Emergency Medicine Locum Pay Guide: 2026 Rates, Shifts, and What to Negotiate
Emergency medicine is one of the most consistently active locum specialties in the country. Shift-based scheduling maps cleanly to locum coverage, hospital demand is continuous, and the rural and frontier markets that struggle most to recruit permanent EM physicians depend heavily on locums to keep their departments open. For physicians who want flexibility, strong rates, and no shortage of assignments, EM locum work delivers all three.
What it does not always deliver is rate transparency. Locum EM compensation is negotiated case by case, and what a recruiter quotes on the first call is rarely the ceiling. This guide gives you the market context to evaluate what you’re being offered — and the framework to push back when the number doesn’t reflect what the assignment actually requires.
How Locum EM Pay Is Structured
Locum emergency medicine pay is quoted hourly, but the real unit of compensation is the shift. Most locum EM assignments are built around 12-hour or 24-hour blocks — not the 8- or 10-hour increments common in outpatient specialties. Hospitals structure coverage this way because they need gaps filled completely, not partially, and agencies price accordingly.
This matters when you’re comparing offers across sites. A $230/hour rate at a community ED running 12-hour shifts produces a very different daily total than the same rate at a rural critical access hospital running 24-hour solo coverage. The hourly number is the starting point, not the comparison point. Always convert to shift earnings before evaluating.
Overnight, weekend, and holiday pay is handled inconsistently across the market. Some facilities bake a premium into the base rate for all shifts. Others negotiate differentials separately. A flat blended rate that looks strong on paper may be absorbing weekend and overnight work without acknowledging it. If a recruiter quotes you a single rate for all shift types, ask directly how nights, weekends, and holidays are priced — and get the answer in writing before you sign.
2025-2026 Locum EM Rates by Setting
Locum EM pay clusters meaningfully by site type. The table below reflects current market conditions synthesized from compensation guides, staffing trend data, and job posting analysis. These are market ranges, not published rate schedules — actual offers will vary by region, urgency, credentialing timeline, and individual negotiation.
| Setting | Hourly Range | 12-hr Shift (est.) | 24-hr Shift (est.) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Level I/II Trauma Center | $250-$350+/hr | $3,000-$4,200+ | $6,000-$8,400+ | Higher acuity, heavier backup expectations, top of market |
| Community ED | $200-$275/hr | $2,400-$3,300 | $4,800-$6,600 | Most common mid-market range for standard ED coverage |
| Critical Access / Rural ED | $225-$325/hr | $2,700-$3,900 | $5,400-$7,800 | Rural premium for hard-to-fill coverage; may include solo coverage and transfer responsibility |
Where Locum EM Demand Is Concentrated
Locum EM demand is nationally distributed but not geographically uniform. Rural communities accounted for roughly 27% of locum physician assignments in 2025, and emergency medicine is one of the primary drivers of that figure. Permanent EM recruitment in rural markets is difficult — compensation alone often cannot compete with urban positions when lifestyle, call burden, and professional isolation are factored in — which means locums fill a structural gap that permanent staffing cannot close.
The markets with the most acute locum EM pressure in current reporting include the rural Southeast, the Midwest, and frontier settings in the West where long transport distances and limited specialty backup make EM coverage both harder to staff and higher-stakes when a physician is unavailable. These are also the markets most likely to pay at the upper end of posted ranges, and where urgent placements — which command above-market rates — are most common.
Urban and suburban EDs use locums too, primarily for surge coverage, scheduling gaps, and transition periods between permanent hires. These assignments tend to pay at the mid-market range and are less likely to involve rural premiums or solo coverage expectations.
What to Negotiate Before You Sign
Locum EM contracts have more negotiable line items than most physicians realize. The hourly rate is the most visible number but rarely the only lever. The following are the items that materially affect total compensation and working conditions — all of them should be defined in writing before you accept an assignment.
Shift structure and total hours. Confirm whether the assignment is 12-hour or 24-hour shifts, how many shifts per block, and whether there is any expectation of staying past scheduled end time. Uncompensated overlap time is a common friction point in locum EM contracts.
