π You might be underpaid by $10,000—or more.
If you're a PA, NP, or pharmacist and you're relying on vibes and guesswork instead of real data to evaluate your compensation, you could be losing tens of thousands of dollars every year. That’s money that could be funding your investments, knocking out debt, or helping you reach financial independence faster.
So let’s fix that.
Below is the 6-step system to figure out what you should be earning—and what to do if you're falling short.
First, you need a benchmark.
It’s shocking how many medical professionals skip this part. Before asking friends or Facebook groups if a salary is “good,” go to actual data sources.
π Try:
For example:
π Write this number down. It’s your starting point.
Earning $130K in Columbus, OH ≠ $130K in San Diego, CA.
Use a cost of living (COL) calculator to adjust your base salary to your city’s real purchasing power.
β Tools to use:
π Example:
π Adjust your salary benchmark based on where you live—or where you’re moving.
More experience = more value = more compensation.
This is especially relevant if you’re seasoned. Use data to check how salary scales with years on the job.
π Example from MaritHealth (Orthopedics PA):
That’s a 13% increase above the average.
Note - it’s not an across the board truth that 10 years of experience = 13% more pay. You need to do your own research for your speciality.
π Formula:
Take your COL-adjusted salary (Step 2) and apply:
Now that you’ve found the average, it’s time to aim higher.
Most high-performing clinicians should be compensated in the 75th percentile—not just at the median.
π Example:
Apply the same COL + experience adjustments to the 75th percentile figure to find your true target range.
This is your negotiation goal.
The Step 3 number is your floor. The Step 4 number is your goal (not your ceiling, because someone has to be the 95th percentile!).
Total compensation matters more than just your W2.
Don't forget to factor in:
π Example:
Two offers at $150K
— One includes 10% retirement match = +$15K in comp
— The other offers only 3% = +$4.5K
That's a $10K difference in total comp.
Not all $150K jobs are created equal.
π§ You must evaluate how much you’re being paid per hour worked.
π Example:
Even with the same salary, their lives and workloads look VERY different.
βοΈ Knowing your effective hourly rate helps you:
This 6-step system gives you data-backed clarity on whether you're being paid fairly. If you discover you're underpaid, this is your first fix in the wealth-building journey.
Because saving, investing, and paying off debt?
π‘ They all get a lot easier when you're earning what you're truly worth.
π’ Get your Income Upgrade Blueprint here
Get access to:
β
4-Hour Masterclass on how to multiply your income
β
Salary negotiation tools
β
Side gig strategies
β
CV/Resume Optimization Checklist
π² And follow us on Instagram for daily finance tips: @millionairesinmedicine