Taxes for Physicians: What You Need to Know (Without Letting the Tax Tail Wag the Dog)

Maryam Sheikh
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September 23, 2025
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Health & Well-being
Don’t Let the Tax Tail Wag the Dog

Translation: Never make an investment just for a tax break. For example, buying a rental property that bleeds cash month after month simply because it “saves you money on taxes” is a mistake. A bad deal is still a bad deal, even if Uncle Sam gives you a deduction. Every investment you make needs to stand on its own merits, tax benefits are simply the icing, not the cake.

Why Taxes Matter So Much for Physicians

High-Income Brackets – Physicians often land in the top tax brackets, which means every smart deduction and deferral can move the needle.

W-2 vs. 1099 Income – Many doctors earn W-2 income (with limited write-offs), but others pick up locums, moonlighting, or side gigs that are 1099. Structuring and tracking these correctly can make a big difference.

Retirement Accounts = Tax Shields – 401(k), 403(b), and HSA contributions lower taxable income now, while Roth accounts give you tax-free growth later. A smart mix matters.

Student Loan Planning – Taxes tie directly into student loan strategies (PSLF, IDR plans) since your Adjusted Gross Income affects payments.

Real Estate & Syndications – Depreciation can create paper losses that offset real income, but again, the property itself has to cash flow.

Why You Need a Great CPA

As a physician, you don’t just need someone to file your taxes. You need a strategic CPA who understands physician-specific issues:

  • Deducting CME, licensing, and board fees.

  • Structuring 1099 side income (LLC, S-Corp, or sole prop?).

  • Planning for quarterly estimated taxes if you moonlight or invest.

  • Advising on when real estate professional status might (or might not) make sense for you or your spouse.

Bottom Line

Taxes are a tool, not the goal.

Max out the obvious wins (retirement accounts, HSA, employer match).

Layer in smart strategies (charitable giving, backdoor Roths, real estate depreciation) if they fit your bigger plan.

And always make sure every decision aligns with your vision for life, not just with the IRS code.