National Resident Matching Program
The National Resident Matching Program (NRMP), commonly known as "The Match," is an independent, non-profit organization established in 1952 to administer a centralized, algorithm-driven process that pairs applicants—primarily graduates of U.S. and international medical schools—with first-year residency positions in accredited graduate medical education programs throughout the United States.[1][2] The system employs a computerized stable matching algorithm, originally developed by economists Lloyd Shapley and Alvin Roth, to simultaneously process rank-order lists submitted by both applicants and programs, producing outcomes that maximize mutual preferences while ensuring stability—meaning no participant pair would both prefer each other over their assigned matches.[3][4] This mechanism arose from pre-1952 chaos in internship placements, where hospitals issued early offers to secure top talent, prompting medical students to request a fair, orderly alternative that deferred final decisions until after interviews.[2][4] The NRMP's Main Residency Match typically occurs annually in March, with over 40,000 positions filled in recent cycles across specialties accredited by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME), though match rates vary by applicant type—U.S. seniors often exceed 90% success, while international medical graduates face lower odds due to limited spots and visa constraints.[5][6] Programs must adhere to NRMP rules, including an "all-in" policy requiring them to rank all interviewed applicants or forgo filling positions outside the match, which aims to prevent pre-match contracts but has drawn scrutiny for potentially reducing applicant leverage.[7] The process has evolved to include fellowship matches via the Specialties Matching Service and data reporting on outcomes, contributing to a structured pipeline for physician training that has sustained high participation rates for seven decades.[8][5] Despite its role in standardizing placements, the NRMP has faced persistent criticism as a monopsony—a collective buyer mechanism that allegedly suppresses resident wages by eliminating competitive bidding among programs, akin to a cartel exempt from antitrust scrutiny under federal law.[9][6] Lawsuits and analyses have argued that the system's binding commitments and deferred offers restrain trade, limiting physicians' ability to negotiate salaries or conditions, with resident pay remaining stagnant relative to training costs and inflation since the 1950s.[9][10] Recent congressional hearings in 2025 examined the NRMP's antitrust exemption, questioning whether it perpetuates labor market distortions amid physician shortages, though defenders emphasize its necessity for orderly allocation in a time-sensitive, information-asymmetric market.[11][12] These debates underscore tensions between efficiency in matching scarce training slots and competitive dynamics in the physician workforce.[13][6]History
Origins and Establishment
The competitive process for securing medical internships in the United States during the early 20th century devolved into disorder, as hospitals vied aggressively for top graduates, prompting offers as early as students' sophomore or junior years—often before they had completed clinical rotations or received final grades.[4] This "internship rat race" involved "exploding offers," where students faced pressure to accept positions immediately under threat of withdrawal, limiting their ability to compare options and leading to suboptimal matches based on incomplete information.[4] By the 1940s, the situation had intensified, with some offers extending to preclinical years, exacerbating inequities and dissatisfaction among both students and programs.[4] Medical students, through organizations like the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC), advocated for reform to create a fairer, centralized system that would allow applicants to rank preferences after full evaluation and finalize appointments simultaneously.[1] Regional experiments, such as the Chicago Pool in the late 1940s, demonstrated the viability of pooled preference lists and deferred decisions, but lacked national scope.[4] In response, the National Interassociation Committee on Internships—comprising representatives from the AAMC, American Hospital Association, American Medical Association, and Association of American Medical Colleges—coordinated the first national matching process in 1952, involving over 1,300 hospitals and matching 5,564 applicants on March 24.[14][4] This inaugural match, initially termed the National Clearinghouse for Internships, successfully curbed early bidding wars by enforcing a uniform "results day," establishing a precedent for orderly placement.[4] Formalized as a nonprofit entity in 1953 and renamed the National Resident Matching Program (NRMP) as it expanded to residencies, the system addressed core causal drivers of inefficiency—information asymmetry and coercive timing—through applicant- and program-submitted rank-order lists processed via a stable matching algorithm.[1][8] The NRMP's origins thus stemmed from empirical failures of decentralized markets in graduate medical education, prioritizing mutual preference revelation over first-come, first-served chaos.[4]Evolution and Key Milestones
