Cardiology Physician Salary in Alaska (2026)
A Cardiology physician practicing in Alaska can expect a base salary inside the national Cardiology band of $445K to $640K, with the median tracking close to $510K. The Alaska variation on that number is driven mostly by anchor-employer comp structure in Anchorage, Fairbanks, Juneau and by shortage-area incentive stacking outside those metros — not by Alaska cost-of-living alone.
Cardiology compensation snapshot for Alaska
- Typical Alaska base range
- $445K – $640K (national median $510K)
- National demand signal
- high
- Top Alaska hiring metros
- Anchorage, Fairbanks, Juneau
- Alaska HPSA / shortage posture
- Nearly the entire state outside the Anchorage metro is HPSA-designated; J-1 waivers and IHS pathways are routine
- Primary board
- ABIM Cardiovascular Disease subspecialty board
Where Cardiology offers land highest in Alaska
Alaska runs a unique recruitment market with extensive Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium hiring, Indian Health Service positions, and isolated critical-access hospitals. Compensation premiums are among the highest in the country. For Cardiology, the highest-comp Alaska opportunities I see are typically not in the urban core of Anchorage — they sit in rural and HPSA-designated counties where the same Cardiology role carries a 10-25% base premium plus signing bonuses of $30K-$100K and loan repayment of $50K-$200K layered on top of base. That stacking can push an Alaska Cardiology offer comfortably above the $640K national ceiling in year-one total cash.
Alaska incentive programs that boost Cardiology take-home
Alaska has the SHARP (Supporting Health Care Access through loan REPayment) program, which is among the more generous state-level loan repayment opportunities I work with — it stacks with NHSC for physicians serving qualifying sites. The Alaska Conrad State 30 J-1 waiver program is small but consistently filled. Indian Health Service and Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium positions carry their own loan-repayment structures that often exceed civilian comp once total package is modeled. For Cardiology specifically, these federal and state programs frequently add the equivalent of $30K-$60K per year of pre-tax value over the first three years of service.
How I benchmark a Cardiology offer in Alaska
When a Cardiology candidate sends me an Alaska offer, I check three things in order: (1) where the base lands inside the $445K–$640K band relative to MGMA regional percentiles, (2) the wRVU conversion factor and ramp/threshold structure, and (3) the call burden and stipend. Alaska's licensing pace also matters for ramp timing: The Alaska State Medical Board issues licensure with one of the more thorough credentialing processes in the country.
Engage a Alaska Cardiology compensation review
Email hire@physicianrecruitment.com for a written Alaska Cardiology compensation review of any offer you've received, at no cost. We benchmark against MGMA/AMGA percentiles and the active Alaska Cardiology pipeline we're working in real time.