🗺️ The full path · year by year · dollar by dollar
How to become a US doctor
14 years on average from your first day of college to your first attending paycheck. Around 350,000 $ in tuition, fees, exam costs, application costs, and lost income. Every step is public. Every number can be verified.
📚 Phase 0 — High School (years -4 to 0)
You don't apply to medical school in high school in the US (unlike France or Korea). But this is where the GPA and the science habits start.
🎓 Phase 1 — Undergraduate (years 1–4) · ~$120K
4 years of bachelor's degree. The major doesn't have to be biology — but the pre-med course list is fixed.
| Item | Detail | Cost / number |
|---|---|---|
| Tuition (public, in-state) | 4 yr × ~11K $ | ~44,000 $ |
| Tuition (private) | 4 yr × ~55K $ | ~220,000 $ |
| Living + housing | 4 yr × 18K $ | ~72,000 $ |
| Pre-med courses required | 2× Bio · 2× Gen Chem · 2× Org Chem · 1× Biochem · 2× Physics · 1× English · 1× Stats / Math | 11 courses |
| Target GPA | Matriculant median (2024) | 3.77 sci · 3.81 total |
| Clinical hours expected | Volunteering + shadowing | 200–500 hr |
Source: AAMC FACTS Applicants & Matriculants 🟡 Tier 2
📝 Phase 2 — MCAT (year 3 of college) · ~$5K
One exam decides which medical schools will read your application. 7.5 hours. 230 questions. Three attempts maximum within a year.
📨 Phase 3 — Application (gap year or year 4) · ~$5K
The average successful applicant applies to ~17 medical schools. Each application costs money. Each interview costs travel.
🏥 Phase 4 — Medical School (years 5–8) · ~$240K
4 years split into 2 preclinical + 2 clinical. The MD (allopathic) and DO (osteopathic) paths are both valid; both lead to the same residencies and same licenses today.
Year 1–2 (preclinical)
Anatomy · Physiology · Biochem · Pharmacology · Pathology · Microbiology. Lectures + small group + cadaver lab. End: USMLE Step 1 (P/F since 2022).
Year 3 (clinical core)
Internal medicine · Surgery · Pediatrics · OB-Gyn · Psychiatry · Family medicine · Neurology. 6–8 weeks each. End: USMLE Step 2 CK — 3-digit score, decisive for residency match.
Year 4 (audition + match)
"Sub-internships" at hospitals you want for residency. ERAS application September. Interviews October–January. Match Day: 3rd Friday of March.
Average medical school debt at graduation: 200,500 $ (AAMC 2024). 🟢 Tier 1 — AAMC
🩺 Phase 5 — Residency (years 9–11 to 9–15) · paid 60–75K $/yr
You are now a licensed graduate. You are paid. You are also working 60–80 hours a week under ACGME limits. Length depends on specialty.
| Specialty | Length | Match competitiveness |
|---|---|---|
| Family medicine | 3 yr | Low |
| Internal medicine | 3 yr | Low–medium |
| Pediatrics | 3 yr | Low–medium |
| Anesthesiology | 4 yr | Medium |
| Radiology | 5 yr | Medium–high |
| General surgery | 5 yr | Medium–high |
| Orthopedic surgery | 5 yr | Very high |
| Dermatology | 4 yr | Very high |
| Neurosurgery | 7 yr | Highest |
During PGY-1 you take USMLE Step 3. Patient management. Final license requirement.
🏆 Phase 6 — Attending (year 12 to 15+)
Independent practice. The salary jumps from ~70K $ to ~250K $ overnight. The debt is still there.
💰 Total Investment — The Receipt
Tuition is only one column. Time is the bigger one.
| Phase | Years | Out-of-pocket | Lost income (vs 60K $/yr peer) |
|---|---|---|---|
| College + pre-med | 4 | ~120,000 $ | ~240,000 $ |
| MCAT + applications | ~1 | ~10,000 $ | ~60,000 $ |
| Medical school | 4 | ~240,000 $ | ~240,000 $ |
| Residency (paid, but below peer) | 3–7 | — (paid 60K $/yr) | ~0–180,000 $ |
| Total to attending day 1 | 11–15 yr | ~370K $ | ~540K $ |
Break-even with the peer who took a 60K $/yr job at 22 happens around age 38–42 for most physicians. For neurosurgeons it can be earlier (high salary), for pediatricians later (lower salary, same debt).
🧭 Alternative Paths You Should Know Exist
DO instead of MD
Same scope of practice today. Slightly easier admission stats. ~36 schools.
Caribbean / international
Higher acceptance, harder match. Ross · St. George · Saba.
MD-PhD (MSTP)
Tuition waived + stipend. 7–8 years. Research career path.
Military (HPSP)
Tuition paid in exchange for service years. No loan, lower attending pay during service.
PA / NP route
Not a doctor. 2–3 yr training, ~110K $/yr median, less autonomy. Worth knowing as a comparison.