Form 10-K for the year ended June
30,  2009,  the Company had still not met the minimum  stockholders'  net equity
requirement, but had achieved compliance with the alternative minimum net income
requirement of $500,000, showing a net income of $1.1 million.


NOTE 12 - LICENSE FEES AND ROYALTIES

In July 2000,  the Company  entered into a  non-exclusive  sales  representative
agreement with an unrelated third party. The agreement  requires the third party
to sell at least two Fonar MRI  scanners or if it does not,  pay an amount equal
to the Company's gross margin on the unsold MRI scanners.  The Company  received
the gross margin payment on one scanner of $585,493 in November 2008 and applied
a previously received deposit for two other gross margin payments for a total of
$1,755,493  which was included in revenue for the year ended June 30, 2009.  The
Company  received the last gross margin payment of $585,493 in July 2009,  which
has been  included in revenue for the six months ended  December 31, 2009. As of
April 2009, this agreement has expired.

NOTE 13 - NOTES RECEIVABLE

On October 27, 2009,  the Company  entered into an agreement with Mountain Crest
Ventures  LLC to  assign  the  promissory  note from  Health  Plus for the Asset
Purchase  Agreement.  The Company  received  $1,580,862,  which  represented the
remaining principal balance less a discount of $350,000. Mountain Crest Ventures
LLC  retains  all rights  under the  original  promissory  note to  collect  all
remaining  payments due. The Company recorded the $350,000 loss in the financial
statements for the six months ended December 31, 2009.


                       FONAR CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
              NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                DECEMBER 31, 2009
                                   (UNAUDITED)

NOTE 14 - INCOME TAXES

Effective  January 1, 2007, the Company  adopted the provisions of ASC topic 740
(formerly FASB  Interpretation  No. 48/FASB  Statement No. 109,  "Accounting for
Uncertainty in Income Taxes"). ASC topic 740 prescribes a recognition  threshold
and  a  measurement  attribute  for  the  financial  statement  recognition  and
measurement  of tax  positions  taken or expected to be taken in a corporate tax
return.  For those  benefits  to be  recognized,  a tax  position  must be more-
likely-than-not  to  be  sustained  upon  examination  by  taxing   authorities.
Differences  between tax positions taken or expected to be taken in a tax return
and the benefit  recognized  and  measured  pursuant to the  interpretation  are
referred to as "unrecognized  benefits". A liability is recognized (or amount of
net operating loss  carryforward  or amount of tax refundable is reduced) for an
unrecognized tax benefit because it represents an enterprise's  potential future
obligation to the taxing authority for a tax position that was not recognized as
a result of applying the provisions of ASC topic 740.

In accordance  with ASC topic 740,  interest costs related to  unrecognized  tax
benefits are required to be calculated (if  applicable)  and would be classified
as "Interest  expense,  net".  Penalties if incurred  would be  recognized  as a
component of "Selling, general and administrative" expenses.

The Company files  corporate  income tax returns in the United States  (federal)
and in various state and local jurisdictions.  In most instances, the Company is
no longer  subject to federal,  state and local income tax  examinations  by tax
authorities for years prior to 2004.

The adoption of the  provisions of ASC topic 740 did not have a material  impact
on the Company's consolidated financial position and results of operations. Upon
the adoption and as of September  30, 2009, no liability  for  unrecognized  tax
benefits  was  required  to  be  recorded.  The  Company  does  not  expect  its
unrecognized tax benefit position to change during the next 12 months.

The  Company  recognized  a deferred  tax asset of $863,660  and a deferred  tax
liability  of  $863,660  as of  December  31,  2009,  primarily  relating to net
operating loss carryforwards of approximately  $169,884,000  available to offset
future taxable income through 2029. The net operating  losses begin to expire in
2012 for federal tax purposes and in 2012 for state income tax purposes.


                       FONAR CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
              NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                DECEMBER 31, 2009
                                   (UNAUDITED)

NOTE 14 - INCOME TAXES (Continued)


The ultimate  realization  of deferred tax assets is dependent on the generation
of future taxable income during the periods in which those temporary differences
become deductible. The Company considers projected future taxable income and tax
planning strategies in making this assessment.  At present, the Company does not
have a sufficient history of income to conclude that it is  more-likely-than-not
that the  Company  will be able to realize  all of its tax  benefits in the near
future and therefore a valuation allowance was established for the full value of
the deferred tax asset.

A valuation  allowance will be maintained  until  sufficient  positive  evidence
exists to support the  reversal of any portion or all of the  valuation.  Should
the Company become  profitable in future periods with  supportable  trends,  the
valuation allowance will be reversed accordingly.

NOTE 15 - SUBSEQUENT EVENTS

The Company had a license  agreement which requires the Company to pay a royalty
on the  Company's  future sales of certain MRI imaging  apparatus.  The licensor
claimed that the Company  breached  its  contract  and was owed certain  amounts
under this  agreement.  During  September  2009,  the  Company  entered  into an
understanding regarding this matter with the licensor. On February 12, 2010, the
Company  signed a settlement  agreement  and release with this licensor in which
the Company will pay principal and interest of $711,181.  The Company has agreed
to pay this amount  plus 5%  interest  over a term  beginning  February  2010 to
September 2014.

