No guessing. No spin.
The Anesthesiology Rate & Negotiation Toolkit
50-state rate data, word-for-word scripts, and contract checklist: everything you need before the recruiter calls.
Get the Toolkit — $99Instant download. No subscription.
Built by a physician. No staffing agency affiliation. No referral fees.
Market Snapshot
Is your current rate above or below the median? The full 50-state breakdown is in the toolkit.
What's Inside
Not "a PDF." Six specific tools:
- Rate Benchmark Database
Anesthesiology rates by state and setting (urban hospital and rural/critical access) at the 25th, 50th, 75th, and 90th percentile. Fifty states. The number you need before you call the recruiter back.
- Recruiter Call Scripts
Word-for-word. Not "be confident." The exact sentences:
- The opening anchor when you've received a below-market offer
- The counter when they say "this is our standard rate"
- The script when they create time pressure ("I need an answer by 5 pm")
- The intangibles trade when the hourly is locked
- The renewal script when they try to roll your old rate forward as a new offer
- Anesthesiology Leverage Points
The specific credentials and coverage types that justify a higher rate, and how to state them on the call:
- CRNA supervision ratio directly sets your billing tier: 1:1 supervision commands higher hourly than 1:4 medically directed models
- Cardiac, regional nerve block, and OB anesthesia subspecialty capability each represent distinct, higher rate tiers
- 24-hr call at rural or CAH sites commands $50–100/hr premium over standard 8–10-hr block shifts
- TEE certification and cardiac monitoring at non-cardiac surgery centers is a scarcity lever few locum anesthesiologists can offer
- Contract Red Flag Checklist
The CRNA supervision ratio, OR schedule guarantee, call compensation, malpractice tail, and non-compete language that quietly cut into a strong headline rate. One page, annotated, open it while reviewing a contract.
- Agency Markup Framework
The math behind what the hospital is actually paying for your shift. Knowing the approximate bill rate changes how you respond to "that's our maximum."
- Locum Tax Framework
The 1099 math most physicians undercount: the S-corp threshold, the Solo 401(k) gap, the minimum premium required to break even against a W-2 rate.
What It Looks Like on the Call
When a recruiter quotes $330/hr for anesthesia coverage, this is the sentence from Section 2:
"The market median for anesthesia coverage in this setting is $358/hr. With my regional nerve block capability and cardiac experience, I'd expect to be in the $390–$425 range. Is there flexibility to get there?"
You change the numbers to match your state. You say it. That is the product.
Who Built This
For years I took every rate I was offered without pushing back. Not because I was naive. I didn't have the data to know whether I should. Neither did anyone I trained with. I built this because the information existed in federal wage surveys, peer-reviewed research, and 50 years of negotiation science, and it wasn't assembled anywhere a physician could use it before calling a recruiter back.
I started with surgery. Then I built the same data model and negotiation framework for the 22 specialties with the highest locum demand. The leverage points in each toolkit come from specialty-specific research. The scripts and the data are the same framework I use myself.
The agency has this organized. Now you do too.
Verify the Premise Before You Buy
Call three locum agencies and ask what their bill rate is for anesthesia coverage. Write down how many give you a number.
That is the problem this PDF solves.
The Research Behind It
The economic analysis in this toolkit is grounded in Nobel Prize-winning research:
- Akerlof (1970, Nobel 2001): In markets where one side has better information, the uninformed party is systematically underpriced, not because they're naive, but because the market is structured that way.
- Spence (1973, Nobel 2001): Credentials only move your rate when the agency prices them. This toolkit shows you how to make that happen.
- Nash (1950, Nobel 1994): The fair split in any negotiation assumes equal information and equal skill. Neither assumption holds on a recruiter call.
The negotiation psychology section cites 17 peer-reviewed sources. This is not a blog post formatted as a PDF.
What It Costs in Context
- Consulting an attorney to review your locum contract: $350–$500/hr.
- Hiring a negotiation consultant: $3,000–$5,000.
- This toolkit: $99. One successful negotiation covers it in the first call.
One Honest Limitation
This will not help you if you are already negotiating above the 75th percentile for your specialty and state. Top-quartile rate: skip it, you don't need it.
If you don't know what percentile your current rate is, that is the problem this solves.
About the Data
Sourced from BLS OEWS public data and CMS geographic adjustment factors, processed through a locum-adjusted model. Not derived from agency-reported data.