2026 National Compensation Benchmarks
| Specialty | Median Compensation |
| General / Non-Invasive Cardiology | $650,000 |
| Interventional Cardiology | $750,000 |
| Electrophysiology (EP) | $798,000 |
| Invasive Cardiology | $774,000 |
These figures are based primarily on MedAxiom’s national cardiovascular compensation survey and MGMA-referenced compensation data. (Cardiovascular Business)
Compensation Percentiles
General Cardiology
| Percentile | Compensation |
| 10th | $450,000 |
| 25th | $550,000 |
| Median | $650,000 |
| 75th | $775,000 |
| 90th | $900,000+ |
Interventional Cardiology
| Percentile | Compensation |
| 10th | $550,000 |
| 25th | $650,000 |
| Median | $750,000 |
| 75th | $900,000 |
| 90th | $1,050,000+ |
Electrophysiology
| Percentile | Compensation |
| 10th | $550,000 |
| 25th | $675,000 |
| Median | $798,000 |
| 75th | $950,000 |
| 90th | $1,100,000+ |
Geographic Premiums
Physicians in metropolitan coastal areas (like New York City or Los Angeles), compensation will often hover closer to the 25th to 50th percentiles due to a high supply of candidates. Conversely, upper-midwest states, the South, and rural areas often pay at the 75th to 90th percentiles plus hefty signing bonuses to attract top talent
FQHC Reality Check
FQHCs typically recruit General/Non-Invasive Cardiologists to manage chronic clinical diseases. Due to federal grant structures, an FQHC salary will usually lean toward the 10th to 25th percentile ($450,000 – $550,000) base, but they offset this lower number by offering:
- Government student loan forgiveness via the NHSC (National Health Service Corps).
- Pristine outpatient work-life balance with minimal to no weekend hospital call.
- Comprehensive federal malpractice coverage under the FTCA (Federal Tort Claims Act).
Cardiology Compensation Growth
New cardiologists are seeing dramatically higher starting salaries than a decade ago.
According to MedAxiom, median compensation for cardiologists under age 35 increased from approximately $214,000 in 2014 to nearly $600,000 by 2023—a 179% increase driven largely by workforce shortages and increasing demand. (MedAxiom)
Hospital vs Private Practice
| Practice Type | Median Compensation |
| Integrated Health System | $701,000 |
| Private Practice | $588,000 |
The compensation gap between employed cardiologists and private-practice cardiologists is now the largest seen in more than five years. (Cardiovascular Business)
Why Cardiology Salaries Continue to Rise
1. Physician Shortages
Nearly one-quarter of practicing cardiologists are older than 61, creating significant retirement pressure. (MedAxiom)
2. Aging Population
Heart disease remains the leading cause of death in the United States, increasing demand for cardiovascular specialists. (VitalSolution)
3. Procedure-Based Revenue
Interventional cardiologists and electrophysiologists perform high-value procedures that generate substantial hospital revenue, supporting premium compensation.
4. Growing Structural Heart Programs
Expansion of TAVR, Watchman, MitraClip, AF ablations, and complex EP procedures continues to increase demand for advanced cardiology specialists.
Most Difficult Cardiology Specialties to Recruit
1. Electrophysiology
- Highest compensation
- Limited fellowship output
- Significant procedural demand
2. Interventional Cardiology
- Strong demand nationwide
- Rural shortages severe
- Heavy call burden
3. Structural Heart Specialists
- TAVR and Watchman expertise
- Limited supply
4. Non-Invasive Cardiology
- Large number of openings
- Growing demand from health systems
Signing Bonuses & Incentives
Typical 2026 recruitment packages include:
| Incentive | Typical Range |
| Signing Bonus | $25,000-$100,000 |
| Relocation | $10,000-$25,000 |
| Student Loan Assistance | Up to $200,000 |
| Fellowship Stipends | $2,000-$5,000/month |
| Retention Bonus | $25,000-$100,000 |
Market-leading interventional and EP opportunities frequently exceed these benchmarks. (MedAxiom)
Outlook Through 2030
Cardiology is expected to remain among the most heavily recruited physician specialties.
Expected trends:
- Continued salary growth
- Increasing use of APPs
- More employed physician models
- Growing structural heart programs
- Significant retirement-driven shortages
Electrophysiologists and interventional cardiologists are likely to remain among the highest-paid physicians in medicine for the foreseeable future. (Cardiovascular Business)
Key Takeaway for Hiring Organizations
If you are recruiting cardiologists in 2026, competitive compensation generally starts around:
- General Cardiology: $600,000-$700,000
- Interventional Cardiology: $700,000-$900,000
- Electrophysiology: $800,000-$1,000,000+
Organizations below these ranges will increasingly struggle to attract experienced candidates in a highly competitive market. (Cardiovascular Business)
Summary Matrix : Recruiting Strategy
| Cardiology Type | Core Sourcing Channels | Recruitment Bottleneck | Best “Hook” to Pitch |
| General | NEJM CareerCenter, ACC | High imaging volumes / technician shortages | Pristine work-life balance & limited inpatient floors |
| Interventional | Society for Cardiovascular Angiography & Interventions (SCAI) | Excessive emergency STEMI call schedules | Guaranteed Cath Lab block times & dedicated labs |
| Electrophysiology | Heart Rhythm Society (HRS) | Lack of advanced cardiac mapping technology | State-of-the-art labs & outpatient ASC scheduling options |