In January  2010,  the Company  was  required to  implement a  substantial  cost
reduction which consisted in a reduction in personnel and significant reductions
in the remaining  employees  compensation and other costs.  Pursuant to the cost
reductions, there was no termination cost incurred.

The Company has evaluated  subsequent events through February 22, 2010, which is
the date the  Company  filed its  quarterly  report on Form 10-Q for the  period
ended December 31, 2009 with the Securities and Exchange  Commission.  There are
no further subsequent events for disclosure.



                       FONAR CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES

Item 2. MANAGEMENT'S  DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS
     OF OPERATIONS.

For the six month period ended December 31, 2009, we reported a net loss of $3.0
million on  revenues  of $15.7  million as compared to net income of $331,000 on
revenues of $18.1  million for the six month period ended  December 31, 2008. We
recognized  an  operating  loss of $2.7  million for the six month  period ended
December  31, 2009  compared to an  operating  loss of $1.1  million for the six
month period ended December 31, 2008.  The principal  reason for the smaller net
loss in the first half of fiscal  2009 as  compared  to the first half of fiscal
2010 was that during the first  quarter of fiscal 2009,  we recognized a gain of
$1.4  million on the sale of a  consolidated  entity  managing  an MRI  scanning
facility  and,  $1.8 million in license fees and  royalties in the first half of
fiscal 2009 as compared to $0 in license fees and royalties in the first half of
fiscal  2010.  The license  fees were paid  pursuant to an  agreement  which has
expired.

For the three month period ended December 31, 2009, we reported net loss of $1.3
million on  revenues  of $8.2  million as  compared to net income of $781,000 on
revenues of $11.3  million for the three month period  ended  December 31, 2008.
The figures for the second  quarter of fiscal 2009  included the $1.8 million in
license fees as compared to $0 in such fees in fiscal 2010.

Overall,  our  revenues  decreased  13.1% from $18.1  million  for the first six
months of fiscal 2009 to $15.7  million for the first six months of fiscal 2010.
Revenues from service and repair fees increased  4.1%, from $5.3 million for the
first six  months of fiscal  2009 to $5.5  million  for the first six  months of
fiscal 2010, but product sales declined  22.3%,  from $5.8 million for the first
six months of 2009 to $4.5 million for the first six months of fiscal 2010.

Due to the decrease in our revenues our operating  loss for the six months ended
December 31, 2009  increased  as compared to the six months  ended  December 31,
2008 (a $2.7 million  operating  loss for the first six months of fiscal 2010 as
compared  to a $1.1  million  operating  loss for the first six months of fiscal
2009). The increase in the operating loss was principally due to the decrease in
revenues of 13%,  while costs and expenses in the aggregate  declined only 4.3%,
from $19.2  million in the first six months of fiscal  2009 to $18.4  million in
the first six months of fiscal 2010.

In order to reduce our operating losses and demands on our cash and other liquid
reserves,  we instituted an aggressive  program of cost cutting  during  January
2010.  These  measures  include   reductions  in  the  size  of  our  workforce,
compensation  and benefits,  as well as across the board  reduction of expenses.
These cost  reductions  are intended to enable us to withstand  periods of lower
volumes of MRI scanner  sales,  such as we have  experienced  in fiscal 2008 and
2009, by keeping expenditures at levels which, if necessary, can be supported by
service revenues and HMCA revenues.

Forward Looking Statements

Certain   statements   made  in  this   Quarterly   Report   on  Form  10-Q  are
"forward-looking  statements"  (within  the  meaning of the  Private  Securities
Litigation  Reform Act of 1995) regarding the plans and objectives of Management
for  future  operations.  Such  statements  involve  known  and  unknown  risks,
uncertainties  and other factors that may cause our actual results,  performance
or achievements to be materially different from any future results,  performance
or achievements  expressed or implied by such  forward-looking  statements.  The
forward-looking  statements  included  herein are based on current  expectations
that involve  numerous  risks and  uncertainties.  Our plans and  objectives are
based, in part, on assumptions involving the expansion of business.  Assumptions
relating to the foregoing involve judgments with respect to, among other things,
future  economic,   competitive  and  market   conditions  and  future  business
decisions,  all of which are difficult or impossible to predict  accurately  and
many of which are beyond our control.  Although we believe that our  assumptions
underlying the forward-looking statements are reasonable, any of the assumptions
could  prove  inaccurate  and,  therefore,  there can be no  assurance  that the
forward-looking statements included in this Report will prove to be accurate. In
light of the significant uncertainties inherent in the forward-looking statement
included herein,  the inclusion of such information  should not be regarded as a
representation  by us or any other person that our  objectives and plans will be
achieved.

Results of Operations

We operate in two industry  segments:  the  manufacture and servicing of medical
(MRI) equipment,  our traditional business which is conducted directly by Fonar,
and  diagnostic  facilities  management  services,  which is  conducted  through
Fonar's wholly-owned subsidiary, Health Management Corporation of America, which
we also refer to as HMCA.

