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Best states for an occupational medicine physician

Quoted expert
Julie Aultman Ph.D.
  • Rank 1 - 10
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Occupational medicine physician opportunities vary in different parts of the country. In order to help you determine the best states for occupational medicine physicians, we ranked all fifty states from best to worst for occupational medicine physicians.Pay, benefits, and opportunities vary greatly by state, and it's no different for occupational medicine physicians. We found that Wisconsin is the best state in the nation for occupational medicine physicians, and people in Muskogee earn the most in the field.
To do that, we looked at the most recent data we have available for the following criteria -- average annual wages, and availability of jobs for occupational medicine physicians.Wisconsin is the best state, and Muskogee is the city with the highest pay for occupational medicine physicians.

10 best states for occupational medicine physicians in 2025

  1. Wisconsin #1 best state for occupational medicine physicians

    1. Wisconsin

    Total occupational medicine physician jobs:896
    Average annual salary:$178,386
    Lowest 10 percent earn:$118,000
    Highest 10 percent earn:$269,000
    Location Quotient:
    1.59
  2. North Dakota #2 best state for occupational medicine physicians

    2. North Dakota

    Total occupational medicine physician jobs:170
    Average annual salary:$174,056
    Lowest 10 percent earn:$114,000
    Highest 10 percent earn:$265,000
    Location Quotient:
    1.8
  3. Oklahoma #3 best state for occupational medicine physicians

    3. Oklahoma

    Total occupational medicine physician jobs:324
    Average annual salary:$181,366
    Lowest 10 percent earn:$121,000
    Highest 10 percent earn:$270,000
    Location Quotient:
    1.03
  4. Louisiana #4 best state for occupational medicine physicians

    4. Louisiana

    Total occupational medicine physician jobs:397
    Average annual salary:$173,126
    Lowest 10 percent earn:$113,000
    Highest 10 percent earn:$263,000
    Location Quotient:
    1.22
  5. Arizona #5 best state for occupational medicine physicians

    5. Arizona

    Total occupational medicine physician jobs:784
    Average annual salary:$172,545
    Lowest 10 percent earn:$113,000
    Highest 10 percent earn:$261,000
    Location Quotient:
    1.32
  6. Alabama #6 best state for occupational medicine physicians

    6. Alabama

    Total occupational medicine physician jobs:315
    Average annual salary:$174,463
    Lowest 10 percent earn:$114,000
    Highest 10 percent earn:$265,000
    Location Quotient:
    0.7
  7. Maine #7 best state for occupational medicine physicians

    7. Maine

    Total occupational medicine physician jobs:172
    Average annual salary:$170,975
    Lowest 10 percent earn:$111,000
    Highest 10 percent earn:$262,000
    Location Quotient:
    1.28
  8. Missouri #8 best state for occupational medicine physicians

    8. Missouri

    Total occupational medicine physician jobs:553
    Average annual salary:$173,652
    Lowest 10 percent earn:$113,000
    Highest 10 percent earn:$266,000
    Location Quotient:
    0.93
  9. Rhode Island #9 best state for occupational medicine physicians

    9. Rhode Island

    Total occupational medicine physician jobs:109
    Average annual salary:$174,098
    Lowest 10 percent earn:$114,000
    Highest 10 percent earn:$264,000
    Location Quotient:
    0.88
  10. Vermont #10 best state for occupational medicine physicians

    10. Vermont

    Total occupational medicine physician jobs:164
    Average annual salary:$169,819
    Lowest 10 percent earn:$110,000
    Highest 10 percent earn:$261,000
    Location Quotient:
    2.1

Occupational medicine physician jobsNear Columbus, OH

How Zippia determines the best states to be an occupational medicine physician

You can read about how the best state rankings are calculated here.

