LIVE MARKET·27 POSTINGS · LAST 180 DAYS

Surgery Physician salary: $205.83/hr median.

Across 27 active postings · 5 titles with data · 6 states.

Browse Surgery Physician salary titles in Physician (MD/DO), including posting volume, median pay, state coverage, and role-level comparisons.

Titles
6
5 with data
Postings
27
Median /hr
$205.83
$428,133/yr
Coverage
6 states
13 employers
01·PAY DISTRIBUTION·P10 → P90

How Surgery Physician pay is distributed across the market.

10% of postings pay under $18.50. The top 10% pay above $414.15.

P10
$18.50
P25
$19.63
P50
$205.83
P75
$405.38
P90
$414.15
P10
$18.50
$38,480/yr
P25
$19.63
$40,830/yr
P50 (median)
$205.83
$428,126/yr
P75
$405.38
$843,190/yr
P90
$414.15
$861,432/yr
03·STATE BREAKDOWN·n=27

Surgery Physician pay across every state with live data.

01Connecticut CT6 postings
$276.00/hr

Showing all 1 state with live data. Bars scale to the highest-paying state.

05·HIGHEST MEDIAN HOURLY·LAST 180 DAYS

Highest-paying job titles in the Surgery Physician track.

RoleCategory · TrackMedian /hrP25–P75PostingsΔ pay
Spine SurgeonPhysician (MD/DO) · Surgery Physician$390.75$376.13–$405.382— flat
Trauma SurgeonPhysician (MD/DO) · Surgery Physician$384.00$384.00–$384.001— flat
Vascular SurgeonPhysician (MD/DO) · Surgery Physician$276.00$276.00–$288.5013— flat
Colorectal SurgeonPhysician (MD/DO) · Surgery Physician$206.00$117.25–$211.003— flat
Plastic SurgeonPhysician (MD/DO) · Surgery Physician$23.25$19.63–$194.388 850.0%
06·HOW TO BECOME·CAREER PATHWAY·GENERAL TO PHYSICIAN (MD / DO)

How to become a Surgery Physician.

Physicians diagnose, treat, prescribe, and lead the medical decision-making for patients across every specialty in healthcare. US physicians hold either an MD (Doctor of Medicine) or DO (Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine) — the two degrees are equivalent for licensure, residency, and practice. The pathway is the longest in clinical medicine: four years of medical school plus 3-7+ years of residency training before independent practice.

Education·Min: MD or DO · Preferred: MD or DO + completed residency

The full US pathway: 4-year bachelor's (with premed prerequisites) → MCAT → 4 years of medical school → USMLE Step 1 (P/F) and Step 2 CK → residency match → 3-7 years of residency → board certification → optional fellowship (1-3 years). Total time from college to independent practice ranges from 11 years (family medicine, internal medicine) to 15+ years (surgical sub-specialties, interventional radiology).

DegreeDurationNotes
Doctor of MedicineMD4 years post-bachelorAllopathic medical degree. Schools accredited by the LCME. Year 1-2 preclinical, year 3-4 clinical clerkships. USMLE Steps 1-2 taken during med school.
Doctor of Osteopathic MedicineDO4 years post-bachelorOsteopathic medical degree. Schools accredited by the COCA. Equivalent clinical training plus osteopathic manipulative medicine (OMM). Take USMLE or COMLEX (or both).
Combined MD/PhDMD/PhD7-8 yearsPhysician-scientist track. Common in academic-medicine careers. Most US MD/PhD spots are funded MSTP programs.
International medical graduate routeIMGVariableForeign-trained physicians pursue ECFMG certification (USMLE Steps 1-2, OET/clinical skills) before applying to US residency through ERAS.
Licenses & Exams·4 credentials
State medical licensePhysician license (MD or DO)Required
Issued by: State medical board

Required in every state to practice medicine independently. Eligibility requires completing USMLE/COMLEX Steps 1-3, at least one year of accredited residency (usually three), and a background check.

DEA registrationDEA prescriber numberOptional
Issued by: US Drug Enforcement Administration

Required to prescribe controlled substances. Standard for any patient-facing role.

Board certificationSpecialty board certificationOptional
Issued by: ABMS or AOABOS member board

Technically optional but required by virtually every hospital and payer to credential. Maintained by completing CME and recertification (MOC/OCC) every 7-10 years.