Trends in the second  quarter of fiscal 2010 include a decrease in product sales
revenues and an increase in service and repair  fees,  a decrease in  management
fees, as well a decrease in our total costs and  expenses,  in particular in our
costs  related to product  sales.  We will  continue  to focus on our  marketing
efforts to improve  sales  performance  and increase  patient  volume at the MRI
facilities managed by HMCA in fiscal 2010. In addition, we will monitor our cost
cutting program and will continue to reduce costs as necessary.

For the three month  period ended  December  31, 2009,  as compared to the three
month period ended  December 31, 2008,  overall  revenues from MRI product sales
decreased 32.8% ($3.0 million compared to $4.4 million).

For the six month period ended  December 31, 2009,  as compared to the six month
period  ended  December  31,  2008,  overall  revenues  from MRI  product  sales
decreased 22.2% ($4.5 million compared to $5.8 million).

Service  revenues for the three month period ended December 31, 2009 as compared
to the three month period  ended  December  31, 2008  remained  constant at $2.7
million.  Unrelated  party  service  and repair fees  remained  constant at $2.6
million and related party service and repair fees remained  constant at $55,000.
We anticipate that there will be increases in service  revenues as warranties on
installed scanners expire over time.

Service  revenues for the six month period ended  December 31, 2009, as compared
to the six month period ended  December 31, 2008 increased by 4.1% ($5.5 million
compared to $5.2 million).  Unrelated party service and repair fees increased by
4.2% ($5.4  million  compared to $5.2  million)  and related  party  service and
repair fees remained constant at $110,000.

There were  approximately  $2.9  million in foreign  revenues  for the first six
months of fiscal 2010 as compared to approximately  $397,000 in foreign revenues
for the first six months of fiscal  2009,  representing  an  increase in foreign
revenues of 630%. The Company is making a concerted  effort to increase  foreign
sales, most recently through its foreign distributors.

Overall,  for the first six  months of fiscal  2010,  revenues  for the  medical
equipment segment decreased by 17.5% to $10.6 million from $12.9 million for the
first six months of fiscal 2009. The revenues  generated by HMCA  decreased,  by
2.4%,  to $5.1  million  for the first six months of fiscal  2010 as compared to
$5.2 million for the first six months of fiscal 2009.

We recognize MRI scanner sales revenues on the "percentage of completion" basis,
which means the revenues are recognized as the scanner is manufactured. Revenues
recognized  in a  particular  quarter do not  necessarily  reflect new orders or
progress payments made by customers in that quarter. We build the scanner as the
customer meets certain  benchmarks in its site  preparation in order to minimize
the time lag between  incurring  costs of  manufacturing  and our receipt of the
cash  progress   payments  from  the  customer  which  are  due  upon  delivery.
Consequently,  there can be a disparity  between the  revenues  recognized  in a
fiscal period and the number of product sales. Generally, the recognized revenue
results from revenues from a scanner sale are  recognized in a fiscal quarter or
quarters following the quarter in which the sale was made.

Costs  related  to product  sales  decreased  by 19.3% from $2.8  million in the
second  quarter of fiscal  2009 to $2.3  million in the second  quarter of 2010,
reflecting a decrease in product sales revenues.

Costs related to product sales  decreased by 7.7% from $4.3 million in the first
six  months  of fiscal  2009 to $3.9  million  in the first six  months of 2010,
reflecting the  corresponding  decrease in product sales revenues as well as our
lower cost basis for parts and components.

Costs related to providing service for the second quarter decreased by 4.9% from
$1.0 million in the second quarter of fiscal 2009 to $998,000 in fiscal 2010. We
believe that an important factor in keeping service costs down is our ability to
monitor the performance of customers'  scanners from our facilities in Melville,
New York,  on a daily basis and to detect and repair any  irregularities  before
more serious problems result.

Cost  related to  providing  service  decreased by 5.9% from $2.1 million in the
first six months of fiscal 2009 to $2.0 million in fiscal 2010.

Overall,  the operating  results for our medical  equipment segment reflected an
operating  loss of $1.7  million  for the  first six  months  of fiscal  2010 as
compared to an  operating  loss of  $608,000  for the first six months of fiscal
2009.

HMCA  revenues  increased  in the second  quarter of fiscal 2010 by 4.9% to $2.6
million from $2.4 million for the second  quarter of fiscal 2009,  primarily due
to increased  revenues from our Florida  locations.  HMCA revenues for the first
six months of fiscal 2010, however,  declined slightly by 2.4% from $5.2 million
in the first six months of fiscal  2009 to $5.1  million in the first six months
of fiscal 2010.  We now manage ten sites,  nine of which are equipped with FONAR
UPRIGHT(R) MRI scanners. HMCA experienced an operating loss of $1.0
million for the first six months of fiscal 2010  compared to  operating  loss of
$539,000 for the first six months of fiscal 2009.