Detailed list of the best states for an occupational medicine physician

RankStateAverage salaryLowest 10% earnPopulationJob count
1Wisconsin$178,386$118,0005,795,483896
2North Dakota$174,056$114,000755,393170
3Oklahoma$181,366$121,0003,930,864324
4Louisiana$173,126$113,0004,684,333397
5Arizona$172,545$113,0007,016,270784
6Alabama$174,463$114,0004,874,747315
7Maine$170,975$111,0001,335,907172
8Missouri$173,652$113,0006,113,532553
9Rhode Island$174,098$114,0001,059,639109
10Vermont$169,819$110,000623,657164
11Mississippi$173,937$114,0002,984,100126
12Nevada$169,639$111,0002,998,039264
13Pennsylvania$169,473$109,00012,805,5371,279
14West Virginia$166,178$106,0001,815,857195
15Kentucky$170,670$110,0004,454,189273
16Minnesota$169,947$110,0005,576,606757
17Oregon$172,120$112,0004,142,776454
18New Hampshire$166,688$107,0001,342,795316
19South Carolina$166,529$106,0005,024,369529
20California$175,945$117,00039,536,6532,599
21New Mexico$165,487$106,0002,088,070398
22South Dakota$161,787$102,000869,666227
23North Carolina$166,353$106,00010,273,419965
24Delaware$172,500$112,000961,93991
25Illinois$167,838$107,00012,802,0231,249
26Texas$167,367$108,00028,304,5961,986
27Nebraska$164,947$105,0001,920,076230
28Wyoming$162,677$103,000579,31569
29Alaska$160,928$98,000739,795135
30Arkansas$165,147$105,0003,004,279166
31Utah$167,415$108,0003,101,833143
32District of Columbia$172,279$112,000693,97282
33Idaho$167,448$107,0001,716,943115
34Montana$163,099$103,0001,050,493155
35Washington$165,282$105,0007,405,743854
36Massachusetts$166,302$107,0006,859,819871
37Colorado$167,317$107,0005,607,154510
38Ohio$164,147$104,00011,658,609699
39Connecticut$164,127$105,0003,588,184390
40Indiana$159,166$99,0006,666,818722
41Michigan$160,460$101,0009,962,311694
42Kansas$156,564$97,0002,913,123340
43Florida$160,324$100,00020,984,4001,641
44Maryland$163,678$104,0006,052,177596
45Virginia$163,887$104,0008,470,020772
46New Jersey$163,680$104,0009,005,644718
47Hawaii$130,733$74,0001,427,538147
48Iowa$154,151$95,0003,145,711372
49New York$149,857$92,00019,849,3991,703
50Tennessee$155,328$96,0006,715,984426
51Georgia$157,574$98,00010,429,379901

Highest paying states for occupational medicine physicians

RankStateAvg. Occupational Medicine Physician Salary
1Wisconsin$178,386
2North Dakota$174,056
3Oklahoma$181,366
4Louisiana$173,126
5Arizona$172,545
6Alabama$174,463
7Maine$170,975
8Missouri$173,652
9Rhode Island$174,098
10Vermont$169,819
11Mississippi$173,937
12Nevada$169,639
13Pennsylvania$169,473
14West Virginia$166,178
15Kentucky$170,670
16Minnesota$169,947
17Oregon$172,120
18New Hampshire$166,688
19South Carolina$166,529
20California$175,945
21New Mexico$165,487
22South Dakota$161,787
23North Carolina$166,353
24Delaware$172,500
25Illinois$167,838
26Texas$167,367
27Nebraska$164,947
28Wyoming$162,677
29Alaska$160,928
30Arkansas$165,147
31Utah$167,415
32District of Columbia$172,279
33Idaho$167,448
34Montana$163,099
35Washington$165,282
36Massachusetts$166,302
37Colorado$167,317
38Ohio$164,147
39Connecticut$164,127
40Indiana$159,166
41Michigan$160,460
42Kansas$156,564
43Florida$160,324
44Maryland$163,678
45Virginia$163,887
46New Jersey$163,680
47Hawaii$130,733
48Iowa$154,151
49New York$149,857
50Tennessee$155,328
51Georgia$157,574

Expert opinions on the best states for occupational medicine physicians

  • Are there any particularly good places in the United States for occupational medicine physicians to find work opportunities?

    Julie Aultman Ph.D.Julie Aultman Ph.D. LinkedIn profile

    Professor of Family and Community Medicine, Northeast Ohio Medical University

    We need this future workforce to be innovative, to make important changes - from environmental and global warming initiatives (bioethicists who have a passion for environmental ethics) to being researchers and advocates for patients and others who might fall victim to the negative impact of the pandemic (clinical ethics, health humanities scholars). The transition to work will be slow, as the revitalization of our national economy, but there will be work.

    We need these future minds more than anything right now. But again, mentors are going to be essential for helping these graduates get to that next phase in their lives. I am fully confident my dual-enrolled students (medical or pharmacy students who are also taking the Masters program in Medical Ethics and Humanities) will find work opportunities. For my traditional graduate students who are not in the health professions, there will be roles for these students in medicine and science (e.g., regulatory compliance).

    However, I do encourage them to work toward a doctoral program as the MA degree is a non-terminal degree. I have had students receive work prior to the pandemic, and I would suspect similar opportunities post-pandemic, particularly in the sciences where ethics and compliance are so essential.

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