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Hospitalist vs Outpatient Internal Medicine 2026: Comp, Hours, Burnout, Career Paths

AH
Ava Health Team
··13 min read

For internal medicine residents and IM-trained physicians considering a career pivot, the two dominant practice models are hospitalist and outpatient (clinic-based). Each has materially different compensation, hours, burnout profile, and long-term career trajectory. This is the 2026 head-to-head — what each actually pays, what each actually feels like, and which fits which career stage.

Compensation at a glance — 2026

MetricHospitalistOutpatient IM
Median base salary$335,000$295,000
25th percentile$295,000$255,000
75th percentile$390,000$345,000
Median total comp (with bonuses)$365,000$320,000
Sign-on bonus (median)$45,000$30,000
Schedule7-on, 7-off (most common)M–F 8a–5p, occasional Sat AM
Total clinical hours/year (est)~1,800 (84/week × 26wks)~2,000 (40/week × 50wks)
Call structureIn-house during shifts; off completely otherwisePhone call only, distributed
Partnership track availabilityRare (hospital-employed)Common (private group)
Locum tenens rate (1099)$160–$220/hr$130–$170/hr

The hospitalist day

A typical hospitalist 12-hour shift on a 7-on, 7-off schedule:

  • 0700: Sign-out from outgoing hospitalist; review overnight events on patients
  • 0730–1130: Bedside rounds — typically 14–18 patients
  • 1130–1300: Notes, orders, family communications, admit triage
  • 1300–1700: New admissions from ED (~3–5 per shift), ICU/floor consults, procedure billing review
  • 1700–1900: Wrap-up notes, family meetings, sign-out prep
  • 1900: Sign-out to incoming hospitalist or nocturnist

Patient panel size varies: 14–20 patients per shift is the 2026 median. AMC settings and academic centers run lower (10–14); high-volume community programs run higher (20–25). The pace is intense for the on-week and the off-week is genuinely off — most hospitalists report the time off as the single most valuable feature of the model.

The outpatient IM day

A typical M–F outpatient IM clinic schedule:

  • 0800–0830: Email/inbox review, prior labs, prior auth queue
  • 0830–1200: Morning patients — typically 10–14 in 4 hours (15–25 min slots)
  • 1200–1300: Lunch + admin (charting, callbacks, refills)
  • 1300–1700: Afternoon patients — typically 8–12 in 4 hours
  • 1700–1830: End-of-day charting, MyChart messages, lab callbacks

Total daily patient panel: 18–26. Total weekly panel: 90–130 unique encounters. Phone call (covering after-hours questions) is typically distributed across the practice on a rotation — most outpatient IM docs cover phone call 4–6 weekends per year.

Burnout rates and career longevity

Metric (2025 Medscape data)HospitalistOutpatient IM
Self-reported burnout51%38%
Considering leaving practice within 5 years22%16%
Plans to retire before age 6534%27%
Median time in current job before switching3.4 years5.8 years

Hospitalist burnout drivers cluster around the intensity of the on-week (sleep disruption, ICU acuity, family-meeting volume), patient turnover, and the difficulty of building longitudinal relationships with patients. Outpatient burnout drivers cluster around inbox overload (MyChart messages, prior auths, refills), 15-minute slot pressure, and administrative load relative to face-to-face care.

Both rates are higher than the 2018 baseline (hospitalist 42%, outpatient 32%), driven by EMR overhead and post-pandemic patient acuity.

Partnership / equity opportunities

Hospitalists are almost universally employed (W-2, hospital or large health-system contractor). Partnership track is rare — TeamHealth, Sound Physicians, IPC and other large groups offer some equity programs but they're modest compared to private-practice partnership.

Outpatient IM is the opposite. Roughly 40% of outpatient IM positions are at physician-owned multi-specialty groups offering a partnership track. Years 1–2 base is typically $250K–$290K, partnership offered at year 2–3, partner distributions $375K–$500K+ for established practices.

The 5-year cumulative comp for a partnership-track outpatient IM physician often exceeds the 5-year hospitalist comp by 10–18%, despite the lower base.

Career trajectories

Hospitalist career paths:

  • Stay clinical (most common) — escalating shift differential and seniority bonuses
  • Hospitalist medical director (~$50K admin add-on, 0.2 FTE admin time)
  • Quality / informatics roles within hospital admin
  • Move to procedure-heavy hospital roles (pulm/cc, GI hospitalist)
  • Pivot to telemedicine companies (lower stress, often comparable comp)

Outpatient IM career paths:

  • Build patient panel + partnership equity (most common)
  • Add procedural volume (joint injections, minor derm, GU procedures)
  • Concierge / direct-care practice (250–400 patient panel, $2K–$3K/yr/patient)
  • Subspecialty re-training (geriatrics, palliative, addiction med)
  • Practice ownership / start own group

Which fits which career stage

Hospitalist tends to fit better:

  • Early career (residency → 5 years out) — stable income, no panel-building, predictable schedule
  • Physicians prioritizing time-off blocks (parents, second careers, hobbies)
  • Geographically flexible — most metros have hospitalist demand
  • Procedure-light style — most hospitalists do minimal procedures beyond LP, paracentesis, central lines

Outpatient IM tends to fit better:

  • Mid-career (5–15 years out) — partnership equity compounds
  • Physicians wanting longitudinal relationships and continuity
  • Lower-acuity practice preference
  • Geographic stability — outpatient pay/equity rewards staying in one place
  • Family-flexible schedule — predictable hours, more weekends off than hospitalist on-week

What we see at Ava Health

About 60% of new IM-trained physicians we place start as hospitalists, and roughly 30% of those switch to outpatient within 5 years. The most common reason cited: "the on-week intensity wasn't sustainable with kids." Going the other direction (outpatient → hospitalist) is rarer but happens, usually for the schedule flexibility (block off time) reason.

The financial argument flips depending on horizon. Year-1 comp: hospitalist wins. 5-year cumulative: roughly even. 10-year cumulative if the outpatient physician makes partner: outpatient wins by ~15%. 20-year cumulative: outpatient wins by ~25–30% if partnership equity grows.

Related: Physician Contract Negotiation: 10 Hidden Levers, PCP vs Urgent Care 2026 Comp Comparison.

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