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 Nephrology (N=33 verified submissions, updated May 12, 2026, data as of 2026-05-12). URL: https://www.salarydr.com
Explore verified nephrology salary data from 33 submissions. Compare total compensation by specialty, state, and practice setting.
Median total compensation from 33+ verified reports.
33+ Nephrology salaries shared. Yours unlocks them all.
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Median total compensation from 33+ verified reports.
MEDIAN TOTAL COMP
$400,000
AVERAGE BASE
$330,000
AVG BONUS / INCENTIVE
$55,000
100% received
AVG WORKLOAD
50
hrs/wkHealth Insurance · Dental Insurance · Vision Insurance · Life Insurance · Disability Insurance · Malpractice Coverage
Model: Base + Quality Bonus
401k/403b (4% match) · CME $2,000/yr · Malpractice Coverage · Tail Coverage
What could be improved
“There is less money in academic. Old colleagues in private practice are making 800k+ a year.”
Work-life balance
“I work 5 days a week, no call or weekends worked. Flexible schedhule and easily able to move around patients if necessary. Mostly medical directorship and academic work rather than full-time clinical. ”
Time Allocation
Medical Insurance · Vision Insurance · Paid Holidays · Paid Sick Leave · Dental Insurance · Retirement Plan (401k or similar) · Paid Continuing Education · Paid Vacation
Time Allocation
Medical Insurance · Dental Insurance · Vision Insurance · Retirement Plan (401k or similar) · Paid Vacation · Paid Continuing Education
What could be improved
“Ability to take more than week off at the time ”
Time Allocation
Medical Insurance · Dental Insurance · Vision Insurance · Retirement Plan (401k or similar) · Paid Vacation · Paid Continuing Education
What could be improved
“better EMR”
Work-life balance
“i would say this atypical of Nephrology. 250,000 of my salary comes from dialysis center directorshop. I did not include my share from JV with dialysis units, but that has significantly decreased because of cut reimbursements to dialysis. It took me 5 years to become partner and i think that's why people don't go into Nephrology. The old guys will not give you a share of dialysis JV or directorship easily. i made 300k for 5-6 years. graduated fellowship in 2016”
Time Allocation
Medical Insurance · Paid Vacation
Most wanted: “better insurance career. also practice doesn't match my 401k. i get in my 401k whatever I put in. ”
33+ Nephrology salaries shared. Yours unlocks them all.
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Browse All 33 Submissions
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Data-driven answers for Nephrology
The median physician salary is $400,000 in 2026 in Nephrology, based on 33 verified salary submissions on SalaryDr. The average physician salary is $396,752, with compensation varying significantly based on specialty, location, experience, and practice setting.
The median base salary for physicians in Nephrology is $330,000, with median bonuses and incentives adding $55,000. Total compensation ($400,000 median) includes base salary, productivity bonuses, signing bonuses, call pay, and other incentives.
Physicians in Nephrology work an average of 50 hours per week, based on 33 verified submissions. This includes clinical hours, administrative duties, charting, and call responsibilities. Work hours vary significantly by specialty and practice setting.
Physicians in Nephrology report 72% satisfaction with their careers, and 79% 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 $400,000 gross typically takes home $248,000-$288,000 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 33 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 33 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 expert negotiation guidance 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 $400,000 based on 33 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 strategy call with a physician negotiation expert can identify exactly where your offer falls relative to market and what specific terms can be improved.
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 Nephrology
The median physician salary is $400,000 in 2026 in Nephrology, based on 33 verified salary submissions on SalaryDr. The average physician salary is $396,752, with compensation varying significantly based on specialty, location, experience, and practice setting.
The median base salary for physicians in Nephrology is $330,000, with median bonuses and incentives adding $55,000. Total compensation ($400,000 median) includes base salary, productivity bonuses, signing bonuses, call pay, and other incentives.
Physicians in Nephrology work an average of 50 hours per week, based on 33 verified submissions. This includes clinical hours, administrative duties, charting, and call responsibilities. Work hours vary significantly by specialty and practice setting.
Physicians in Nephrology report 72% satisfaction with their careers, and 79% 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 $400,000 gross typically takes home $248,000-$288,000 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 33 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 33 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 expert negotiation guidance 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 $400,000 based on 33 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 strategy call with a physician negotiation expert can identify exactly where your offer falls relative to market and what specific terms can be improved.
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.