4 Insights from BFMV’s 2025 Physician Call Coverage Burden & Compensation Survey
- Zoe Devine
- 12 minutes ago
- 2 min read
Every year, BFMV conducts a national direct-to-physician call coverage survey. This project offers valuable insights that inform our fair market value appraisals. It also provides valuable information to participating physicians, who receive free access to the results.
The direct-to-physician feature of our call survey differentiates it from other physician compensation surveys. In its inception, we wanted a survey that helped us better understand the off-site/unrestricted call coverage "burden." We also hoped to capture the impact of unrestricted call coverage on physician compensation. Therefore, we chose to contact physicians directly for data since physicians know best the burden-related factors (phone calls received, in-person activations, etc.) of their call arrangements.
Here are four valuable insights from the 2025 survey:
1. Surgeons are more likely to be paid a call stipend than other specialties.
The 2025 survey supports the conventional wisdom that specialists and surgeons are more likely to receive a call stipend for off-site call coverage than other physicians. The highest percentages of respondents receiving a stipend were in specialties like neurological surgery (78.1% of respondents reported stipends) and orthopedic spine surgery (75.0% of respondents reported stipends), compared to non-surgical specialties like podiatry (19.2% of respondents reported stipends). Overall, 65.6% of surgeons reported stipends, while 39.8% of non-surgical specialists reported stipends.
2. More than 97% of specialties reported a weekend or holiday coverage differential.
The size of the differential varied significantly, with special shift premiums ranging from 4.5% to 380.0%. Across all specialties reporting a premium shift rate, the average increase was 100.97% over the regular unrestricted call daily rate.

3. Physicians earning a call stipend often provide uncompensated call coverage.
Among those physicians with compensated call arrangements, an average of 22.9% provided uncompensated coverage in addition to their paid shifts. These physicians provide an average of 8.8 uncompensated call days per month.
4. Most respondents cover more than one facility; however, most reported stipends for this survey are for coverage of just one facility.
About 60% of responding physicians provide call coverage to multiple facilities. This statistic hasn’t changed much since we launched the survey five years ago. However, for the majority of specialties, the median number of facilities covered for the reported rate during weekday shifts was just one facility.


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