Podiatry has an increase in salary with experience more than any other speciality?
Thoughts as to why?
Mainly private practice (more income as practice grows)
Saturation with underpaid associate jobs
View attachment 412790
Other reasons?
Hey all, Sam from APMA here. This graph is from this document on the Marit site:
Physician Salary Growth: How Pay Changes Throughout Your Career.
This is based on Sept 2025 data, so before we started the APMA/Marit compensation survey. This is NOT the updated data. The full APMA/Marit report should be going out... today? Or so?
On this point:
"4. Marit data is self reported. I submitted mine. There's no verification. You can say whatever you want. You can claim a base $800K salary, which some people did.
5. After the Marit data came out - there was an adjustment performed where the overall average came down. I assumed - they had dropped a bunch of the people who had reported ridiculous numbers that seemed artificial/inflated. Instead, they came down because Marit had excluded low reported values and decided to include them. Color me skeptical of some of the stupidly high values, but I suppose if they are reporting medians that these don't really matter."
So, we actually did two things on the top end to keep any especially high values from affecting the central measures (mean, median). First, on point 4, we checked some of the details around the highest reported values as part of data validation checks and there's reason to think they're legitimate. Second, and this is the most impactful, I applied winsorization to the top 1% of values, basically capping the highest possible value at just over $1M. This kept the 1% who reported more than that from dragging up the means. You might say, "$1M! That's a lot!". Yup, sure is. Still, it's a small set of people making even that much and there's reason to think it's legitimate,
Warmly,
Sam
Editing briefly to say: Thanks
@heybrother, you're spot on in many of these points. As you mention, we switch almost entirely to reporting the median instead of the mean as our primary metric throughout the report which will be released shortly. That goes a LONG way towards reducing the influence of those top-end outliers. We also report a broader range of statistics than you normally see in this stuff. Everywhere (I think?) we report mean we also report median, along with measures like min/max, 25th/75th percentile, etc. Our goal was to actually contextualize the summary metrics that you usually see.
@heybrother makes some good points here on income growth over time in the profession, pay difference as a hospitalist, etc. I think the survey data we're presenting will make a lot of sense to many of you here based on what you might expect from your experience.
Lastly, for clarity, the data on the Marit site doesn't have post-survey measures applied (e.g., winsorization). The APMA report which is coming out very, very, very soon does. Marit will be shortly releasing a version of that report for anyone registered on their platform (aka you submitted data for the survey) that is a bit simplified and without a fair amount of APMA's analysis as that's part of the membership benefit. Finally, still planning on releasing a last short brief that covers big picture stuff for non-APMA members.