Specialty Guide · 2026

Student loans for emergency medicine physicians: your 2026 repayment strategy

With a typical attending income around $350,000 and education debt often in the $250k–$400k range, emergency medicine physicians face a specific set of repayment tradeoffs. Here's how to think about it — and a free tool to find your answer.

Find your lowest-cost repayment path

Enter your real numbers and we'll compare PSLF, RAP, capped IBR, and refinancing — ranked by true lifetime cost. Free, no signup to see your answer.

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The key question for emergency medicine physicians

Many EM physicians work for staffing groups (often for-profit), which usually don't qualify for PSLF — making refinancing or aggressive payoff common. Academic/hospital-employed EM docs may still pursue PSLF.

How the decision usually breaks down

What about the new RAP plan?

As of July 1, 2026, the Repayment Assistance Plan (RAP) is the new federal income-driven option. For emergency medicine physicians, whether RAP beats legacy IBR or refinancing comes down to your income and PSLF eligibility — which is exactly what our calculator sorts out. RAP vs IBR explained →

Stop guessing — see your actual numbers

Every emergency medicine physician's situation is different. Run yours free and get a ranked, explainable recommendation in two minutes.

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Educational estimates, not financial advice. Income and debt figures are representative ranges, not your specific numbers. Verify program rules at studentaid.gov. See our methodology and disclosures.