Orthopedic Surgeon Salary 2026: Subspecialty Pay, States, and Partnership Tracks
Orthopedic surgery is one of the most lucrative physician specialties in the US. Median base salaries cleared $600,000 in 2026, and private practice partners at established groups routinely earn $800,000 to $1.2M+. Demand is compounding — the population over 65 is expected to grow 30% by 2030, and orthopedic fellowship output has not kept pace.
National Orthopedic Subspecialty Benchmarks (2026)
| Subspecialty | Median Base | Top Quartile | Typical Sign-On |
|---|---|---|---|
| General Orthopedic Surgery | $590,000 | $725,000 | $75,000–$150,000 |
| Orthopedic Spine Surgery | $725,000 | $925,000 | $150,000–$300,000 |
| Adult Reconstructive (Joint Replacement) | $675,000 | $835,000 | $125,000–$250,000 |
| Sports Medicine | $580,000 | $715,000 | $75,000–$175,000 |
| Hand Surgery | $575,000 | $715,000 | $75,000–$175,000 |
| Foot and Ankle | $545,000 | $680,000 | $60,000–$150,000 |
| Pediatric Orthopedics | $475,000 | $585,000 | $50,000–$100,000 |
| Orthopedic Trauma | $625,000 | $780,000 | $100,000–$200,000 |
| Orthopedic Oncology | $510,000 | $625,000 | $50,000–$120,000 |
Sources: Medscape 2025 Orthopedic Compensation Report, MGMA 2025 Physician Comp, AAOS Practice Management Reports.
Top 10 Highest-Paying States for Orthopedic Surgery
| Rank | State | Median Base | Driver |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Wisconsin | $685,000+ | Integrated systems, Midwest premium |
| 2 | Indiana | $665,000+ | Strong community practices |
| 3 | Oklahoma | $650,000+ | Private practice vitality, energy-sector payers |
| 4 | Nebraska | $642,000+ | Rural shortage, strong regional hospitals |
| 5 | Kentucky | $635,000+ | Aging population, strong system competition |
| 6 | Missouri | $628,000+ | BJC + Mercy + SSM competition |
| 7 | Florida | $620,000+ | Retiree demographics, procedure volume |
| 8 | Ohio | $615,000+ | Cleveland Clinic + community system competition |
| 9 | Texas | $610,000+ | Population growth, strong private groups |
| 10 | Michigan | $605,000+ | Corewell/Henry Ford/U-M competition |
Private Practice Partnership Track
Orthopedic surgery is one of the few specialties where private partnership tracks remain financially superior to hospital employment. Typical trajectory:
- Year 1-2 (associate / buy-in): $525,000-$625,000
- Year 3+ (partner): $750,000-$1,100,000+
- Senior partner with ancillary stakes (surgery center, imaging): $1.0M-$1.6M+
Partnership buy-in range: $200K-$600K typical. Ancillary stakes (ASC, PT, DME) often drive the upside above base partnership distributions.
Hospital-Employed Structures
| Structure | Typical Range | Considerations |
|---|---|---|
| Base + wRVU bonus | $525K-$725K | Most common; bonus at $70-$95/wRVU above threshold (6,500-8,000) |
| MGMA percentile guarantee | $550K-$650K at 50th %ile | Straightforward, no RVU complexity |
| Co-management agreement | Base + $30K-$80K co-mgmt | Surgeons run service line; hospital pays for operational oversight |
| Bundled payment / episode-based | Variable | Emerging at integrated systems; surgeons share in savings |
Sign-On Bonuses and Loan Repayment
2026 orthopedic sign-on ranges:
- General ortho (urban): $75K-$150K + relocation
- General ortho (rural/shortage): $150K-$250K + HRSA loan repayment up to $250K
- Spine surgery: $200K-$350K at competitive groups
- Joint replacement: $150K-$275K
- Pediatric ortho: $60K-$120K (smaller market, less competition)
What Orthopedic Surgeons Negotiate in 2026
- Block OR time (this is the #1 lever for surgical productivity)
- Ancillary stake access (ASC, PT, DME)
- Subspecialty case flow allocation
- Medical director or chief stipend
- Protected research/education time
- Device preference + capital equipment commitments
- Tail coverage for malpractice
- Non-compete geographic/time limits
- Call coverage structure
- First-assist PA or APP allocation
Ava Health places orthopedic surgeons across subspecialties nationwide. Contact us for current openings.