The National Resident Matching Program (NRMP) expanded beyond its initial focus on internships shortly after 1952, incorporating residency positions and evolving into a comprehensive system for postgraduate year-1 (PGY-1) training across specialties. By the 1980s and 1990s, the match process adapted to the shift from standalone internships to integrated residency programs, addressing the growing complexity of medical education pathways and increasing female participation, which necessitated accommodations like couples matching.[4][2] A pivotal reform occurred in 1995 when the NRMP Board of Directors commissioned a revised applicant-proposing algorithm to enhance fairness for participants, culminating in the 1998 adoption of the Roth-Peranson algorithm. This update, building on the original Gale-Shapley deferred acceptance framework, prioritized applicant preferences more effectively while maintaining match stability and supporting advanced features such as simultaneous intern-residency pairings.[4][8] Participation surged over subsequent decades, with applicants outnumbering positions starting in 1992, leading to policies like the "All In" requirement that mandated programs to fill openings via NRMP or equivalent national matches, boosting PGY-1 coverage from 71% in 2008 to 85% by 2020. The 2020 Main Residency Match marked the first "Single Match," unifying seniors from U.S. MD- and DO-granting schools into one process, which resolved prior fragmentation between the NRMP and the parallel American Osteopathic Association match.[2][8] By the program's 70th anniversary in 2022, the Main Residency Match had scaled to 34,075 individuals placed in PGY-1 positions, a sixfold increase from the 5,564 in 1952, amid ongoing refinements including the Supplemental Offer and Acceptance Program (SOAP) for unmatched applicants and recent trials of preference signaling to streamline applications. The 2025 match achieved a record 47,208 active applicants and a 99.1% fill rate post-SOAP, underscoring the NRMP's adaptability to rising demand and specialty expansions like public health and preventive medicine.[14][2][15]Integration of Osteopathic and Other Matches
In the mid-2010s, the American Osteopathic Association (AOA) and Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) pursued unification of graduate medical education accreditation to create a single system, culminating in the Single Accreditation System (SAS) agreement announced on February 26, 2014. This initiative addressed longstanding fragmentation where osteopathic residencies operated under separate AOA accreditation and a distinct matching process, while allopathic programs used ACGME standards and the National Resident Matching Program (NRMP). The SAS transition required AOA-accredited programs to apply for ACGME accreditation by June 30, 2016, with full implementation targeted for July 1, 2020, after which AOA would cease accrediting new residency programs. During this period, over 6,600 AOA positions transitioned to ACGME accreditation by late 2018, enabling osteopathic applicants to increasingly participate in NRMP alongside allopathic counterparts.[16][17] Prior to full integration, U.S. osteopathic (DO) seniors could register for both the AOA Match and NRMP, providing a dual pathway but complicating applications and rank-order lists. The AOA conducted its final matching cycle in early 2019, after which participating DO students withdrew unmatched positions from NRMP to avoid dual commitments, with the deadline for AOA rank submission set for January 18, 2019. This marked the end of the separate osteopathic match, as the SAS eliminated AOA-only accreditation, funneling all DO graduates into the NRMP for postgraduate year-1 (PGY-1) positions. "Other matches," such as military-specific processes (e.g., Joint Service Graduate Medical Education Selection Board) or specialty-specific systems like the San Francisco Match, remained distinct but saw indirect effects; for instance, DO applicants to military residencies now primarily interface with NRMP for civilian positions if unmatched in service-specific boards.[18][19] The 2020 NRMP Main Residency Match represented the inaugural "Single Match," incorporating all U.S. MD and DO seniors without a parallel osteopathic process, resulting in 37,518 total positions offered—the largest in NRMP history at that point—and participation from 43,084 applicants. This unification expanded access for DOs to ACGME-accredited programs but introduced challenges in competitive specialties, where post-SAS analyses indicated lower initial match rates for DOs in fields like ophthalmology and orthopedics compared to pre-merger trends, attributed to heightened competition and program preferences. By 2025, however, DO match success stabilized at record levels, with 8,049 DO seniors and graduates (92.6% rate) securing positions in the NRMP, reflecting broader integration and growth in accredited slots. Peer-reviewed evaluations of the SAS highlight its success in standardizing training but note persistent disparities, such as slower DO ingress into certain surgical residencies, underscoring the merger's uneven causal impacts on applicant outcomes.[20][21][22]Matching Algorithm
Core Mechanism and Theoretical Basis
