Physician Salary Explorer
Explore real physician salary data by specialty, location, and practice type.
Explore real physician salary data by specialty, location, and practice type.
Source: SalaryDr salary data for Dermatology - Dermatopathology (N=1 verified submissions, updated May 20, 2026, data as of 2026-05-20). URL: https://www.salarydr.com
Explore verified dermatology - dermatopathology salary data from 1 submissions. Compare total compensation by specialty, state, and practice setting.
Median total compensation from 1+ verified reports.
Adding your data helps others negotiate better. Secure and 100% anonymous.
Add Your SalaryBrowse All 1 Submissions
Search, filter, and compare across every specialty
Median total compensation from 1+ verified reports.
MEDIAN TOTAL COMP
$350,000
AVERAGE BASE
$350,000
AVG BONUS / INCENTIVE
$0
AVG WORKLOAD
40
hrs/wkModel: Base + Productivity
What could be improved
“I wish I knew that the department was a toxic workplace”
Health Insurance · Dental Insurance · Vision Insurance · Life Insurance · Disability Insurance · Pension · CME $3,000/yr + 5 days · Malpractice Coverage · 0
Browse All 1 Submissions
Search, filter, and compare across every specialty
Data-driven answers for Dermatology - Dermatopathology
The median physician salary is $350,000 in 2026 in Dermatology - Dermatopathology, based on 1 verified salary submissions on SalaryDr. The average physician salary is $350,000, with compensation varying significantly based on specialty, location, experience, and practice setting.
Physicians in Dermatology - Dermatopathology work an average of 40 hours per week, based on 1 verified submissions. This includes clinical hours, administrative duties, charting, and call responsibilities. Work hours vary significantly by specialty and practice setting.
Physicians in Dermatology - Dermatopathology report 20% satisfaction with their careers, and 100% would choose their specialty again. Satisfaction varies by practice setting, work-life balance, and compensation relative to workload.
Private practice physicians typically earn 15-30% more than hospital-employed counterparts, though with greater income variability and business risk. Based on SalaryDr data, practice owners and partners often reach the top 10% of earners in their specialty. However, employed positions offer more predictable income, benefits, and less administrative burden.
New physicians starting their careers earn $250,000-$350,000 in their first year, depending on specialty and location. Many employers offer signing bonuses of $20,000-$50,000+, relocation assistance, and loan repayment programs. Salaries increase significantly within the first 3-5 years of practice.
1099/locums physicians earn higher gross pay (often 20-40% more per day) but must pay self-employment tax, purchase their own benefits, and manage malpractice tail coverage. W-2 employees receive lower gross pay but benefit from employer-paid taxes, health insurance, retirement matching, and PTO. The net advantage depends on individual circumstances and hours worked.
A competitive RVU rate depends on specialty, with most physicians earning $45-$65 per work RVU (wRVU). Primary care typically sees $50-$60/wRVU, while surgical specialties may see $35-$55/wRVU with higher volume. The total RVU value includes your base guarantee, so compare total compensation per wRVU rather than bonus rate alone.
A physician earning $350,000 gross typically takes home $217,000-$252,000 after federal taxes, state taxes (varies 0-13%), and deductions. High-income strategies like maximizing 401(k), HSA, backdoor Roth IRA, and practice-specific deductions can improve take-home significantly.
SalaryDr salary data comes from 1 anonymous submissions from verified physicians across the United States. Each submission includes total compensation, base salary, bonuses, specialty, location, practice setting, and years of experience. Data is updated in real-time and outliers are handled statistically to ensure accuracy.
Yes. Most physicians leave $20,000–$50,000 on the table by accepting their initial offer. Based on SalaryDr data from 1 salary submissions, physicians who negotiate earn 15–20% more in total compensation. Employers expect negotiation — hospitals have trained professionals negotiating every contract. Having real compensation data and a benchmark-anchored counter-offer plan gives you the leverage to secure what you’re actually worth.
Start by comparing your offer to real compensation data on SalaryDr — the median physician salary is $350,000 based on 1 verified submissions, but this varies dramatically by specialty, location, and practice setting. Key metrics to benchmark include base salary, RVU rates, signing bonus, call pay, and benefits. For a comprehensive assessment, a benchmark-anchored counter-offer bundle pinpoints exactly where your offer falls relative to market and which specific terms to push.