Overnight, weekend, and holiday differentials. If a recruiter is quoting a flat blended rate, ask how it was calculated. If weekend and overnight shifts are priced the same as weekday days, you are likely leaving money on the table. A split rate structure — higher for nights and weekends — is a reasonable ask in most markets and should be written into the contract explicitly.
Mid-level supervision. If the site expects you to supervise NPs or PAs working in the department, that responsibility should be disclosed upfront and reflected in the rate. Supervision adds cognitive load, liability exposure, and often administrative time that is not captured in a standard hourly rate negotiated for direct patient care. If supervision is expected, it is a legitimate basis for a higher rate or a separate supervision stipend — but only if you negotiate it before signing.
Solo coverage and transfer responsibility. Critical access hospitals frequently offer solo coverage — no in-house backup, you are the physician of record for everything that walks in. This is not the same job as working a community ED with a department of colleagues and on-call specialists. Solo coverage assignments command a premium and require explicit contract language about what backup resources exist, what the transfer protocol is, and what your liability exposure looks like. Do not accept a solo coverage assignment at a community ED rate.
Credentialing and start date. Locum contracts sometimes include language that ties your first paycheck to credentialing completion. If credentialing delays are the facility’s responsibility and not yours, you should not bear the financial cost of those delays. Ask how credentialing delays are handled and whether there is any compensation for reserved time if the assignment falls through at the credentialing stage.
EMR orientation. If the site runs an EMR system you are not trained on, negotiate paid orientation time before your first clinical shift — typically 4 to 8 hours at your full hourly rate. This is a reasonable ask and most facilities will accommodate it. Learning an unfamiliar EMR in real time during a high-acuity ED shift is an avoidable liability for both you and the facility. If a site resists this request, that tells you something about how they handle other contract details.
Malpractice coverage. Confirm whether coverage is occurrence-based or claims-made, and if claims-made, who pays for the tail. This is standard in locum contracts but worth verifying explicitly on every assignment. The malpractice guide on this site covers the distinction in detail. Locum Tenens Malpractice Insurance Guide
Evaluating an Agency Offer
The rate a recruiter quotes on the first call is informed by the agency’s margin, not just market data. Agencies typically take 25-40% of the bill rate as their cut — meaning the facility is paying substantially more than what you see. How Locum Tenens Agencies Make Money
This does not mean the first offer is always negotiable by a large margin, but it does mean you should approach initial quotes as opening positions. A few practical points:
Working with multiple agencies on the same assignment is not possible — agencies typically have exclusive relationships with specific facilities — but working with multiple agencies across different assignments is standard practice and gives you market data to calibrate what strong rates look like in your target geography.
Urgent placements are a genuine leverage point. If a facility needs coverage in two weeks and you can credential and start quickly, you have negotiating power that a physician who needs eight weeks does not. Multi-state licensure through the IMLC expands this leverage further by opening up the pool of assignments where you can move fast. [Internal link: Multi-State Medical Licensing and the IMLC — coming soon]
Rural and critical access assignments that have been open for extended periods are also worth negotiating on. A facility that has been unable to fill a slot for three months has already absorbed the cost of that gap. The recruiter knows it. You can reasonably ask whether there is flexibility on rate for a multi-week commitment that solves a chronic coverage problem.
Tax and Structure Considerations
At EM locum pay rates, tax structure is not an afterthought. A physician earning $250/hour across a meaningful number of shifts annually is generating income at a level where the difference between a well-structured 1099 arrangement and an unoptimized one can easily reach five figures per year. The S-Corp election guide on this site covers the mechanics in detail, but the core principle is that self-employment tax on 1099 income is 15.3% on the first dollar up to the Social Security wage base — and at EM locum rates, you will hit that ceiling quickly. Structure matters. S-Corp Election for Locum Physicians
Bottom Line
Locum emergency medicine is a strong market — high demand, durable rates, and a wide geographic spread of assignments that gives physicians real flexibility in where and how much they work. The ceiling is high for physicians who can credential quickly, tolerate rural assignments, and negotiate competently. The floor is set by mid-market community ED rates for physicians who take the first number offered without asking questions.
The rate table above gives you market orientation. The negotiation framework above gives you the questions to ask. What you do with them determines where you land.
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