HMCA cost of revenues for the first six months of fiscal 2009 as compared to the
first six months of fiscal  2010  increased  by 14.5% from $3.6  million to $4.2
million.  HMCA cost of revenues increased to $2.1 million for the second quarter
of fiscal  2010 as compared  to $1.8  million  for the second  quarter of fiscal
2009.  The increase in HMCA's cost of revenues was  primarily  the result of the
increased  expenditures  we have been  making to improve  HMCA  revenues  by our
marketing   efforts,   which   focus   on   the   unique   capability   of   our
Upright(R) MRI Scanners to scan patients in different positions.

In 2009, the Obama administration announced its intentions for healthcare reform
in the United States. The plan contemplates  providing  healthcare  coverage for
some 40 million  uninsured  Americans.  The plan calls for,  among other things,
more vigilant control of healthcare  utilization,  including  diagnostic imaging
services.  In  November  of 2009,  the U.S.  House of  Representatives  passed a
healthcare  reform  bill.  In  December of 2009,  the Senate  passed a different
healthcare  reform bill.  Whether the two bills can be  reconciled or healthcare
reform be enacted at all is uncertain at this time.

The use of radiology benefit  managers,  or RBM's has increased in recent years.
It is common  practice for health  insurance  carriers to contract  with RBMs to
manage utilization of diagnostic imaging procedures for their insureds.  In many
cases,  this  leads  to  lower  utilization  of  imaging  procedures  based on a
determination  of  medical  necessity.  The  efficacy  of RBMs is still a highly
controversial   topic.   The  Company   cannot   predict   whether  the  current
administration's  healthcare plan and the use of RBMs will negatively impact its
business,  but it is possible that the Company's  financial position and results
of operations could be negatively affected by increased utilization of RBMs.

While the  Company has  prepared  certain  estimates  of the impact of the above
discussed  changes and proposed  changes,  it is not possible to fully  quantify
their impact on its business. There can be no assurance that the impact of these
changes  will not be  greater  than  estimated  or that any future  health  care
legislation  or  reimbursement  changes will not adversely  affect the Company's
business.

The decrease in our consolidated net revenues of 27.3% from $11.3 million in the
second  quarter of fiscal 2009 to $8.2  million in the second  quarter of fiscal
2010, was offset in part by a decrease of 10.5% in total costs and expenses from
$10.6  million in the second  quarter of fiscal 2009 compared to $9.5 million in
the second quarter of fiscal 2010. As a result, our loss from operations changed
from a income of $701,000 in the second quarter of fiscal 2009 to a loss of $1.3
million in the second quarter of fiscal 2010.

For the first six months of fiscal 2010 the consolidated  revenues  decreased by
13.1% to $15.7  million  from $18.1  million  for the first six months of fiscal
2009 while the total costs and expenses  decreased by only 4.3% to $18.4 million
for the first six  months of fiscal  2010 from $19.2  million  for the first six
months of fiscal 2009.  Our operating  loss  increased  from $1.1 million in the
first six  months  of fiscal  2009 to $2.7  million  in the first six  months of
fiscal 2010.

Selling,  general and administrative  expenses decreased by 6.0% to $6.3 million
in the first six months of fiscal 2010 from $6.7 million in the first six months
of fiscal 2009. The compensatory  element of stock issuances,  which is included
in selling,  general and administrative  expenses, was $18,000 for the first six
months of fiscal 2010 as compared to $0 for the first six months of fiscal 2009.

Research  and  development  expenses  decreased  by 9.8% to $1.6 million for the
first six months of fiscal 2010 as compared to $1.8  million for the first three
months of fiscal 2009.

Interest  expense in the first six months of fiscal 2010  increased  to $188,000
compared to $119,000 for the first six months of fiscal 2009.

Inventories  decreased by 10.5% to $2.8 million at December 31, 2009 as compared
to $3.2  million at June 30,  2009  representing  the use of raw  materials  and
components in our inventory to fill orders.

Management  fee and medical  receivables  decreased  by 10.1% to $4.9 million at
December 31, 2009 from $5.8 million at June 30, 2009,  primarily due to improved
collections on the Company's management fee and medical receivables.

The overall  trends  reflected  in the results of  operations  for the first six
months of fiscal 2010 are an increase in revenues  from service and repair fees,
as compared  to the first six months of fiscal 2009 ($5.5  million for the first
six months of fiscal 2010 as  compared to $5.3  million for the first six months
of  fiscal  2009),  and a  decrease  in  MRI  equipment  segment  revenues  both
absolutely  ($10.6  million as compared to $12.9  million)  and relative to HMCA
revenues  ($10.6 million or 67.5% from the MRI equipment  segment as compared to
$5.1  million or 32.5% from HMCA,  for the first six months of fiscal  2010,  as
compared  to $12.9  million or 71.1%  from the MRI  equipment  segment  and $5.2
million or 28.9%, from HMCA, for the first six months of fiscal 2009). Unrelated
party sales constituted 100% of our medical equipment product sales for both the
first six months of fiscal 2010 and of fiscal 2009.