The core mechanism of the National Resident Matching Program (NRMP) relies on an applicant-proposing deferred acceptance algorithm, implemented via the Roth–Peranson procedure, which processes rank-order lists (ROLs) submitted by applicants and programs to generate pairings.[23] In this process, unmatched applicants iteratively propose to their highest-ranked unfilled program choice, while programs maintain tentative acceptances limited by their position quotas, provisionally holding the highest-ranked proposals received thus far and rejecting others.[3] Rejected applicants then propose to their next-preferred programs, and tentatively accepted applicants may be displaced if a higher-ranked proposer arrives at the program, prompting the displaced applicant to continue proposing down their ROL.[23] This iteration continues until no further proposals are possible, yielding a complete matching that accommodates complexities such as couples matching through supplemental ROLs and variable quotas across multi-year positions.[23] The algorithm runs on the NRMP's R3 system, handling over 50,000 applicants and 10,000 programs annually without requiring full preference revelation, as it converges efficiently even with truncated lists reflecting interview outcomes.[24] Theoretically, the mechanism draws from the Gale–Shapley framework introduced in 1962, which guarantees a stable matching: one devoid of blocking pairs, where an applicant and program mutually prefer each other over their assigned partners.[25] In the applicant-proposing variant used by NRMP, the outcome is applicant-optimal among all stable matchings, meaning no applicant can achieve a better stable partner by switching to another stable matching, though it is program-pessimal.[23] Stability prevents post-match unraveling, as observed in pre-NRMP markets with explosive early offers, by enforcing deferred acceptance that discourages strategic deviations; truthful ROL submission is a dominant strategy for applicants, with manipulation opportunities minimal (affecting fewer than 1% of participants in large markets).[23] The Roth–Peranson extension preserves these properties while addressing residency-specific features like even-quota constraints and complementarities (e.g., couples), ensuring the core of stable outcomes converges to a single point in sufficiently large markets, as evidenced by NRMP data showing near-uniqueness across decades.[23] This design, refined since its 1998 adoption, underpins the Nobel Prize-winning contributions of Alvin Roth and Lloyd Shapley to market design.Inputs and Rank-Order Lists
The National Resident Matching Program (NRMP) matching algorithm relies primarily on rank-order lists (ROLs) submitted by both applicants and residency programs as its core inputs. Applicants, including U.S. MD and DO seniors, international medical graduates, and others, create an ROL by ranking programs in their order of true preference, without regard to perceived chances of matching, as the algorithm is designed to assign each applicant to their highest possible position on the list that also appears on the program's ROL.[26] Programs similarly submit ROLs ranking applicants they have interviewed, reflecting their preferences based on evaluations such as interviews, letters of recommendation, and standardized test scores, with no obligation to rank all interviewed candidates.[27] These ROLs must be certified via the NRMP's R3 system by deadlines—typically March for applicants and programs in the Main Residency Match—to be included in the algorithm's processing, ensuring that uncertified lists result in no participation.[28] The ROLs encode ordinal preferences rather than cardinal utilities, meaning participants express only relative rankings without numerical scores or quotas beyond position availability. For standard categorical positions, an applicant's primary ROL combines preferences for specific programs, while programs' ROLs are limited to applicants who registered interest and completed required steps like interviews.[26] Supplemental ROLs (SRLs) serve as additional inputs for applicants pursuing preliminary or transitional year positions alongside advanced programs; the algorithm first attempts to match the primary ROL and, if unsuccessful, processes the SRL to fill preliminary slots, preventing orphaning of advanced matches.[29] Programs may create multiple ROLs for different position types (e.g., categorical vs. preliminary), but each is processed independently within the applicant-proposing deferred acceptance framework, which prioritizes applicant preferences while ensuring program stability.[30] No other data, such as application materials or interview feedback, directly influences the matching beyond their role in forming ROLs; the algorithm treats ROLs as complete and truthful representations of preferences, assuming participants rank honestly to maximize outcomes under the stable matching theorem.[3] Violations, like strategic omissions from ROLs, can lead to suboptimal or unmatched results, as evidenced by NRMP data showing that applicants who rank more programs and in true preference order achieve higher match rates.[31] For couples matching, paired ROLs form joint inputs where each pair of program choices is treated as a single entity in sequence, allowing the algorithm to evaluate linked preferences without altering the core mechanism.[32] This input structure, rooted in the Gale-Shapley model's applicant-optimal stability, has been empirically validated in NRMP's operations since 1952, producing matches resistant to post-hoc deviations.[24]Handling Simple Cases and Stability
