ava health

Healthcare Recruiting

Emergency Medicine Physician Compensation 2026: Hourly Rates, RVU, Hospital-Employed vs CMG vs Democratic Group

AH
Ava Health Team
··14 min read

Emergency medicine in 2026 is a market in flux. The contract management group (CMG) consolidation that defined 2018–2023 (TeamHealth, USACS, Envision, SCP) has reversed in many markets — democratic groups and hospital-employed positions are recovering market share, and physicians are voting with their feet.

This guide covers what emergency medicine physicians are actually earning across all three structural arrangements (hospital-employed, CMG, democratic group), plus the hourly economics, locum landscape, and the RVU vs hourly debate.

National compensation snapshot — 2026

MetricValue (2026)
Median total comp (W-2 employed)$385,000
25th percentile$325,000
75th percentile$455,000
Median hourly rate (employed)$285/hour
Median hourly rate (1099 / democratic group)$310/hour
Annual clinical hours (full-time)1,440 hours (avg 28/week)

Hospital-employed vs CMG vs democratic group

StructureTotal compHourly equivalentEquity
Hospital-employed$365K–$435K$255–$305None
CMG (TeamHealth, USACS, Envision, SCP)$345K–$415K$235–$290None / phantom equity
Democratic group (small, regional)$405K–$525K$285–$365Yes (1–3 yr buy-in)
Democratic group (post-partnership)$485K–$685K$340–$485Equity holder

The democratic group premium is real but the entry barrier is geographic — most democratic groups operate in 1–3 hospitals in a single metro and don't recruit broadly. The largest are Vituity (CA), Apollo MD (Southeast), USACS Independent (despite the name, regional democratic groups), and ApolloMD.

RVU vs hourly: which is better for you?

EM is unusual in that contracts are split roughly 60% hourly, 40% RVU-based. The math depends on your volume:

  • RVU contract math: Typical structure is hourly base ($180–$220/hr) + RVU bonus above 4.5–5.0 RVU/hour
  • If you see 2.0+ pts/hour with appropriate complexity coding: RVU contracts pay 15–25% more
  • If you see <1.7 pts/hour (lower acuity, slow ED, training-heavy): Pure hourly pays more

Most EM physicians underestimate their RVU productivity. The average board-certified EM physician working a community ED in 2026 generates 5.2–5.8 RVU/hour. At $52/RVU after a 4.5 threshold, that's $36–$67/hour in bonus on top of base.

Top-paying states — 2026

  • South Dakota: Median $475K, hourly $325 — extreme rural shortage
  • North Dakota: $465K, $315/hour
  • West Virginia: $455K, $310/hour
  • Alaska: $445K, $305/hour
  • Wyoming: $435K, $295/hour

The pattern is sharp: states with thin physician supply pay 25–40% over the national median. California and Florida are roughly at median; New York and Massachusetts are slightly below median.

Locum tenens rates

  • Standard community ED: $300–$365/hour
  • Trauma center / Level 1: $325–$395/hour
  • Critical access (rural): $345–$425/hour + housing + travel
  • Pediatric ED: $315–$395/hour
  • Night premium: $25–$50/hour additional on top of base rate
  • Holiday / weekend: 1.25× to 1.5× standard rate

Most EM locum work is contracted as 12-hour shifts. A 12-shift/month locum schedule at $345/hour generates $49,680/month before taxes and travel.

Burnout drivers — what to evaluate in offers

EM has the highest burnout rate of any major specialty. The contract drivers we see correlate most with retention:

  • Patients per hour: >2.0 sustained is the burnout zone. Ask for the 90-day rolling average from the prior physician in the role.
  • Mid-level coverage ratio: 1:1 PA/NP to physician is healthy; 2:1 or higher indicates the ED leans heavily on you to cover MLP gaps.
  • Boarding hours: >6 hours average ED LOS is a structural failure. The hospital can't move admitted patients out and you're managing a de facto inpatient floor with ED staffing.
  • Schedule structure: Equitable nights/weekends across the group, or one or two physicians shouldering the load? Always ask the group's nights/weekends rotation in the second interview.

What we see at Ava Health

The biggest comp delta we see in EM is between democratic group partners and CMG-employed physicians at the same hospital — often $100K+/year for the same clinical work. If you're an EM physician at a CMG-staffed hospital where a democratic group exists in the same market, the partnership-track move is almost always worth the buy-in.

Critical access EDs (rural hospitals with <25 beds) are paying historically high locum rates because they can't recruit permanent staff. We've placed candidates at $385/hour with 30-day notice contracts in MT, WY, ND, and northern MN — these slots stay open because the lifestyle is rural-isolated, but for a 6-month single-and-saving career window, the comp is unmatched.

Related: Physician Contract Negotiation: 10 Hidden Levers, Locum Tenens Tax Basics.

Hiring in this space?

Browse 1.4M+ verified providers across all 50 states

NPI-sourced, free, no account required. Filter by specialty + state in seconds.

Search the directory →

Free tool

2026 Healthcare Salary Calculator

Estimate comp by specialty, state, experience, and practice setting. Based on MGMA, AMGA, and BLS benchmarks.

Try the salary calculator →

Be on the launch list

Salary data, hiring plays, and market trends. We'll email you when issue 1 ships. Free, unsubscribe anytime.

No spam. Unsubscribe anytime. We never share your email.

Looking for providers?

Search the Ava Health directory

Keep reading