We are committed to improving the operating  results we experienced in the first
six months in fiscal 2010. Nevertheless, factors beyond our control, such as the
timing and rate of market growth which depend on economic conditions,  including
the  availability  of  credit,  payor  reimbursement  rates  and  policies,  and
unexpected  expenditures or the timing of such expenditures,  make it impossible
to forecast  future  operating  results.  We believe we are pursuing the correct
policies  which should prove  successful in improving  the  Company's  operating
results.

Our FONAR  UPRIGHT(R)  MRI, and  Fonar-360(TM)  MRI scanners,  together with our
works-in-progress,   are  intended  to  significantly  improve  our  competitive
position.

Our FONAR UPRIGHT(R) MRI scanner,  which operates at 6000 gauss (.6 Tesla) field
strength, allows patients to be scanned while standing,  sitting,  reclining and
in multiple  flexion and extension  positions.  It is common in visualizing  the
spine that  abnormalities are visualized in some positions and not others.  This
enables surgical  corrections that heretofore would be unaddressable for lack of
visualizing the symptom causing the pathology. A floor-recessed  elevator brings
the  patient  to the  height  appropriate  for  the  targeted  image  region.  A
custom-built  adjustable  bed will allow  patients to sit or lie on their backs,
sides or  stomachs at any angle.  Full-range-of-motion  studies of the joints in
virtually any direction  are possible and another  promising  feature for sports
injuries.

Recently,  this capability of the FONAR  UPRIGHT(R)  technology has demonstrated
its key value on patients with the Arnold-Chiari syndrome,  which is believed to
affect 200,000 to 500,000  Americans.  In this syndrome,  brain stem compression
and  subsequent  severe  neurological  symptoms  occur in these  patients,  when
because of  weakness  in the support  tissues  within the skull,  the brain stem
descends and is compressed at the base of the skull in the foramen magnum, which
is the  circular  bony  opening at the base of the skull  where the spinal  cord
exits the skull.  Conventional  lie-down  MRI  scanners  cannot make an adequate
evaluation  of the pathology  since the patient's  pathology is most visible and
the   symptoms   most  acute  when  the   patient  is  scanned  in  the  upright
weight-bearing position.

The UPRIGHT(R) MRI has also  demonstrated its value for patients  suffering from
scoliosis.  Scoliosis  patients have been  typically  subjected to routine x-ray
exams for years and must be imaged  upright for an adequate  evaluation of their
scoliosis.  Because the patient must be standing for the exam,  an x-ray machine
has been the only modality that could provide that service.  The  UPRIGHT(R) MRI
is the only MRI scanner  which  allows the patient to stand during the MRI exam.
Fonar has  developed a new RF receiver and scanning  protocol that for the first
time allows  scoliosis  patients to obtain  diagnostic  pictures of their spines
without the risks of x- rays. A recent study by the National  'Cancer  Institute
(2000) of 5,466 women with  scoliosis  reported a 70% increase in breast  cancer
resulting from 24.7 chest x-rays these  patients  received on the average in the
course of their scoliosis treatment. The UPRIGHT(R) MRI examination of scoliosis
enables the needed imaging  evaluation of the degree of spine scoliosis  without
exposing the patient to the risk of breast  cancer from  x-radiation.  Currently
scoliosis affects more than 3,000,000 American women.

In addition,  the  University of California,  Los Angeles (UCLA)  reported their
results  of  their  study of  1,302  patients  utilizing  the  FONAR  UPRIGHT(R)
Multi-Position(TM)  MRI at the 22nd Annual  Meeting of the North  American Spine
Society on October 23, 2007.  The UCLA study showed the superior  ability of the
Dynamic(TM)   FONAR  UPRIGHT(R)  MRI  to  detect  spine   pathology,   including
spondylolisthesis,  disc  herniations  and  disc  degneration,  as  compared  to
visualizations of the spine produced by traditional single position static MRIs.

The UCLA study by MRI of 1,302 back pain patients when they were  UPRIGHT(R) and
examined in a full range of flexion and  extension  positions  made  possible by
FONAR's new  UPRIGHT(R)  technology  established  that  significant  "misses" of
pathology were occurring with static single  position MRI imaging.  At L4-5, the
vertebral level responsible for 49.8% of lumbar disc  herniations,  35.1% of the
spondylolistheses    (vertebral   instabilities)   visualized   by   Dynamic(TM)
Multi-Position(TM)  MRI were being  missed by static  single  position  MRI (510
patients).  Since this vertebral  segment is responsible for the majority of all
disc  herniations,  the  finding may reveal a  significant  cause of failed back
surgeries.   The  UCLA  study  further  showed  the   "miss-rate"  of  vertebral
instabilities  by static only MRI was even higher,  38.7%, at the L3-4 vertebral
segment.  Additionally  the  UCLA  study  showed  that MRI  examinations  of the
cervical spine that did not perform  extension  images of the neck "missed" disc
bulges 23.75% of the time (163 patients).