The NRMP matching algorithm, a variant of the deferred acceptance mechanism, initiates with all unmatched applicants proposing to their highest-ranked program from their rank-order list. Programs evaluate these proposals based on their own rankings and available positions, tentatively accepting the highest-ranked applicants up to capacity and rejecting the rest. In simple cases—such as when an applicant's top program has an unfilled position and ranks the applicant above any currently held tentative matches—the proposal results in immediate acceptance without displacement or further iteration for that applicant. Such scenarios resolve in the first round, as no bumping occurs and the tentative match aligns with both parties' preferences without conflict.[3] Rejected applicants then propose to their next preferred program, repeating the process until no further proposals are outstanding or all lists are exhausted. This iterative handling accommodates straightforward alignments where preferences lead to minimal rejections, such as small applicant pools or non-competitive specialties with excess capacity, allowing many matches to finalize early without extensive reprocessing. Tentative matches become permanent only after exhausting all possibilities, ensuring completeness even in these uncomplicated instances.[3] Central to the algorithm's design is stability, defined as the absence of any blocking pair: an applicant-program combination where the applicant prefers the program to their assigned match, and the program prefers the applicant (considering capacity) to at least one of its assigned applicants. The NRMP's Roth-Peranson implementation, adapted from Gale-Shapley for many-to-one matching, guarantees stability by resolving potential blocks during proposals—if an applicant ranks a program higher, they propose to it before lower options, and programs only reject for superior alternatives, preventing unresolved mutual preferences post-match.[33][34] This stability holds irrespective of simple or complex cases, as the algorithm's structure—applicant-proposing deferred acceptance—ensures no participant can mutually deviate profitably after finalization. Empirical validation from the 1998 algorithm redesign, which shifted to applicant-proposing, showed stability preserved with only 0.1% of applicants receiving different outcomes compared to the prior program-proposing version, confirming robustness across preference structures.[34] The approach prioritizes applicant optimality among stable matchings, where applicants receive their best possible stable outcome, though programs may not.[33]Accommodations for Couples and Groups
The National Resident Matching Program (NRMP) accommodates couples by enabling two applicants to participate as a linked pair in the Main Residency Match, forming paired program choices on a joint rank order list (ROL). Each applicant registers individually via the NRMP's R3 system, submits a couple request for approval, and pays an additional non-refundable fee of $45 per partner upon acceptance of the request.[32] Once linked, the couple constructs a primary ROL of mutually ranked pairs—one program per partner per rank—with both lists required to contain an identical number of entries, not exceeding 300; duplicate pairs are prohibited, and certification by one partner must precede the other's to avoid processing errors.[35] The NRMP's Gale-Shapley-based algorithm extends its core applicant-proposing deferred acceptance mechanism to treat the couple's paired ROL as a single proposing entity during the matching process, prioritizing the highest-ranked pair where each respective program has ranked the applicant to a position permitting a match for both.[35] If a primary pair match occurs, any supplemental ROLs (e.g., for preliminary or advanced programs) are processed individually afterward, often aligned geographically; unranked "no match" codes (999999999 for residency) may be appended at the list's end as a fallback.[32] This structure aims to optimize joint geographic proximity or program compatibility without guaranteeing both partners match to the same institution unless ranked as such.[36] In the 2025 Main Residency Match, 1,259 couples (2,518 individuals) participated, with outcomes showing 1,122 couples (89.0%) matching both partners, 102 (8.1%) matching one, and 35 (2.8%) matching neither, yielding a 93.2% rate of at least one match per couple.[36] Historical trends indicate consistently high success, with both-partner match rates exceeding 89% in recent cycles and overall couple participation rising annually.[37] The NRMP does not provide formal algorithmic accommodations for groups larger than two applicants, limiting paired processing to dyads; larger groups, such as friend cohorts or family units beyond couples, must submit independent ROLs and coordinate preferences informally to align outcomes, relying on individual program rankings without joint proposal capabilities.[32][38]Participation and Process
Eligibility and Applicant Categories
