LIVE MARKET·37 postings · last 180 days·Updated April 30, 2026

Medical Coding Specialist salary: $29.00/hr$1,160/wk$60,320/yr median.

Pay range $24.00$960$49,920$33.50/hr$1,340/wk$69,680/yr across the middle 50% of active Revenue Cycle Administrative Support postings nationwide.

27 unique employers · 33 cities · 22 states. Pay moved -6.8% over the last 30 days.

Show pay as
Median /hr/wk/yr
$29.00$1,160$60,320
P25–P75
$24.00$960$49,920$33.50$1,340$69,680
middle 50%
Postings
37
30.0%
Coverage
22 states
27 employers
01·PAY DISTRIBUTION·P10 → P90

How Medical Coding Specialist pay is distributed.

10% of postings pay under $22.00/hr$880/wk$45,760/yr. The top 10% pay above $38.31/hr$1,532/wk$79,685/yr.

P10
$22.00
P25
$24.00
P50
$29.00
P75
$33.50
P90
$38.31
P10
$22.00/hr$880/wk$45,760/yr
P25
$24.00/hr$960/wk$49,920/yr
P50 (median)
$29.00/hr$1,160/wk$60,320/yr
P75
$33.50/hr$1,340/wk$69,680/yr
P90
$38.31/hr$1,532/wk$79,685/yr
05·EMPLOYER BREAKDOWN·TOP 20 BY PAY

Where the top of the market is paying for Medical Coding Specialist.

EmployerMedian /hr/wk/yrRangePostings
kaiser permanente$38.31$1,532$79,685$34.56$1,382$71,885$105.99$4,240$220,4595

Showing all 1 employer with live pay data.

06·SHIFT & CONTRACT MIX·PAY BY WORK PATTERN

How Medical Coding Specialist pay shifts by schedule and contract type.

Staff Position pays the most at $38.31/hr$1,532/wk$79,685/yr median — 45% above Fulltime at $26.50/hr$1,060/wk$55,120/yr. Fulltime drives the volume with 26 active postings.

BY SHIFT
Not Specified
32 postings
$27.00/hr$1,080/wk$56,160/yr
AM
4 postings
$38.31/hr$1,532/wk$79,685/yr
BY JOB TYPE
Fulltime
26 postings
$26.50/hr$1,060/wk$55,120/yr
Staff Position
5 postings
$38.31/hr$1,532/wk$79,685/yr
Not Specified
3 postings
$33.50/hr$1,340/wk$69,680/yr
08·HOW TO BECOME·CAREER PATHWAY·GENERAL TO HEALTHCARE ADMINISTRATIVE SUPPORT

How to become a Medical Coding Specialist.

Healthcare administrative support keeps the business of medicine running: scheduling, registration, insurance verification, prior authorization, medical coding, billing, revenue cycle, and unit coordination. The category spans entry-level office roles to specialized billing and coding professionals, with educational requirements ranging from a high school diploma to specialty coding certifications.

Education·Min: High school diploma · Preferred: Certificate or associate's in medical office, coding, or HIM

Entry roles (registrar, scheduler, unit secretary, prior-auth specialist) require only a high school diploma plus 1-3 months of on-the-job training. Medical coding requires a coding-specific certificate and a credential (CPC, CCS, or CCA). Revenue cycle leadership and HIM positions require an associate's (RHIT) or bachelor's (RHIA) in HIM.

DegreeDurationNotes
Medical office certificateCert6-12 monthsCovers medical terminology, EHR navigation, HIPAA, scheduling, and insurance basics. Sufficient for entry into front-desk, registration, and scheduling roles.
Medical Coding & Billing certificateCert9-15 monthsSpecialty training in ICD-10-CM, CPT, HCPCS, and modifiers. Prepares for CPC, CCS, or CCA certification exams.
Associate's in Health InformationAAS HIT2 yearsBroader HIM training preparing for the RHIT credential. Required for HIM tech and clinical documentation roles.
Bachelor's in Health Information ManagementBS HIM4 yearsRequired for the RHIA credential. Leads to revenue cycle leadership, compliance, and HIM director tracks.
Licenses & Exams·1 credential
No state license requiredMost healthcare administrative roles are unlicensedOptional
Issued by:

Unlike clinical roles, administrative healthcare positions are not state-licensed. Hiring and credentialing happens at the employer or certifying-body level.