The UCLA study further  reported that they were able to  quantitatively  measure
the dimensions of the central spinal canal with the "highest accuracy" using the
FONAR  UPRIGHT(R)  Multi-Position(TM)  MRI thereby enabling the extent of spinal
canal  stenosis that existed in patients to be measured.  Spinal canal  stenosis
gives rise to the symptom complex intermittent  neurogenic claudication manifest
as  debilitating  pain  in  the  back  and  lower   extremities,   weakness  and
difficulties  in ambulation  and leg  paresthesias.  Spinal canal  stenosis is a
spinal  compression  syndrome  separate and distinct  from the more common nerve
compression  syndrome  of the spinal  nerves as they exit the  vertebral  column
through the bony neural foramen.

The  FONAR  UPRIGHT(R)  MRI  can  also be  useful  for  MRI  directed  emergency
neuro-surgical  procedures  as the surgeon would have  unhindered  access to the
patient's head when the patient is supine with no  restrictions  in the vertical
direction.  This  easy-entry,  mid-field-strength  scanner could prove ideal for
trauma  centers where a quick  MRI-screening  within the first  critical hour of
treatment will greatly improve  patients'  chances for survival and optimize the
extent of recovery.

The Fonar 360(TM) is an enlarged  room sized magnet in which the floor,  ceiling
and walls of the scan room are part of the magnet  frame.  This is made possible
by  Fonar's  patented  Iron-Frame(TM)  technology  which  allows  the  Company's
engineers  to  control,  contour  and direct the  magnet's  lines of flux in the
patient  gap where  wanted  and almost  none  outside of the steel of the magnet
where  not  wanted.  Consequently,   this  scanner  allows  surgeons  and  other
interventional  physicians  to walk  inside the magnet  and  achieve  360 degree
access to the patient to perform interventional procedures.

The Fonar 360(TM) is presently marketed as a diagnostic scanner and is sometimes
referred to as the Open  Sky(TM)  MRI. In its Open  Sky(TM)  version,  the Fonar
360(TM)  serves as an open  patient  friendly  scanner  which  allows 360 degree
surgical   access  to  the  patient  on  the  scanner   bed.  To  optimize   the
patient-friendly  character of the Open Sky(TM) MRI, the walls,  floor,  ceiling
and magnet poles are decorated with landscape murals.  The patient gap is twenty
inches and the magnetic field strength,  like that of the FONAR  UPRIGHT(R),  is
0.6 Tesla.

In the future, we expect the Fonar 360(TM) to function as an interventional MRI.
The enlarged  room sized  magnet and 360o access to the patient  afforded by the
Fonar  360(TM)  permits  surgeons to walk into the magnet and  perform  surgical
interventions  on the patient under direct MR image guidance.  Most  importantly
the  exceptional  quality of the MRI image and its  capacity  to exhibit  tissue
detail on the image,  can then be  obtained  real time during the  procedure  to
guide the  interventionalist.  Thus surgical  instruments,  needles,  catheters,
endoscopes  and the like could be  introduced  directly  into the human body and
guided  directly  to a  malignant  lesion  using the MRI  image.  The  number of
inoperable  lesions could be  significantly  reduced by the availability of this
new FONAR technology.  Most importantly treatment can be carried directly to the
target tissue.

The  first  Fonar  360(TM)  MRI  scanner,  installed  at  the  Oxford-  Nuffield
Orthopedic Center in Oxford,  United Kingdom,  is now carrying a full diagnostic
imaging  caseload.  In addition,  however,  development of the works in progress
Fonar   360(TM)  MRI  image  guided   interventional   technology   is  actively
progressing.  Fonar software  engineers  have completed and installed  their 2nd
generation tracking software at Oxford-Nuffield  which is designed to enable the
surgeons to insert needles into the patient and accurately  advance them,  under
direct visual image  guidance,  to the target tissue,  such as a tumor,  so that
therapeutic agents can be injected.

The Company  expects  marked demand for its most  commanding  MRI products,  the
FONAR UPRIGHT(R) MRI and the Fonar 360(TM) because of their exceptional features
in patient diagnosis and treatment. These scanners additionally provide improved
image quality and higher imaging speed because of their higher field strength of
..6 Tesla. The geometry of the FONAR UPRIGHT(R) MRI as compared to a single coil,
or multiple coils on only one axis and its transverse magnetic field enables the
use of two detector rf coils  operating in quadrature  which increases the FONAR
UPRIGHT(R)  MRI signal to noise ratio by 40%,  providing a signal to noise ratio
equal to a .84T recumbent only MRI scanner.

Liquidity and Capital Resources

Cash, cash equivalents and marketable  securities decreased from $1.2 million at
June 30,  2009 to $1.1  million at  December  31,  2009.  Marketable  securities
approximated $30,000 as of December 31, 2009, as compared to $23,000 at June 30,
2009.

Cash used in  operating  activities  for the first six months of fiscal 2010 was
$1.4 million.  Cash used in operating  activities was attributable to a decrease
of  inventories  of  $334,000,  an  increase  in billings in excess of costs and
estimated  earnings on  uncompleted  contracts of $1.1 million and a decrease in
costs and estimated  earnings in excess of billings on uncompleted  contracts of
$219,000,  an increase in other  current  liabilities  of $592,000,  offset by a
decrease in customer advances of $2.0 million and the net loss of $3.0 million.