Participation in the National Resident Matching Program (NRMP) Main Residency Match requires applicants to be capable of commencing graduate medical education on July 1 of the match year, while fulfilling the specific eligibility standards of the residency programs they target.[39] These standards typically mandate graduation—or anticipated graduation—from a medical school accredited by the Liaison Committee on Medical Education (LCME) for allopathic (MD) programs, the Commission on Osteopathic College Accreditation (COCA) for osteopathic (DO) programs, or, for international medical graduates (IMGs), certification by the Educational Commission for Foreign Medical Graduates (ECFMG).[40] Applicants must also satisfy Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) prerequisites and any institutional requirements prior to training commencement, including verification of credentials by their medical school or ECFMG for IMGs.[40] For IMGs, eligibility further involves completing the medical science examination component (e.g., USMLE Step 1), clinical skills, and communication skills assessments as required for ECFMG certification, alongside obtaining a visa permitting U.S. clinical training if non-U.S. citizens.[40] U.S. MD and DO seniors are verified directly by their schools, ensuring they meet NRMP participation thresholds by the registration deadline.[41] Failure to meet these criteria, such as incomplete ECFMG verification for IMGs, can disqualify applicants from program consideration, though NRMP registration itself does not preclude participation if program-specific hurdles are cleared post-verification.[40] NRMP classifies applicants for matching and statistical reporting into distinct categories based on educational origin, graduation status, and citizenship, which influence match outcomes and program preferences:- U.S. MD Seniors: Fourth-year students at LCME-accredited U.S. allopathic medical schools, representing the primary applicant pool with historically high match rates.[36]
- U.S. DO Seniors: Fourth-year students at COCA-accredited U.S. osteopathic medical schools, integrated into the single match since 2020.[36]
- U.S. Senior IMGs: Graduates of non-U.S./non-Canadian medical schools who hold U.S. citizenship or permanent residency, requiring ECFMG certification.[36]
- Non-U.S. Citizen IMGs: Graduates of international medical schools without U.S. citizenship or permanent residency, also needing ECFMG certification and a suitable visa.[36]
- Previous U.S. MD or DO Graduates: Individuals who graduated from U.S. accredited schools in prior years, often re-entering after gaps, research, or unmatched attempts.[36]
- Previous IMGs: Prior international graduates reapplying, categorized separately to track repeat participation.[36]
Timeline and Key Steps
The National Resident Matching Program (NRMP) operates on an annual cycle for its Main Residency Match, synchronized with the Electronic Residency Application Service (ERAS) administered by the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC). This timeline ensures orderly application submission, program evaluation, interviews, ranking, and matching, with dates varying slightly each year but generally spanning from mid-year preparation through late March results. For the 2026 cycle, ERAS opens on June 4, 2025, enabling applicants to upload documents and prepare MyERAS applications.[42] Residency applicants may begin submitting applications to programs on September 3, 2025, at 9:00 a.m. ET, while programs receive access to applications and Medical Student Performance Evaluations (MSPEs) on September 24, 2025, at 9:00 a.m. ET.[42] NRMP registration for applicants and medical schools opens on September 15, 2025, requiring separate enrollment in NRMP alongside ERAS for participation in the Match and potential Supplemental Offer and Acceptance Program (SOAP). Standard registration closes on January 30, 2026, after which late fees apply until the final deadline of March 4, 2026. Medical schools upload rising seniors' credentials starting October 1, 2025, and verify applicant eligibility by March 4, 2026. Programs set quotas by January 30, 2026. Interviews, a critical evaluation phase, predominantly occur between October and January, allowing programs to assess applicants beyond written materials.[43] Rank-order list (ROL) submission begins on February 2, 2026, for applicants, programs, and medical schools, with certification required by March 4, 2026, at 9:00 p.m. ET to lock preferences for the algorithm. Match Week commences on March 16, 2026, at 10:00 a.m. ET, when applicants learn match status (matched or unmatched) via the R3 system, and unmatched applicants enter SOAP—a four-round process from March 17 to 19, 2026, involving application preparation, program reviews, and iterative offers ending at 9:00 p.m. ET on March 19.[43] Final match results, including program rosters, become available to programs on March 19, 2026, at 2:00 p.m. ET, culminating in Match Day on March 20, 2026, at 12:00 p.m. ET, when applicants receive specific program assignments.[43] ERAS season concludes on May 31, 2026, at 5:00 p.m. ET, though late applications may persist for unfilled positions post-Match.[42] Key steps include:- Preparation and Application: Applicants research programs via directories and submit ERAS applications early to maximize interviews, as competitiveness varies by specialty.[44]
- Interviews and Evaluation: Programs conduct virtual or in-person interviews, often signaling interest through second-look visits, though not formalized in NRMP rules.
- Ranking and Certification: Both parties submit confidential ROLs prioritizing preferences; the deferred acceptance algorithm processes these to produce stable matches.
