Healthcare

Physician (Doctor)

The longest educational path on this site — 11 to 15 years from high school graduation to independent practice. Here is every step, every cost, and every decision point. Go in with clear eyes.

Total Training Time
11–15 Yrs
High school graduation to independent practice
Medical School Cost
$200–350K
4 years tuition + living expenses
Average Med School Debt
~$200K
At graduation
Resident Salary
$55–80K
3–7 years post-med school
Attending Physician
$200–500K+
Depends heavily on specialty

What the Job Actually Is

Physicians diagnose illness, develop treatment plans, perform procedures, manage chronic conditions, and coordinate care across specialties. The day-to-day reality varies enormously by specialty — a dermatologist and a trauma surgeon have almost nothing in common except the degree hanging on their wall.

Medicine offers genuine intellectual challenge, strong compensation, and the satisfaction of meaningful work. It also demands years of deferred income, hundreds of thousands of dollars in debt, sustained performance under enormous pressure, and a training pipeline that selects out people at multiple stages. Understanding all of this before you commit is the point of this page.

The honest framing

If you're 17 and want to be a doctor, that's a completely achievable goal — but you need to start building toward it now. GPA in high school matters for college admissions. GPA in college matters for medical school admissions. MCAT scores matter. Clinical experience matters. Research experience matters. Every year from now until you apply to medical school is an investment in or a withdrawal from your application.

The Full Timeline — Year by Year

Yrs 1–4
Undergraduate
Pre-Med Bachelor's Degree
No specific major is required — any bachelor's works as long as you complete the medical school prerequisite courses. Most pre-med students choose Biology, Chemistry, or Biochemistry but engineers, philosophers, and English majors are admitted to medical school every year. GPA is the primary selection metric — aim for 3.7+ overall and 3.7+ in science.
Yr 3–4
Critical Milestone
MCAT Preparation and Application
The Medical College Admission Test (MCAT) is a 7.5-hour standardized exam covering biology, chemistry, physics, psychology, and critical analysis. Most competitive applicants score 510+ (out of 528). MCAT prep typically takes 3–6 months of serious study. You also need 100–200+ clinical volunteer/shadowing hours and research experience for competitive applications.
Yrs 5–8
Medical School
MD or DO Program — 4 Years
Years 1–2 are primarily classroom-based — anatomy, physiology, pharmacology, pathology, and clinical skills. Years 3–4 are clinical rotations through core specialties (internal medicine, surgery, pediatrics, OB/GYN, psychiatry, family medicine) and electives. Medical school ends with USMLE Step exams (for MD) or COMLEX (for DO) which heavily influence residency matching.
Yr 8
Critical Milestone
The Match — Residency Selection
The National Resident Matching Program (The Match) is the process by which medical school graduates are assigned to residency programs. You rank programs; programs rank you; an algorithm produces a binding match. Competitive specialties (dermatology, orthopedic surgery, neurosurgery) require exceptional board scores and research. Less competitive specialties (family medicine, psychiatry) are more accessible. Not matching is a real possibility.
Yrs 9–12
Residency
Graduate Medical Education — 3–7 Years
Residency is supervised clinical training in your specialty — family medicine is 3 years, internal medicine is 3, general surgery is 5, neurosurgery is 7. Residents are paid (~$55,000–$80,000/year) but work 60–80 hours per week. This is where you develop actual clinical competence as a physician.
Yrs 12–14
Optional
Fellowship — Subspecialty Training (1–3 Years)
Many physicians pursue fellowship training in subspecialties after residency — cardiology after internal medicine, surgical oncology after general surgery, child psychiatry after psychiatry. Fellowship is optional but required for most subspecialty practice. Adds 1–3 more years of training at modest pay before attending-level income begins.
Yr 11+
Career Begins
Attending Physician — Independent Practice
After residency (and fellowship if applicable), you become an attending physician — fully licensed and practicing independently. This is when attending-level compensation begins. For a family medicine physician with no fellowship, this is year 11. For a neurosurgeon with fellowship, this may be year 15–16.