Cash  provided by investing  activities  for the first six months of fiscal 2010
was $1.2 million.  The principal source of cash from investing activities during
the first six months of fiscal 2010  consisted  mainly of  proceeds  from a note
receivable of $1.6 million  offset by  capitalized  software and patent costs of
$363,000.

Cash used in  financing  activities  for the first six months of fiscal 2010 was
$8,000. The principal uses of cash in financing  activities during the first six
months of fiscal 2010 consisted of repayment of principal on long- term debt and
capital lease  obligations of $80,000,  and repayment of notes  receivable  from
employee stockholders of $72,000.


The  Company's  contractual  obligations  and the  periods  in  which  they  are
scheduled to become due are set forth in the following table:

                                (000's OMITTED)

                                 Due in
                                  less         Due          Due          Due
Contractual                       Than 1      in 2-3       in 4-5       after 5
Obligation          Total         year         years        years        years
--------------   -----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------

Long-term debt   $     935      $     269   $     138      $  -        $    528

Capital lease
 Obligations           261            129         132         -            -

Operating
   Leases           10,821          1,989       3,939        3,240        1,653

Stipulation
Agreements             485           396           89         -            -
                 -----------   ----------     --------    ---------   ----------
Total cash
Obligations      $  12,502      $   2,783     $  4,298     $  3,240    $  2,181
                 ==========    ==========     ========    =========   ==========


Total  liabilities  decreased by 1.7% to $30.8 million at December 31, 2009 from
$31.2 million at June 30, 2009. We experienced an decrease in long-term debt and
capital  leases from  $759,000 at June 30, 2009 to $682,000 at December 31, 2009
and a decrease in accounts  payable  from $3.7  million at June 30, 2009 to $3.5
million at December  31,  2009,  along with an increase in billings in excess of
costs and estimated earnings on uncompleted  contracts from $2.0 million at June
30,  2009 to $3.1  million at  December  31,  2009,  and a decrease  in customer
advances  from $9.2  million at June 30, 2009 to $7.2  million at  December  31,
2009.  Unearned revenue on service contracts increased from $5.5 million at June
30, 2009 to $6.0 million at December 31, 2009.

As of December 31, 2009, the total of $8.6 million in other current  liabilities
included  primarily  accrued  salaries and payroll  taxes of  $765,000,  accrued
interest of $989,000 and sales taxes of $2.5 million.

Our working capital  deficit  increased to $11.8 million at December 31, 2009 as
compared to $10.8 million as of June 30, 2009.  This resulted from a decrease in
current  assets ($18.3  million at June 30, 2009 as compared to $17.0 million at
December  31,  2009)  particularly  a decrease in the  current  portion of notes
receivable  of  $433,000  ($518,000  at June 30,  2009 as compared to $85,000 at
December 31,  2009),  and a decrease in  management  fee  receivable of $555,000
($5.5 million at June 30, 2009 as compared to $4.9 million at December 31, 2009)
along with a decrease in current  liabilities ($29.1 million at June 30, 2009 as
compared to $28.8  million at December  31,  2009)  resulting  primarily  from a
decrease of  approximately  $63,000 in the current  portion of accounts  payable
($3.5 million at June 30, 2009 as compared to $3.4 million at December 31, 2009)
and a decrease of $2.0 million in customer  advances  ($9.2  million at June 30,
2009 as compared to $7.2 million at December 31, 2009) .

Fonar has not committed to making any  significant  capital  expenditures in the
2010 fiscal year.

Our business  plan calls for a continuing  emphasis on providing  our  customers
with enhanced  equipment  service and  maintenance  capabilities  and delivering
state-of-the-art,   innovative  and  high  quality  equipment  and  upgrades  at
competitive prices.

The Company continues to focus its efforts on increased  marketing  campaigns to
strengthen the demand for its products and services. Management anticipates that
its capital  resources  will improve if Fonar's MRI scanner  products gain wider
market recognition and acceptance  resulting in increased product sales. Current
economic credit  conditions have contributed to a slowing business  environment.
Given such liquidity and credit constraints in the markets, the business has and
may  continue  to  suffer,  should the credit  markets  not  improve in the near
future. The direct impact of these conditions is not fully known. However, there
can be no assurance that the Company would be able to secure additional funds if
needed and that if such funds were  available,  whether the terms or  conditions
would be  acceptable  to the  Company.  In such case,  the further  reduction in
operating  expenses as well as  possible  sale of other  operating  subsidiaries
might need to be substantial in order for the Company to generate  positive cash
flow to sustain the operations of the Company.

At  December  31,  2009,  the  Company  had  a  working  capital  deficiency  of
approximately $11.8 million and a stockholders' deficiency of approximately $5.9
million.  For the six months ended December 31, 2009, the Company incurred a net
loss  of  approximately  $3.0  million,   which  included  non-cash  charges  of
approximately $1.5 million. The Company has funded its cash flow deficit for the
six months ended December 31, 2009 through cash used in operations.

