Medical Device Sales Careers
Medical device sales is a performance-driven career where independent and employed reps sell surgical hardware, implants, biologics, and instrumentation directly to hospitals, ambulatory surgery centers, and surgeon offices. Reps in orthopedic and spine verticals routinely earn $150K-$400K+ in total compensation, with top earners in trauma and joint reconstruction exceeding $500K. This resource center covers everything from breaking into the field with no experience to evaluating distributors, understanding compensation structures, and choosing between 1099 and W-2 paths.
Featured Guides
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COMPREHENSIVE GUIDE
The Complete Guide to Medical Device Sales in 2026
Everything you need to know about entering and succeeding in medical device sales — from compensation models and territory structures to the skills that separate top performers from average reps.
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INDUSTRY OVERVIEW
Medical Device Distribution: How the Surgical Supply Chain Works
How devices move from manufacturer to OR tray — the distributor tiers, stocking models, consignment arrangements, and logistics that drive the $180B U.S. medical device market.
Career Guides & Resources
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CAREER GUIDE
How to Break Into Medical Device Sales With No Experience
The realistic paths into device sales — which entry points actually work, what hiring managers look for, and how to position B2B or clinical backgrounds for your first role.
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COMPENSATION
Medical Device Sales Rep Salary and Compensation Guide 2026
Base salary ranges, commission structures, bonus tiers, and total compensation benchmarks across orthopedic, spine, trauma, sports medicine, and biologics verticals.
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ROLE BREAKDOWN
What Does a Medical Device Sales Rep Actually Do?
Beyond the pitch — case coverage, implant inventory management, surgeon relationships, in-service training, and the daily realities most job descriptions leave out.
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DAY IN THE LIFE
A Day in the Life of an Orthopedic Device Sales Rep
What a real day looks like — from 5:30 AM case prep to post-op inventory reconciliation. Covers OR coverage, surgeon interaction, tray management, and territory logistics.
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COMPARISON
Medical Device Sales vs Pharmaceutical Sales: Key Differences
Compensation ceilings, daily workflow, technical requirements, travel demands, and career trajectory differences between device and pharma sales — with honest pros and cons of each path.
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EMPLOYER RANKINGS
The Best Medical Device Sales Companies to Work For in 2026
Top device companies ranked by rep compensation, territory protection, product portfolio strength, training programs, and culture — from large OEMs to high-growth independents.
Ready to Start Selling Medical Devices?
SLR Medical Consulting partners with independent reps and distributors nationwide. Access our full surgical hardware catalog, biologics portfolio, and zero-lead-time fulfillment from fully stocked warehouses.
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Frequently Asked Questions
How much do medical device sales reps make?
Total compensation varies by product vertical and experience. Entry-level reps in general surgery devices typically earn $70K-$100K. Mid-career orthopedic and spine reps average $150K-$300K. Top producers in joint reconstruction, trauma, or robotics-assisted surgery regularly exceed $400K, with some earning over $500K. Compensation usually combines a base salary with commissions on implant sales, case coverage fees, and performance bonuses.
Do you need a medical degree to sell medical devices?
No. Most device reps hold a bachelor’s degree in business, biology, kinesiology, or a related field — not a medical degree. What matters more is product knowledge, OR comfort, and the ability to build surgeon relationships. Many successful reps come from athletic training, nursing, B2B sales, or military backgrounds. Manufacturers and distributors provide product-specific training, and reps learn surgical procedures through case observation and vendor credentialing programs.
What’s the difference between working for an OEM vs. an independent distributor?
OEM reps (Stryker, Zimmer Biomet, Medtronic, etc.) sell a single manufacturer’s portfolio, receive W-2 benefits, and typically have defined territories with quota. Independent distributor reps work as 1099 contractors, carry products from multiple manufacturers, set their own schedules, and earn higher commission rates — but without employer-provided benefits or guaranteed base salary. The distributor model offers more upside and autonomy; the OEM path offers more structure and brand recognition.