- Results and SOAP: Matched applicants proceed to onboarding; unmatched enter SOAP, applying to remaining positions in real-time rounds with immediate decisions.[43]
- Post-Match: Successful matches lead to contracts starting July 1; unfilled applicants pursue alternatives like preliminary years or reapplication.[44]
Rank Submission and Algorithm Execution
Both applicants and residency programs submit rank order lists (ROLs) specifying their preferences, which form the inputs to the matching algorithm. Applicants rank programs in order of preference via the NRMP's R3 system after completing interviews, with no limit on the number of programs that can be included, though only interviewed programs are eligible.[26] Programs similarly rank interviewed applicants without numerical limits, prioritizing those deemed most suitable based on evaluations such as interviews, letters of recommendation, and standardized test scores.[27] ROLs must be certified electronically by both parties to be valid; certification locks the list but allows modifications until the deadline, after which changes are prohibited except in cases of documented errors reviewed by NRMP.[28] For the 2025 Main Residency Match, the ROL certification deadline was March 5, 2025, at 9:00 p.m. ET, following an opening period for ranking that began earlier in February.[45] Late registration or withdrawal was permitted until this deadline, but uncertified or incomplete ROLs result in automatic exclusion from the match for that participant.[45] Confidentiality is maintained throughout; neither party accesses the other's ROL, preventing strategic gaming beyond honest preference revelation.[26] Following certification, NRMP executes the matching algorithm—a variant of the Gale-Shapley deferred acceptance mechanism, applicant-proposing in design—to pair participants.[3] The process begins by having each unmatched applicant "propose" to their highest-ranked program; programs tentatively accept the highest-ranked applicant among proposers (per their ROL) while rejecting others, who then propose to their next preference.[3] This iteration continues—revisiting rejected applicants and allowing programs to "bump" lower-ranked tentative matches for higher-ranked proposers—until no further proposals occur, yielding a stable matching where no applicant-program pair both prefer each other over their assigned matches.[3] The algorithm favors applicants by starting with their preferences, ensuring they receive the best possible program attainable given program constraints, though it does not guarantee optimality for programs.[46] Execution occurs centrally at NRMP after the deadline, typically concluding before Match Week, with results released on Match Day (March 21 for the 2025 cycle).[45] Special accommodations, such as paired ROLs for couples, are integrated by treating joint preferences as single units in the proposal sequence.[3] The algorithm's stability property, proven mathematically since its 1962 formulation, minimizes post-match disruptions like reneging, as verified by NRMP's historical data showing near-zero instability.[3]Outcomes and Statistics
Historical Match Rates and Trends
The National Resident Matching Program (NRMP), established in 1952, initially featured surplus internship positions relative to U.S. medical school seniors, with approximately 10,400 positions offered for 5,800 seniors, resulting in near-universal placement success for domestic applicants.[8] Overall position fill rates have remained high since inception, exceeding 90% in most years, driven by expansions in graduate medical education funding and positions that have paralleled applicant growth.[47] Applicant numbers dipped by over 5,000 from 1999 to 2003 before steadily rising annually since the 2004 Match, reflecting increased medical school enrollments and international applicants.[48] For U.S. MD seniors, PGY-1 match rates have consistently hovered between 92% and 95% since the 1970s, with recent figures stable at 93.5% in both 2024 and 2025 (18,465 matched out of 19,755 in 2024).[49][47] First-choice specialty match rates for this group declined from 62.4% in 2000 to 47.9% in 2024, indicating heightened competition in preferred fields despite high overall success.[49] U.S. DO seniors experienced marked improvement, with match rates surpassing 80% annually since 2005 and exceeding 85% since 2014; by 2025, the rate reached 92.6% (7,773 out of 8,392), up from 92.3% in 2024 and an all-time high, attributed to the 2015 single accreditation system integrating osteopathic programs.[50][47] Their unmatched rates fell from 14.9% in 2000 to 7.0% in 2025, with applicant numbers growing 18.2% since 2021.[49][47] International Medical Graduates (IMGs) have faced lower and more variable rates, with U.S. citizen IMGs at 67.8% in 2025 (3,108 out of 4,587) and non-U.S. IMGs at 58.0% (6,653 out of 11,465).[47] U.S. IMG rates peaked at 80.3% in 2016—the highest in over 30 years—before stabilizing around 67%, while non-U.S. IMG rates have fluctuated between 50% and 60%, with applicant volumes surging 44.3% since 2021.[51][47] These disparities stem from program preferences favoring U.S. graduates, though IMGs fill primary care shortages, comprising over 50% of internal medicine matches.[49]| Applicant Type | 2000 Match Rate | 2016 Match Rate | 2025 Match Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| U.S. MD Seniors | ~94% | 93.8% | 93.5% |
