Cardiologist-only recruiting
Cardiologist Salary in Missouri
Cardiologist-only recruiting with documented expectations
Direct answer: Cardiologist Salary in Missouri depends on subspecialty, call burden, acuity, and whether the role is locum or employed. This page explains market drivers in Missouri—not a guaranteed compensation offer.
Cardiologists comparing offers in Missouri need more than a single number from a forum post. This guide explains how subspecialty, STEMI call, consult census, clinic panels, and licensing timelines interact with compensation—employed and locum. Figures are directional market context, not promises.
Missouri cardiology compensation context
This page explains what typically influences cardiologist pay—employed and locum—in Missouri. It is educational only; your offer depends on subspecialty, call, acuity, and contract structure.
Missouri offers a blend of large-system roles and independent community hospitals—credentialing speed varies more by facility than by coast.
Locum vs employed pay drivers
Cardiology locum demand in Missouri often clusters around inpatient consult, cath lab, clinic, and imaging read pools—interventional and EP roles require site-specific privileging and STEMI or lab capabilities confirmed in writing.
Employed packages often emphasize RVU targets, quality metrics, and benefits. Locum packages emphasize weekly or daily rates, travel stipends, and malpractice structure—compare total economics with a CPA, not headline numbers alone.
Midwest assignments vary between academic quaternary centers and community hospitals; census and call definitions move weekly ranges more than geography alone.
How subspecialty affects cardiology pay in this market
Interventional cardiologists in Missouri are usually compensated relative to STEMI activation, cath lab case mix, and add-on PCI availability—not just days worked.
Electrophysiology locums often hinge on ablation day volume, device clinic panels, and overnight arrhythmia call.
General and non-invasive cardiologists should compare consult census, echo read turnaround, and clinic panel size—weekly rates are not interchangeable across subspecialties.
Heart failure and structural programs may include weekend census and heart-team meeting time that should be compensated or explicitly excluded in the contract.
Licensing and start-date economics
Physicians with a primary license in another IMLC member state may pursue a faster pathway to Missouri licensure via the compact—still verify specialty-specific rules and timeline with the Missouri medical board.
Missouri is commonly planned with IMLC or compact thinking for many physicians—but hospital privileging and payer enrollment still take time.
Major metros: St. Louis, Kansas City, Springfield. Demand often clusters there, but community sites may offer different call and stipend tradeoffs.
Negotiation checklist before you accept
Document: call schedule, STEMI role, consult caps, clinic panel, imaging read SLAs, malpractice (claims-made vs occurrence), tail, cancellation, and travel stipends.
Ask whether orientation days are paid, how add-on cases are compensated, and who covers mid-assignment extensions.
Credentialing tip: Confirm whether the facility uses a central credentialing body or local privileging—Missouri systems vary.
Credentialing tip: Request written expectations for census, call, and backup before you accept a rate.
Credentialing tip: If you hold a compact-eligible license elsewhere, ask whether compact licensure applies to your specialty and assignment type.
What happens after you submit an inquiry
After you submit an inquiry, a cardiology recruiter from Locum Career Hub will review your subspecialty, license states, and preferred locations. If there are realistic locum opportunities that match your criteria, we will reach out—typically within one business day. If nothing fits right now, we will tell you plainly rather than sending unrelated blast emails.
We are a physician recruiting service in Missouri, not a hospital employer. Your information is used only to evaluate fit for cardiology locum roles you might actually want—not sold as a generic lead list.
You can include hard boundaries (STEMI call, consult census, clinic panel, travel radius) in the form. The more specific you are, the more useful our follow-up will be.
FAQ
- What is a typical locum cardiologist weekly rate in Missouri?
- There is no single typical rate—STEMI call, subspecialty, and clinic load move offers. Use our salary estimator for directional ranges, then negotiate from written scope.
- Is Missouri often compact-eligible for licensing?
- Licensing rules change—confirm with the state board and your counsel. Even with compact eligibility, privileging timelines are separate.
- Will a recruiter contact me if I inquire about pay and jobs?
- Yes—a cardiology recruiter reviews your subspecialty and states. If realistic locum opportunities exist in your selected areas, we follow up—usually within one business day.
- How does Missouri compare to other states for cardiology pay?
- Compare call burden, cost of living, and tax structure—not only weekly rates. See our highest-paying states overview and this state's locum job hub for context.
- Is this individualized financial or tax advice?
- No. Consult a CPA and attorney for your situation. This page describes common market drivers only.