BLS / ACLS / PALS / ATLSLife Support certificationsRequired
Issued by: American Heart Association / American College of Surgeons

Set varies by specialty. Hospital medicine and EM typically require BLS + ACLS; pediatrics adds PALS; trauma/EM adds ATLS.

Optional Certifications·Pay boost where known
CredentialIssued byPay impact
ABMS / AOABOS board certification
Specialty board certification
Taken after residency. Required in practice by virtually all employers and payers. Examples: ABIM (internal medicine), ABEM (EM), ABS (surgery), ABFM (family medicine).
ABMS or AOABOS member boardEffectively required
Fellowship sub-specialty certification
Subspecialty board certification
Completed after a 1-3 year fellowship in a sub-specialty (e.g. cardiology, GI, hem/onc, interventional radiology, surgical sub-specialties). Sub-specialty pay is typically materially higher than the parent specialty.
ABMS member board+30-100%
Career Path·6 steps
  1. Year 1 of residency
    Intern (PGY-1)

    First post-graduate year. Highly supervised inpatient and outpatient rotations. Eligible to take USMLE Step 3 mid-year.

  2. Years 2-3 (or 2-7 for surgical/long programs)
    Resident (PGY-2 to PGY-3+)

    Progressive clinical autonomy. Chief resident year in some programs. Residency length varies: 3 years (IM, FM, peds), 4 years (EM, OB, anesthesiology), 5+ years (general surgery and surgical sub-specialties).

  3. 1-3 years post-residency
    Fellow (optional)

    Sub-specialty training in fields like cardiology, GI, ICU, hem/onc, interventional radiology, surgical sub-specialties. Adds materially to lifetime earning potential.

  4. 0-5 years post-training
    Attending physician (early career)

    Independent practicing physician. Often a mix of clinical work, supervising trainees, and (in academic centers) teaching/research.

  5. 5-12 years
    Senior attending / specialty lead

    Owns a clinical service line or sub-specialty within a department. Mentors junior attendings. Common point at which partnership or buy-in happens in private practice.

  6. 12+ years
    Department chair / Chief Medical Officer

    Department leadership in academic or community systems. CMOs own clinical strategy, quality, and physician workforce for a hospital or system.

Work Environment
Academic medical centersCommunity hospitalsPrivate practice and partnershipsHealth-system employed groupsTelehealth and virtual careVA / federal healthLocum tenens

Schedule. Highly specialty-dependent. Outpatient specialties (derm, FM, primary care IM) run business hours. Hospital-based (hospitalists, EM, ICU) work 7-on/7-off or shift work including nights and weekends. Surgical specialties carry call. Procedural specialties (cardiology, GI, IR) split between scheduled procedure days and call.

Physical demands. Cognitively demanding above all. Procedural and surgical specialties add long stretches standing, sterile-field positioning, and lead aprons in fluoroscopy. Call burden is a major lifestyle factor in surgical and hospital-based specialties.

Job Outlook·Strong
+3% (2022-2032)

Aggregate physician growth looks modest, but specialty-level demand is uneven. Primary care, psychiatry, hospital medicine, EM, and rural specialties all face persistent shortages. Surgical sub-specialty and procedural roles continue to command the highest pay. AI-augmented diagnostics and APP expansion are reshaping the workload mix but have not reduced demand for trained physicians.

FAQ — Becoming this role·3 questions
MD vs DO — does it matter?

For licensure, residency, and practice, no. Both degrees take the same time, sit for the same residencies and board exams, and earn the same in equivalent specialties. DO programs include OMM training. Historically MDs had slightly easier match outcomes in highly competitive specialties; the gap has narrowed since the single-accreditation residency merger.

How long does it take to become a physician in the US?

Minimum 11 years from college start: 4 years undergrad + 4 years med school + 3-year residency. Specialties like general surgery (5-year residency + 1-3 year fellowship) push it to 13-15 years.

How much does medical school cost?

Median total cost of attendance is roughly $250,000-$350,000 across the four years (higher at private schools). Average graduating debt is around $200,000-$250,000. Public service loan forgiveness, military scholarships (HPSP), NHSC, and academic-center tuition coverage can change the math materially.