A Doctor of Medicine (MD) is the professional degree awarded to physicians who complete medical school in the United States. It's one of the most demanding educational paths you can take—typically 11 years or more from high school graduation to independent practice—but it qualifies you to diagnose, treat, and manage patients across virtually every field of medicine.
If you're wondering what an MD actually involves, how it differs from other medical degrees, and what the path looks like from start to finish, this guide has you covered.
An MD license allows you to practice medicine independently, which means you can:
The scope of what you actually practice depends on your specialty. A family physician's daily work looks nothing like a neurosurgeon's—but both hold the same underlying credential. The MD is the entry point; the specialty you train in during residency defines what you do day to day.
The short answer: a long time. Here's the realistic timeline:
Total: roughly 11 years minimum (4 + 4 + 3 for a primary care specialty) and up to 15+ for competitive surgical subspecialties. That's the reality going in.
Medical school is divided into two phases, and they feel very different.
The first two years are primarily classroom- and lab-based. You'll cover:
Most schools have moved toward integrated curricula—teaching organ systems (cardiology, pulmonology, nephrology) rather than pure disciplines. You learn heart anatomy, cardiac physiology, cardiac pathology, and cardiac pharmacology together in a cardiology block rather than in separate silos.
USMLE Step 1, the first major licensing exam, is now pass/fail (since 2022). You take it at the end of preclinical training. It no longer carries numerical scores for residency applications, which has changed how students approach studying for it.
The second half of medical school places you in hospitals and clinics under attending supervision. Core rotations typically include internal medicine, surgery, pediatrics, obstetrics/gynecology, psychiatry, family medicine, and neurology. Each runs 4–8 weeks.
Year 4 is often used for elective rotations and sub-internships—time to explore subspecialties and strengthen your application for the specialty you want to match into. USMLE Step 2 (scored) is taken during fourth year and matters significantly for residency applications.
Graduating from medical school doesn't mean you're ready to practice independently. Residency is where clinical training actually happens at full depth. You're now a licensed physician—legally able to practice—but you're supervised, learning, and building the volume of clinical experience required by your specialty board.
Residency hours are brutal by any standard. The ACGME caps residents at 80 hours per week on average, with 24-hour shifts allowed in certain circumstances. In practice, the experience varies widely by program, specialty, and rotation.
Specialty training lengths vary significantly:
After residency, you take specialty board exams (like the American Board of Internal Medicine or American Board of Surgery) to achieve board certification. It's not legally required in most states, but hospitals, insurance panels, and employers nearly universally require it.
This is one of the most common questions prospective medical students ask—and the honest answer is that the distinction matters less than it used to.
A DO (Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine) degree trains physicians using an osteopathic philosophy that emphasizes the body as an integrated whole. DO programs include an additional 200+ hours of osteopathic manipulative medicine (OMM) training. MD programs do not.
In terms of licensing, scope of practice, and career outcomes, MD and DO physicians are largely equivalent today. Both take the USMLE (DOs can also take COMLEX). Since 2020, MD and DO residency programs have shared a single match process (NRMP). DOs can match into any residency, including the most competitive surgical programs.
The practical differences: MD programs are statistically more competitive to enter (higher MCAT/GPA averages), and some residency programs still favor MDs in ultracompetitive specialties like dermatology and neurosurgery. But this is less true every year.
A medical PhD and an MD serve entirely different purposes. A PhD in a biomedical field (biochemistry, molecular biology, neuroscience) is a research degree—it trains you to design and conduct original experiments, not to treat patients.
An MD-PhD (the combined program offered by many research-focused medical schools) is for people who want to do both: clinical medicine and independent laboratory research. It takes 7–8 years and typically includes NIH funding through the Medical Scientist Training Program (MSTP). It's a small group—around 700 people graduate from MD-PhD programs annually in the US.
If your goal is patient care, you want the MD. If your goal is research, you might not need medicine at all. If you want both, MD-PhD is the path.
Physician assistants (PAs) and nurse practitioners (NPs) are advanced practice providers who can diagnose, treat, and prescribe in many clinical settings. They're not the same as MDs, but the lines have blurred—particularly in states with full practice authority for NPs.
The meaningful differences:
None of this means one career is better than another—it depends entirely on what you want to do. But if your goal is independent practice at the full scope of medical care, the MD is the right path.
Highly competitive. Here's the landscape:
Beyond numbers, medical schools want clinical experience (patient contact hours), research, community service, leadership, and a coherent narrative about why medicine. The personal statement and letters of recommendation matter more than most applicants expect.
Applying early in the cycle (submitting primary applications in late May/June) significantly improves your chances. Many schools use rolling admissions, which means your application loses value as interview slots fill.
The United States Medical Licensing Examination (USMLE) is a three-step series required for licensure:
High Step 2 scores have become more important since Step 1 went pass/fail. If you're targeting competitive specialties, your Step 2 score is now the primary numerical signal to residency programs.
Physician compensation varies enormously by specialty, setting, and geography. General ranges for US physicians (2024 data):
These figures represent employed attending income after training. During residency, salaries are considerably lower—typically $60,000–$85,000 per year, depending on program and year of training. That's a real financial consideration for people entering a 7-year residency.
That depends entirely on what you're looking for. If you want to provide complex medical care, practice at the full scope of medicine, and have the intellectual depth that comes from 11+ years of intensive training—yes, it's worth it. Medicine is one of the few careers that genuinely pays well, offers job security almost everywhere, and allows you to make meaningful differences in people's lives daily.
The costs are real, though. Student loan debt for private medical schools can exceed $300,000. The opportunity cost of 4 years of medical school plus 3–7 years of residency is enormous. And the emotional demands of clinical medicine—the patient deaths, the diagnostic uncertainty, the administrative burden—are things no ranking system captures.
Most physicians report high levels of career satisfaction, but it's not universal. Burnout rates are significant, particularly in primary care and emergency medicine. Going in with clear eyes about what the training involves—and what you actually want from your career—matters as much as academic preparation.