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Surgeons in the US earn wide-ranging salaries depending on specialty — from $255,000 for general surgeons to $700,000+ for neurosurgeons.

Average Surgeon Salary by Specialty

Surgical specialty is the single largest determinant of a surgeon’s income. Neurosurgeons and orthopedic surgeons regularly earn $600,000–$800,000 due to the complexity of their procedures and years of sub-specialty training. General surgeons — while still earning well above most professions — sit at the lower end of the surgical pay scale at around $255,000, reflecting shorter training and broader competition.

Specialty Average Salary
Neurosurgery $700,000+
Orthopedic surgery $600,000+
Plastic surgery $475,000
Cardiac surgery $450,000
Vascular surgery $420,000
Urology $400,000
General surgery $255,110
Colorectal surgery $350,000
Trauma surgery $380,000
Pediatric surgery $400,000

Surgeon Salary by State

State General Surgeon Orthopedic Surgeon
California $275,000 $650,000
Texas $265,000 $620,000
New York $285,000 $580,000
Florida $255,000 $600,000
Wisconsin $290,000 $700,000
Michigan $270,000 $620,000
Ohio $258,000 $590,000
Georgia $260,000 $610,000

Surgeon Salary by Work Setting

Private practice and multispecialty groups tend to pay significantly more than hospital employment or academic positions, but they come with business overhead, less predictable income, and no employer-sponsored benefits. Academic surgeons accept lower pay in exchange for research time, teaching opportunities, and institutional prestige. Government positions like the VA system offer the lowest pay but include exceptional benefits and work-life balance.

Setting General Surgery Specialty Surgery
Private practice $300,000+ $600,000+
Hospital employed $255,000 $400,000
Academic medical center $220,000 $350,000
Government/VA $210,000 $300,000
Multispecialty group $280,000 $500,000

Surgeon Salary by Experience

Experience Level General Surgery Specialty Surgery
Resident $65,000-$80,000 $65,000-$80,000
New attending (1-3 years) $250,000 $400,000
Mid-career (5-10 years) $280,000 $550,000
Experienced (15+ years) $350,000 $700,000+
Partnership/ownership $400,000+ $1,000,000+

Path to Becoming a Surgeon

The road to becoming a surgeon is one of the longest and most expensive career paths in any profession. It requires a minimum of 13–16 years of education and training after high school, during which time future surgeons accumulate $200,000–$400,000 in student debt while earning resident wages of $65,000–$85,000. The delayed earning potential means surgeons don’t start building real wealth until their mid-30s at the earliest.

Stage Duration Typical Earnings
College (pre-med) 4 years -$100,000 (debt)
Medical school 4 years -$200,000 (debt)
General surgery residency 5 years $65,000-$85,000/year
Fellowship (specialty) 1-3 years $75,000-$90,000/year
Total training 14-16 years

Highest Paying Surgical Subspecialties

Subspecialty Average Salary Training Years
Neurosurgery $700,000+ 7 years residency
Orthopedic spine $750,000+ 5+1 fellowship
Orthopedic surgery $600,000+ 5 years residency
Cardiothoracic surgery $500,000+ 5+2-3 fellowship
Plastic surgery $475,000 6-7 years total
Vascular surgery $420,000 5+2 fellowship
Surgical oncology $400,000 5+2 fellowship
Hand surgery $400,000 5+1 fellowship

Surgeon Salary After Taxes

Gross Salary Federal Tax FICA State Tax (avg) Take-Home
$255,000 $50,000 $18,000 $15,300 $171,700
$400,000 $98,000 $22,600 $24,000 $255,400
$600,000 $168,000 $24,600 $36,000 $371,400
$800,000 $238,000 $24,600 $48,000 $489,400

Surgery Job Outlook

  • Job growth: 3% (2022-2032)
  • Competition: Very high for residency spots
  • Lifestyle: Demanding call schedule, long hours
  • Malpractice: Higher premiums than most specialties

Is Surgery Worth It?

Pros:

  • Among highest-paid careers
  • High job security
  • Meaningful, impactful work
  • Status and prestige

Cons:

  • 14-16 years of training
  • $200K-$400K in student debt
  • Demanding lifestyle and schedule
  • High stress and burnout rates
  • Malpractice concerns

Sources

  • U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. “Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics, May 2024.” bls.gov/oes

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