Nearly every component of a physician employment contract is negotiable, not just base salary. Key negotiable terms include base salary guarantees, RVU rates and thresholds, signing bonuses ($20K–$100K+), relocation packages, CME allowances, call pay and frequency, partnership track and timeline, tail coverage for malpractice, loan repayment assistance, non-compete clauses (radius and duration), PTO and sabbatical, and early termination terms. Many physicians focus only on base salary, but the total package difference from negotiating comprehensively can exceed $100,000 in value.
Help improve salary transparency
Your anonymous submission helps physicians negotiate fair compensation.
Data-driven answers for Dermatology - Dermatopathology
The median physician salary is $350,000 in 2026 in Dermatology - Dermatopathology, based on 1 verified salary submissions on SalaryDr. The average physician salary is $350,000, with compensation varying significantly based on specialty, location, experience, and practice setting.
Physicians in Dermatology - Dermatopathology work an average of 40 hours per week, based on 1 verified submissions. This includes clinical hours, administrative duties, charting, and call responsibilities. Work hours vary significantly by specialty and practice setting.
Physicians in Dermatology - Dermatopathology report 20% satisfaction with their careers, and 100% would choose their specialty again. Satisfaction varies by practice setting, work-life balance, and compensation relative to workload.
Private practice physicians typically earn 15-30% more than hospital-employed counterparts, though with greater income variability and business risk. Based on SalaryDr data, practice owners and partners often reach the top 10% of earners in their specialty. However, employed positions offer more predictable income, benefits, and less administrative burden.
New physicians starting their careers earn $250,000-$350,000 in their first year, depending on specialty and location. Many employers offer signing bonuses of $20,000-$50,000+, relocation assistance, and loan repayment programs. Salaries increase significantly within the first 3-5 years of practice.
1099/locums physicians earn higher gross pay (often 20-40% more per day) but must pay self-employment tax, purchase their own benefits, and manage malpractice tail coverage. W-2 employees receive lower gross pay but benefit from employer-paid taxes, health insurance, retirement matching, and PTO. The net advantage depends on individual circumstances and hours worked.
A competitive RVU rate depends on specialty, with most physicians earning $45-$65 per work RVU (wRVU). Primary care typically sees $50-$60/wRVU, while surgical specialties may see $35-$55/wRVU with higher volume. The total RVU value includes your base guarantee, so compare total compensation per wRVU rather than bonus rate alone.
A physician earning $350,000 gross typically takes home $217,000-$252,000 after federal taxes, state taxes (varies 0-13%), and deductions. High-income strategies like maximizing 401(k), HSA, backdoor Roth IRA, and practice-specific deductions can improve take-home significantly.
SalaryDr salary data comes from 1 anonymous submissions from verified physicians across the United States. Each submission includes total compensation, base salary, bonuses, specialty, location, practice setting, and years of experience. Data is updated in real-time and outliers are handled statistically to ensure accuracy.
Yes. Most physicians leave $20,000–$50,000 on the table by accepting their initial offer. Based on SalaryDr data from 1 salary submissions, physicians who negotiate earn 15–20% more in total compensation. Employers expect negotiation — hospitals have trained professionals negotiating every contract. Having real compensation data and a benchmark-anchored counter-offer plan gives you the leverage to secure what you’re actually worth.
Start by comparing your offer to real compensation data on SalaryDr — the median physician salary is $350,000 based on 1 verified submissions, but this varies dramatically by specialty, location, and practice setting. Key metrics to benchmark include base salary, RVU rates, signing bonus, call pay, and benefits. For a comprehensive assessment, a benchmark-anchored counter-offer bundle pinpoints exactly where your offer falls relative to market and which specific terms to push.
Nearly every component of a physician employment contract is negotiable, not just base salary. Key negotiable terms include base salary guarantees, RVU rates and thresholds, signing bonuses ($20K–$100K+), relocation packages, CME allowances, call pay and frequency, partnership track and timeline, tail coverage for malpractice, loan repayment assistance, non-compete clauses (radius and duration), PTO and sabbatical, and early termination terms. Many physicians focus only on base salary, but the total package difference from negotiating comprehensively can exceed $100,000 in value.
Help improve salary transparency
Your anonymous submission helps physicians negotiate fair compensation.