MD vs. DO — What's the Difference

Allopathic
MD — Doctor of Medicine

The traditional medical degree. MD programs are generally more competitive to enter. MD graduates have historically had slightly more flexibility in residency matching for highly competitive specialties. Both MDs and DOs are fully licensed physicians who can practice in all 50 states.

Osteopathic
DO — Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine

A DO program includes all standard medical training plus osteopathic manipulative medicine (OMM). DO programs have been generally somewhat easier to gain admission to historically, though the gap has narrowed. Since 2020, MD and DO residency programs merged into a single match — DOs now compete directly with MDs for all residency positions.

What It Costs

Medical school is the most expensive graduate education in existence. The debt load at graduation is substantial — and repaid during years of resident salary before attending income begins.

The full financial picture

Undergraduate (4 years): $40,000–$200,000 depending on public vs. private
Medical school tuition (4 years): $150,000–$300,000 at private schools; $100,000–$200,000 at public in-state schools
Living expenses during medical school: $80,000–$120,000+
Average debt at graduation: ~$200,000 (many exceed $300,000)

Interest accrues during residency on most loans. A physician finishing residency with $250,000 in debt may owe $300,000+ by the time they begin attending-level income. Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) can eliminate remaining federal loan balances after 10 years of qualifying payments — a significant financial planning consideration for physicians who work at non-profit hospitals.

What You Can Earn — By Specialty

Physician compensation varies more by specialty than almost any other profession. The difference between a family medicine physician and a neurosurgeon can be $400,000+ per year.

Primary Care
Family Medicine / Internal Medicine
The most accessible specialties to match into. Shorter residency (3 years). Strong demand, especially in underserved areas. Loan forgiveness programs widely available.
Avg. salary: $230,000–$280,000
Surgical
General Surgery
5-year residency. Highly demanding training. Strong compensation and the foundation for subspecialty surgical fellowships (trauma, vascular, colorectal, etc.).
Avg. salary: $350,000–$450,000
Procedural
Cardiology / Gastroenterology
Internal medicine residency + 3-year fellowship. Procedure-heavy specialties command premium compensation. Among the most competitive fellowships to obtain.
Avg. salary: $400,000–$550,000
Highest Paying
Orthopedic Surgery / Neurosurgery
Among the most competitive specialties to match into. Extremely long training (5–7 year residency + fellowship). Exceptional compensation reflects that.
Avg. salary: $550,000–$800,000+
Lifestyle
Dermatology / Radiology / Anesthesiology
Highly competitive to match into. Known for strong pay with more controllable hours than surgical specialties. Dermatology is consistently among the most competitive matches in medicine.
Avg. salary: $400,000–$500,000
Mental Health
Psychiatry
4-year residency. Less competitive to match into than most specialties. Strong demand — significant shortage of psychiatrists nationally. Growing compensation as demand outpaces supply.
Avg. salary: $280,000–$360,000

Who It's Right For

Good fit if you...
  • Are genuinely drawn to medicine — not just the status or income
  • Have strong academic ability and are willing to sustain it for 11+ years
  • Can handle deferred gratification on a decade-long timeline
  • Are comfortable with $200,000+ in debt and a plan to manage it
  • Want the depth of clinical training and responsibility that medicine provides
  • Are starting pre-med preparation seriously in high school or early college
Think carefully if you...
  • Are pursuing medicine primarily for income — other paths reach high income faster with less debt
  • Have a GPA that makes medical school admission genuinely unlikely without significant improvement
  • Aren't prepared for the emotional weight of clinical medicine — death, suffering, and moral complexity are daily realities
  • Haven't spent significant time in clinical settings confirming the career is right for you

