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RVU Targets and Compensation Models for Your First Job

Feb 2, 2026

8 min read

What RVUs Mean (Without the Jargon)

During residency, you get paid the same no matter what shows up on your shift. In your first attending job, things change — the amount and type of work you do can affect your paycheck.

RVUs are simply a way to measure the value of your clinical work. More RVUs → usually more income. They help employers track productivity and figure out how much to pay you.

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Compensation Models You’ll See

Every job structures pay differently, and it’s important to understand how each one impacts your income, stress level, and schedule. Here are the most common setups:

1) Straight Salary

You get the same paycheck every month.

  • 👍 Stable and predictable

  • 👎 No reward for doing more or working faster

2) Base Salary + RVU Bonus

You have a guaranteed base, plus extra money if you produce above a certain target.

  • 👍 Best balance for new attendings

  • 👎 Targets can be unrealistic — always ask what current doctors actually hit last month.

3) Pure RVU (Production Only)

No base salary, and your pay depends entirely on your performance.

  • 👍 High earning potential in busy environments

  • 👎 Risky if volume dips or support isn’t strong

4) Hourly Pay + Incentives

Very common for travelers — set hourly rate with bonuses for nights, weekends, etc.

  • 👍Simple and flexible

  • 👎 RVU pressure can still exist behind the scenes


Understanding RVUs and how you get paid as a new attending can help you feel confident when comparing job offers. In this guide, we break down compensation models in plain language so you know what you’re actually earning — and what to look out for.

Understanding RVUs and how you get paid as a new attending can help you feel confident when comparing job offers. In this guide, we break down compensation models in plain language so you know what you’re actually earning — and what to look out for.

What’s a Normal RVU Target for a New Grad?

Targets vary depending on specialty, location, and hospital volume — but here’s a general starting point:

Specialty

Typical First-Year Target

Emergency Medicine

9,000–12,000 RVUs/year

Radiology

9,000–11,000 RVUs/year

These are not hard rules — they’re just a benchmark to compare against.

Tips for success:

  • Ask how shifts are staffed and how volume is distributed

  • Confirm whether RVU rates are the same for nights vs. days

  • Make sure documentation support is solid — bad staffing = fewer RVUs

A “great pay model” can turn into a headache if the workflow doesn’t support it.

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Know the Terms of How You'll Actually Get Paid
  • W2 vs 1099 Pay (can determine taxes at year end)

  • Are there team RVU goals

  • How compensation changes if volume drops

  • What are the non-monetary benefits

When you understand the pay structure, you can focus on what actually matters: becoming a confident,

Your first job should help you grow — not stress you out. New attendinghood has lots of other challenges, most important of all your confidence as a clinical new attending!

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