On October 27, 2009, in order to improve our liquidity the Company  entered into
an agreement  with Mountain  Crest  Ventures LLC to assign the  promissory  note
issued  by Health  Plus  Management  Services,  LLC in  connection  with a Asset
Purchase Agreement which closed in July, 2005. The Company received  $1,580,862,
which  represented the remaining  principal balance less a discount of $350,000.
Mountain  Crest  Ventures LLC retains all rights  under the original  promissory
note to collect all remaining  payments  due. The Company  recorded the $350,000
discount in the financial statements for the six months ended December 31, 2009.

Management  anticipates  that  Fonar's  capital  resources  will  improve if (1)
Fonar's  MRI scanner  products  gain wider  market  recognition  and  acceptance
resulting in  increased  product  sales,  (2) service and  maintenance  revenues
increase as the  warranties  on  scanners  expire and (3) HMCA  revenues  can be
increased  through  the  Company's  vigorous  marketing  efforts.  In  addition,
Management  is exploring  the  possibility  of equity  and/or loan  financing to
improve  liquidity.  If we are not  successful  with our  marketing  efforts  to
increase  revenues  and are  unable  to raise  debt or equity  capital,  we will
experience  a shortfall  in cash,  and it will be  necessary  to further  reduce
operating  expenses  to  attempt to avoid the need to  curtail  our  operations.
Current  economic  credit  conditions  have  contributed  to a slowing  business
environment.  The precise impact of these conditions can not be fully predicted.
There can be no assurance  that we would be able to secure  additional  funds if
needed.

The  accompanying  financial  statements  have been prepared in accordance  with
accounting  principals  generally  accepted in the United  States of America and
assume  that the  Company  will  continue  as a going  concern.  The Company has
suffered  recurring losses from operations,  continues to generate negative cash
flows from operating activities and had negative working capital at December 31,
2009. These conditions raise  substantial  doubt about the Company's  ability to
continue  as a going  concern.  The  accompanying  financial  statements  do not
include any adjustments that might result from the outcome of this uncertainty.

Fonar was able to maintain its continued listing on the NASDAQ Capital Market by
demonstrating  a net income for fiscal 2009 in the amount of $1.1 million,  well
in excess of the minimum continued listing requirement of $500,000.



Item 3. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk

The Company maintains its funds in liquid accounts.  None of our investments are
in fixed rate instruments.

All of our revenue,  expense and capital purchasing activities are transacted in
United States dollars.

Item 4T. Controls and Procedures

Disclosure Controls and Procedures

Disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Rule 13(a)-15(e)) are controls
and other procedures that are designed to ensure that information required to be
disclosed by a public  company in the reports that it files or submits under the
Exchange Act, is recorded,  processed,  summarized and reported  within the time
periods  specified  in the  SEC's  rules  and  forms.  Disclosure  controls  and
procedures  include,  without  limitation,  controls and procedures  designed to
ensure that  information  required to be  disclosed  by a public  company in the
reports  that it files or submits  under the  Exchange  Act is  accumulated  and
communicated to the company's management,  including its principal executive and
principal  financial  officers,  or persons  performing  similar  functions,  as
appropriate  to  allow  for  timely  decisions  regarding  required  disclosure.
Disclosure controls and procedures include many aspects of internal control over
financial reporting.

In connection with the preparation of this Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the
quarter ended December 31, 2009, management, with the participation of our Chief
Executive Officer and Chief Financial  Officer,  has evaluated the effectiveness
of our  disclosure  controls  and  procedures  pursuant to Rule 13a-15 under the
Exchange  Act and  have  determined  that  such  controls  and  procedures  were
effective as of December 31, 2009.

Changes in Internal Control Over Financial Reporting

There were no changes in our  internal  controls or in other  factors that could
significantly affect these controls, during the quarter ended December 31, 2009,
that have materially  affected,  or are reasonably likely to materially  affect,
our internal control over financial reporting.


PART II - OTHER INFORMATION

Item 1 - Legal  Proceedings:There were no material changes in litigation for the
     first six months of fiscal 2010.

Item 2 - Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities and Use of Proceeds: None

Item 3 - Defaults Upon Senior Securities: None

Item 4 - Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders: None

Item 5 - Other Information: None

Item 6 - Exhibits and Reports on Form 8-K:
                           Exhibits
                           Exhibit 31.1 Certification See Exhibits
                           Exhibit 32.1 Certification See Exhibits
                           Report on Form 8-K containing the Company's
                           Earnings Report for the first quarter of fiscal 2010.
                           See Report on Form 8-K
                           dated November __, 2009,
                           Commission File No. 000-10248


SIGNATURES

Pursuant  to the  requirements  of the  Securities  Exchange  Act of  1934,  the
Registrant  has duly  caused  this  report  to be  signed  on its  behalf by the
undersigned thereunto duly authorized.

                                           FONAR CORPORATION
                                           (Registrant)

                                           By:  /s/ Raymond V. Damadian
                                                  Raymond V. Damadian
                                                  President & Chairman
Dated:February 22, 2010