If you’re an administrator or HR director at a Federally Qualified Health Center in Florida, you already know that recruiting a family medicine physician isn’t like filling most other roles. The process takes longer, costs more, and carries higher stakes than almost any hire your organization will make.
So how long should you actually expect it to take?
The honest answer: anywhere from 3 to 18 months, depending on your location, compensation package, and how prepared your organization is before the search begins. Here’s what drives that range — and what you can do to shorten it.
Nationally, the average time to fill a family medicine physician position runs between 120 and 180 days from job posting to signed offer. For FQHCs specifically, that timeline often stretches longer. The reason comes down to the candidate pool.
Family medicine physicians who are drawn to FQHC work are a specific group. They tend to be mission-driven, often interested in loan forgiveness programs like the NHSC, and looking for something different from private practice or hospital employment. Finding them requires more than posting on a job board — it requires targeted outreach to the right networks.
Florida presents a specific set of dynamics that can push recruitment timelines in either direction.
What works in your favor:
What works against you:
Before you post anything, your organization needs a clear job description, a defined compensation range, and alignment among leadership on what the ideal candidate looks like. Organizations that skip this step often restart the search partway through when internal disagreements surface.
This is where most of the timeline variability lives. If your position is in Orlando or Tampa with a competitive salary and loan forgiveness eligibility, you may have qualified candidates within a month. If you’re recruiting to a rural FQHC in Central Florida with a below-market offer, active outreach could take three months or more before you have a viable slate.
Phone screens, panel interviews, and site visits take time — especially when coordinating schedules across busy physicians. Plan for at least three to four weeks between first contact and a completed interview process.
This is the phase that surprises many FQHC administrators. Even after a candidate accepts your offer, the credentialing and privileging process at most health centers runs two to four months. This can’t be accelerated much, but it can be started earlier in the process to reduce overall time-to-start.
Most physicians give 60 to 90 days notice to their current employer. Factor in relocation time if they’re coming from out of state.
Based on what we see across Florida FQHC searches, the most common reasons timelines stretch beyond six months are:
The FQHCs that consistently fill family medicine positions faster share a few practices in common:
A realistic FQHC physician recruitment timeline in Florida is 4 to 9 months for most positions, with rural and underserved locations sometimes running longer. The organizations that consistently hit the shorter end of that range are the ones that start early, prepare thoroughly, and work with recruiters who understand what makes FQHC recruitment different.
If your Florida FQHC has an open family medicine position — or one that’s coming — All-Genz MediMatch Recruit specializes in exactly this work. Contact us to talk through your timeline and what a targeted search would look like for your organization.
Finding the right healthcare professional requires more than filling a role.
It requires identifying individuals who align with an organization’s mission, culture, and long-term goals.
All-Genz works closely with healthcare leaders to deliver candidates who are prepared to make an immediate and lasting impact.
Contact us using the form below and we will get back to you ASAP.
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