What Most People Get Wrong

Common assumption
"Doctors are rich right out of medical school."
Medical school graduates are not doctors yet — they're residents earning $55,000–$80,000/year while working 60–80 hour weeks and repaying loans accruing interest. A physician doesn't earn attending-level income until 3–7 years after medical school graduation. The financial payoff is real — but it comes late, and after a significant debt load.
Common assumption
"You have to major in Biology or Chemistry to get into medical school."
Medical schools admit applicants from any undergraduate major. The requirements are specific prerequisite courses — not a specific major. Engineers, humanities majors, and social scientists are admitted to medical school every year. Major in something you're genuinely good at and interested in — your GPA in that subject matters far more than the subject itself.
Common assumption
"If I don't get into an MD program I can always do DO instead."
DO programs are not a guaranteed fallback. They are competitive programs that reject most applicants. The average GPA and MCAT scores for DO program admissions are lower than top MD programs but still competitive. Since the residency match merger in 2020, DO graduates now compete directly with MD graduates for the same residency positions — the distinction in career outcomes has narrowed significantly.
Common assumption
"Research experience is optional for medical school."
For competitive MD programs, meaningful research experience is effectively required — not technically mandated, but practically expected. Applicants to top programs typically have 1–2 years of research involvement, often with a publication or poster presentation. For less competitive programs and DO schools, research is less critical — but clinical hours and a strong personal statement remain essential everywhere.

Common Questions

What GPA do I need to get into medical school? +
The average GPA of admitted students at U.S. MD programs is approximately 3.73 overall and 3.68 in science (BCPM — Biology, Chemistry, Physics, Math). Top programs average higher. DO programs average slightly lower — roughly 3.5 overall. These are averages, not minimums — students with lower GPAs are admitted with exceptional MCAT scores, meaningful clinical experience, or other distinguishing factors. But a GPA below 3.5 makes admission to MD programs significantly more challenging.
What is the MCAT and when should I take it? +
The MCAT is a 7.5-hour standardized exam with four sections: Biological and Biochemical Foundations, Chemical and Physical Foundations, Psychological and Social Foundations, and Critical Analysis. Most pre-med students take it the spring of junior year or the summer before senior year. Preparation typically takes 3–6 months of dedicated study. The average score for accepted students at MD programs is around 511–512; top schools average 517–520+. Retaking is possible but schools see all scores.
What is the residency match and what happens if I don't match? +
The Match is a computerized algorithm that pairs medical school graduates with residency programs based on mutual preference rankings. Match Day is in mid-March of fourth year — you find out your assignment (or learn you didn't match) simultaneously nationwide. Students who don't match enter the Supplemental Offer and Acceptance Program (SOAP) to find open positions. Not matching is a real outcome for a percentage of graduates — especially those applying to highly competitive specialties with below-average board scores.
Is Public Service Loan Forgiveness worth it for doctors? +
For physicians who work at qualifying non-profit employers (most academic medical centers, government hospitals, many community hospitals), PSLF forgives remaining federal loan balances after 10 years of qualifying income-driven payments. Given that residency (3–7 years) typically counts toward those 10 years, a physician finishing residency may need only 3–7 additional years of qualifying employment before forgiveness. For those with $250,000+ in federal loans, PSLF can represent six-figure savings — it's worth modeling carefully when choosing practice settings.

Next Steps

1
Get clinical experience now — not after college
Volunteer at a hospital, work as a CNA, shadow a physician, or work as a medical scribe. Confirming medicine is genuinely right for you before investing years in pre-med is the most important first step. Most rejected medical school applicants had insufficient clinical hours.
2
Choose your undergraduate major strategically
Major in something you can excel in. A 3.9 GPA in English is better than a 3.4 GPA in Biology for medical school admissions. Complete prerequisites (Biology, Chemistry, Organic Chemistry, Physics, Statistics, Biochemistry) alongside your major.
3
Start MCAT preparation by the second semester of junior year
The MCAT requires all prerequisite coursework as background. Plan your undergraduate schedule so all prerequisites are complete before you begin serious MCAT prep. Give yourself 3–6 months of dedicated preparation.
4
Apply broadly — medical school admissions are competitive
Most successful applicants apply to 15–25 schools. Apply to a range of reach, match, and safety programs. The application is expensive (~$35–$100 per school) — budget for it. Apply early in the cycle; rolling admissions means early applicants have significant advantages.
Last updated: April 2026