Independent Rep Business
A 1099 independent medical device sales rep is a self-employed contractor who partners with device manufacturers and distributors to sell surgical products — implants, biologics, instrumentation — directly to hospitals and ASCs without being a W-2 employee of any single company. Independent reps typically earn 15-30% commission on product sales, build multi-line portfolios across complementary device categories, and own their territory relationships outright. This hub covers how to build, structure, and grow a profitable independent device sales business.
Featured Guide
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COMPREHENSIVE GUIDE
Building a Successful 1099 Medical Device Sales Business
The complete playbook for launching and scaling an independent medical device sales operation — from entity structure and insurance to line acquisition, territory development, and surgeon onboarding strategy.
Guides for Independent Reps
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COMPARISON
1099 vs W2 Medical Device Sales: Which Path Is Right for You?
A head-to-head breakdown of income potential, tax implications, benefits, territory control, and lifestyle differences between independent contractor and full-time employed device sales roles.
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TERRITORY STRATEGY
How to Build a Profitable 1099 Medical Device Sales Territory
Territory mapping, surgeon targeting, facility penetration tactics, and the math behind building a $300K+ territory from scratch — including realistic timelines and capital requirements.
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DISTRIBUTOR SELECTION
Finding the Right Medical Device Distributor as an Independent Rep
How to evaluate distributors on commission rates, product exclusivity, warehouse logistics, marketing support, and contract terms — plus red flags that signal a bad partnership.
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PRODUCT STRATEGY
How Independent Med Device Reps Choose Which Products to Carry
The decision framework experienced reps use to evaluate new product lines — clinical differentiation, margin potential, surgeon demand, competitive positioning, and portfolio fit.
Partner With SLR Medical as an Independent Rep
Access a full surgical hardware catalog, biologics portfolio, and sports medicine instrumentation with zero-lead-time fulfillment. SLR supports independent reps with competitive commissions, stocked inventory, and operational infrastructure so you can focus on selling.
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Frequently Asked Questions
How much can a 1099 medical device sales rep earn?
Independent reps earn based on commission — typically 15-30% of the sale price on implants and hardware, with biologics often paying higher margins. A rep with an established territory covering 3-5 active surgeon accounts in orthopedics or spine can earn $200K-$400K annually. Top-performing independent reps with multi-line portfolios and strong ASC relationships regularly exceed $500K. The trade-off: no guaranteed base salary, no employer-funded benefits, and 3-12 months of ramp time before meaningful income.
What do you need to start a 1099 medical device sales business?
At minimum: an LLC or S-Corp entity, general liability insurance, product liability coverage through your distributor, vendor credentialing at target facilities, and working capital to cover 6-12 months of expenses during territory development. You’ll also need relationships with at least one distributor willing to grant territory rights, a vehicle that can transport instrument trays and implant sets, and a CRM system to manage surgeon accounts and case schedules.
How do independent reps find distributors to work with?
The best distributor relationships come through industry networking — attending AAOS, NASS, and regional orthopedic society meetings, connecting with other reps, and directly approaching distributors whose product portfolios complement your existing lines. Trade publications, LinkedIn groups like Medical Device Sales Professionals, and industry recruiters are secondary channels. When evaluating a distributor, prioritize inventory availability, commission transparency, territory exclusivity, and the quality of their manufacturer relationships over brand recognition alone.