| U.S. DO Seniors | ~85% | 89.3% | 92.6% |
| U.S. IMGs | ~55% | 80.3% | 67.8% |
| Non-U.S. IMGs | ~50% | ~60% | 58.0% |
Recent Results (2020s)
In the 2020 Main Residency Match, 37,256 positions were offered across all postgraduate years, marking an all-time high at the time, amid disruptions from the COVID-19 pandemic that shifted interviews to virtual formats. Of active applicants, 80.8% matched to PGY-1 positions, totaling 32,399 matches, with U.S. MD seniors achieving a 93.7% match rate. Position fill rates exceeded 99%, reflecting sustained demand despite economic uncertainties.[52][53] The 2021 Match saw continued expansion with 38,106 total positions offered, another record, and 33,353 PGY-1 matches, though the percentage of active applicants matching to PGY-1 positions dipped to 78.5% amid a surge in registrations to 48,700. U.S. MD seniors maintained a high 93.4% match rate, while international medical graduates (IMGs) faced lower success at around 60%. All PGY-1 positions filled at over 99%, underscoring robust program participation.[54][55] By 2022, positions grew to 39,205 total (36,277 PGY-1), with 34,075 PGY-1 matches and an 80.1% active applicant match rate. Registrations stabilized near 47,675, but U.S. DO seniors reached a record 90.7% match rate, signaling integration of osteopathic graduates. Fill rates hit 99.6%, with primary care specialties like internal medicine filling 100% of spots.[56][57][58] The 2023 Match expanded to 40,375 positions (a 3% increase), yielding 34,822 PGY-1 matches and an 81.1% active applicant rate, the highest in recent years. With 48,156 registrants, U.S. MD seniors matched at 93.9%, while IMGs comprised 25% of matches despite comprising over 30% of applicants. Unfilled positions remained minimal at under 1%.[59][60] In 2024, records continued with 41,503 total positions (38,484 PGY-1 offered), 35,984 PGY-1 matches, and a 80.2% active applicant rate among 50,413 registrants. U.S. allopathic and osteopathic seniors combined for over 92% success, but competition intensified for competitive specialties, with some like plastic surgery filling 100% via U.S. graduates. Overall fill rate stayed above 99%.[61][62] The 2025 Match achieved unprecedented scale, with 52,498 registrants competing for 43,237 positions, resulting in 37,667 PGY-1 matches and a 79.8% active applicant rate (47,208 active). This represented a 4.7% increase in PGY-1 matches from 2024, maintaining near-100% position fill rates, though IMG match rates hovered below 60%, highlighting persistent disparities by applicant type.[47][63][64]| Year | Total Positions Offered | PGY-1 Matches | % Active Applicants Matched to PGY-1 | Registered Applicants |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2020 | 37,256[52] | 32,399[53] | 80.8%[53] | ~44,970 (inferred from 2021 growth) |
| 2021 | 38,106[54] | 33,353[55] | 78.5%[55] | 48,700[65] |
| 2022 | 39,205[56] | 34,075[57] | 80.1%[57] | 47,675[58] |
| 2023 | 40,375[59] | 34,822[60] | 81.1%[60] | 48,156[66] |
| 2024 | 41,503[61] | 35,984[62] | 80.2%[62] | 50,413[67] |
| 2025 | 43,237[68] | 37,667[63] | 79.8%[63] | 52,498[69] |
Variations by Specialty and Applicant Type
Match outcomes in the National Resident Matching Program vary substantially by medical specialty, reflecting differences in position availability, applicant volume, and perceived competitiveness, as well as by applicant type, which influences overall placement rates and specialty preferences. In the 2025 Main Residency Match, U.S. MD seniors secured PGY-1 positions at a 93.5% match rate, comprising 47.6% of all filled PGY-1 spots, while U.S. DO seniors matched at 92.6%, accounting for 19.4% of positions. U.S. citizen international medical graduates (IMGs) had a 67.8% match rate, filling 7.8% of positions, and non-U.S. citizen IMGs matched at 58.0%, representing 16.6% of filled spots.[47] These disparities arise from factors including standardized exam performance, clinical experience in the U.S., and program preferences, with U.S. graduates generally favored in competitive fields due to familiarity with domestic training standards.