Family Medicine Physician Salary in North Carolina (2026)
A Family Medicine physician practicing in North Carolina can expect a base salary inside the national Family Medicine band of $235K to $330K, with the median tracking close to $265K. The North Carolina variation on that number is driven mostly by anchor-employer comp structure in Charlotte, Raleigh, Greensboro, Durham, Winston-Salem, Wilmington, Asheville and by shortage-area incentive stacking outside those metros — not by North Carolina cost-of-living alone.
Family Medicine compensation snapshot for North Carolina
- Typical North Carolina base range
- $235K – $330K (national median $265K)
- National demand signal
- very high
- Top North Carolina hiring metros
- Charlotte, Raleigh, Greensboro, Durham, Winston-Salem, Wilmington, Asheville
- North Carolina HPSA / shortage posture
- Eastern coastal plain and far-western mountain counties carry HPSA designations
- Primary board
- American Board of Family Medicine (ABFM)
Where Family Medicine offers land highest in North Carolina
North Carolina is anchored by Atrium Health, Duke Health, UNC Health, Novant Health, Cone Health, and ECU Health. For Family Medicine, the highest-comp North Carolina opportunities I see are typically not in the urban core of Charlotte — they sit in rural and HPSA-designated counties where the same Family Medicine 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 North Carolina Family Medicine offer comfortably above the $330K national ceiling in year-one total cash.
North Carolina incentive programs that boost Family Medicine take-home
The North Carolina State Loan Repayment Program supports primary care, behavioral health, and dental providers in HPSA sites. The North Carolina Office of Rural Health administers several physician recruitment incentive programs targeted at rural placement. The North Carolina Conrad State 30 J-1 waiver program is competitive and consistently filled. NHSC loan repayment is widely used across rural eastern North Carolina FQHCs. For Family Medicine 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 Family Medicine offer in North Carolina
When a Family Medicine candidate sends me an North Carolina offer, I check three things in order: (1) where the base lands inside the $235K–$330K band relative to MGMA regional percentiles, (2) the wRVU conversion factor and ramp/threshold structure, and (3) the call burden and stipend. North Carolina's licensing pace also matters for ramp timing: The North Carolina Medical Board licenses with a typical timeline of 60-90 days for US-trained physicians.
Engage a North Carolina Family Medicine compensation review
Email hire@physicianrecruitment.com for a written North Carolina Family Medicine compensation review of any offer you've received, at no cost. We benchmark against MGMA/AMGA percentiles and the active North Carolina Family Medicine pipeline we're working in real time.