Optional Certifications·Pay boost where known
CredentialIssued byPay impact
CPC
Certified Professional Coder
The dominant outpatient coding credential. Required by most physician-billing and ambulatory coding positions. CPC-A is the apprentice version (granted before 2 years of coding experience).
AAPC+10-25%
CCS
Certified Coding Specialist
Inpatient-focused coding credential. Required by most hospital coding positions.
AHIMA+10-25%
CCA
Certified Coding Associate
Entry-level coding credential. Common stepping stone to CCS or CPC.
AHIMA+5-10%
RHIT / RHIA
Registered Health Information Technician / Administrator
Broad HIM credentials. RHIT requires an associate's degree; RHIA requires a bachelor's. Standard for HIM and revenue cycle leadership roles.
AHIMA+10-20%
CRCS / CRCR
Certified Revenue Cycle Specialist / Representative
Revenue cycle credentials covering registration, billing, follow-up, and denials management.
AAHAM / HFMA+5-10%
Career Path·5 steps
  1. 0-2 years
    Patient registrar / Scheduler / Unit secretary

    Entry-level office role. Front-desk reception, intake, scheduling, or unit coordination. Most common starting point in healthcare administrative work.

  2. 1-4 years
    Insurance verification / Prior auth specialist

    Manages the financial-clearance side: eligibility, benefits, authorizations, and patient financial counseling. Common pathway to revenue cycle roles.

  3. 2-7 years
    Medical coder / Biller

    Holds CPC, CCS, or CCA credential. Codes physician or hospital claims. Many roles are now fully remote.

  4. 5-10 years
    Senior coder / Coding auditor / Revenue cycle analyst

    Specialty or auditor role. Reviews coder accuracy, supports CDI (clinical documentation improvement), or analyzes revenue cycle KPIs.

  5. 10+ years
    Manager / Director of Revenue Cycle or HIM

    Owns billing, coding, and HIM operations for a clinic, hospital, or system. Bachelor's plus RHIA or HFMA credentialing common at this level.

Work Environment
Hospitals (front desk, registration, HIM)Physician practices and ambulatory groupsBilling service companies and RCM vendorsInsurance payersRemote / work-from-home codingSurgical centers and ambulatory surgery

Schedule. Mostly business-hour roles. Hospital registration and bed control require some evening and weekend coverage. Remote coding offers significant schedule flexibility — often the most flexible career path inside healthcare administration.

Physical demands. Largely seated work. Standing for some front-desk and bed-board roles. Long stretches at screens make ergonomics and eye strain the main physical considerations.

Job Outlook·Strong
+8-9% (2022-2032)

Medical coders, revenue cycle staff, and HIM technicians are projected to grow well above the cross-occupation average. Drivers include healthcare expansion, value-based-care reporting demands, and ICD-10 specificity. Remote work is now the norm for coding and many billing roles.

FAQ — Becoming this role·3 questions
How quickly can I start working as a medical coder?

9-15 months on the fast track: complete a coding-specific certificate, then sit for CPC (AAPC) or CCS (AHIMA). New coders often start as CPC-A (apprentice) and convert to full CPC after two years of coding experience.

Can I work medical coding remotely?

Yes — coding is one of the most fully remote healthcare careers. Most coding employers (hospitals, RCM vendors, payers) hire fully remote with the right credentials and a stable, secure work environment.

Do administrative healthcare roles require a degree?

Entry roles (registrar, scheduler, unit secretary) require only a high school diploma. Coding requires a certificate. Leadership and HIM roles typically require an associate's (RHIT) or bachelor's (RHIA) in Health Information Management.

09·FREQUENTLY ASKED·MEDICAL CODING SPECIALIST

What clinicians ask about Medical Coding Specialist pay.

What is the average Medical Coding Specialist salary in 2026?

The median Medical Coding Specialist salary is $29.00/hr (approximately $60,320/yr) based on 37 active job postings.

What is the pay range for Medical Coding Specialist?

Hourly pay ranges from $24.00 at the 25th percentile to $33.50 at the 75th percentile, with the top 10% earning above $38.31/hr.

Which state pays Medical Coding Specialist roles the most?

Alabama currently leads with a median of $30.95/hr across 0 postings.

How many employers are hiring Medical Coding Specialists?

Our dataset shows 27 unique employers posting Medical Coding Specialist roles across 22 states.

Where does TrueRounds get Medical Coding Specialist salary data?

All salary figures are computed from active US healthcare job postings with listed pay ranges, collected over a rolling 180-day window and weighted by posting volume.

11·METHODOLOGY·HOW WE BUILD THESE NUMBERS

Active US healthcare postings. Weighted by volume. Refreshed daily.

Pay benchmarks are computed from active job postings with listed pay ranges, collected on a rolling 180-day window. Each role's percentiles are weighted by posting volume so a metro with two postings doesn't outweigh a metro with two hundred. Outliers (postings priced more than 4× the role median) are dropped to avoid contract-line distortion.

Use the data, then push back.

Bring these numbers into your next contract conversation. Recruiters know what the market pays — now you do too.