[36] Applicant types exhibit distinct patterns in preferred and matched specialties. U.S. MD seniors most frequently matched into internal medicine (4,014 positions), anesthesiology (1,516), and family medicine (1,501), with low unmatched rates in less competitive areas but higher in surgical subspecialties like orthopedic surgery (43.8% unmatched). U.S. DO seniors concentrated in internal medicine (1,930), family medicine (1,482), and emergency medicine (1,078), showing strong performance in primary care and acute specialties. U.S. IMGs primarily entered internal medicine (1,169) and family medicine (626), while non-U.S. IMGs dominated internal medicine (3,655) and family medicine (801), often filling unfilled positions in primary care disciplines where domestic applicants are underrepresented.[47][36] Specialty-specific variations highlight competitiveness gradients, with surgical and dermatologic fields achieving near-100% fill rates dominated by U.S. graduates, whereas primary care specialties like family medicine filled at 85.0% overall, relying more on IMGs. The following table illustrates position fill composition by applicant type for select PGY-1 specialties in 2025:| Specialty | Positions Offered | % Filled | U.S. MD % | U.S. DO % | U.S. IMG % | Non-U.S. IMG % |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Orthopedic Surgery | 929 | 100% | 78.0 | 14.1 | 0.9 | 1.5 |
| Anesthesiology | 1,805 | ~100% | ~72.1 | ~17.1 | ~2.6 | ~4.7 |
| Emergency Medicine | 3,068 | 99.5% | ~44.9 | ~35.1 | ~10.3 | ~4.3 |
| Internal Medicine | 10,941 | 96.7% | 34.6 | 17.2 | 10.5 | 32.7 |
| Family Medicine | ~5,357 | 85.0% | ~28.0 | Variable | Variable | Variable |
Unmatched Applicants
Failure to Match Causes and Rates
In the 2025 Main Residency Match, approximately 6.5% of U.S. MD seniors and 7.4% of U.S. DO seniors failed to match to any PGY-1 position, while unmatched rates were substantially higher for international medical graduates (IMGs), at 32.2% for U.S. IMGs and 42.0% for non-U.S. IMGs.[47] These rates reflect the aggregate outcomes for certified applicants who submitted rank-order lists, with total PGY-1 applicants numbering over 45,000 against 40,041 positions offered, though positions filled at 94.1% prior to the Supplemental Offer and Acceptance Program (SOAP).[47] Unmatched rates for U.S. seniors have remained stable below 10% over the past decade, whereas IMG rates fluctuate with application volumes and program preferences, often exceeding 40% for non-U.S. IMGs due to higher applicant numbers relative to positions allocated to them.[47][5]| Applicant Type | Applicants | Matched | Unmatched Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| U.S. MD Seniors | 20,368 | 19,044 | 6.5% |
| U.S. DO Seniors | 8,392 | 7,773 | 7.4% |
| U.S. IMGs | 4,587 | 3,108 | 32.2% |
| Non-U.S. IMGs | 11,465 | 6,653 | 42.0% |
Supplemental Offer and Acceptance Program (SOAP)
The Supplemental Offer and Acceptance Program (SOAP) enables eligible residency applicants who remain unmatched or partially matched after the main National Resident Matching Program (NRMP) algorithm to pursue unfilled positions in participating programs during a designated phase of Match Week. This process, which began in its current form in 2012 to replace the prior "Scramble," standardizes offers and acceptances to minimize chaos and ensure fairness, with all communications and responses managed through the NRMP's R3 system.[73] Programs with vacancies post-main match submit their unfilled positions to NRMP, which compiles the authoritative List of Unfilled Programs accessible to applicants via the R3 system's SOAP tab, filtered by applicant eligibility status.[73] Eligibility for SOAP participation requires applicants to be fully or partially unmatched from the main match, in compliance with NRMP rules (e.g., no prior binding commitments or violations), and certified as eligible through the R3 system; this includes U.S. MD and DO seniors, international medical graduates (IMGs), and prior-year unmatched applicants who meet certification standards.[73] Ineligible applicants are prohibited from contacting NRMP-participating programs until SOAP concludes, though non-participating programs may be approached starting Tuesday at 8:00 a.m. ET. The process unfolds over Monday to Thursday following Match Day (typically the third Friday in March), with applicants submitting applications exclusively to listed programs via designated services like ERAS; programs review applications starting Tuesday morning and extend offers through iterative rounds, where applicants must respond promptly—tentative accepts hold positions pending finalization, but withdrawals are permitted under strict timelines to allow re-offering.[73] In the 2025 Main Residency Match, 2,521 positions entered SOAP across 1,247 programs, with 2,318 ultimately filled after 3,757 offers were extended (1,324 rejected, 115 expired), leaving 203 vacancies; this yielded a 91.9% fill rate for SOAP positions, dominated by preliminary and primary care spots such as family medicine (805 positions filled), surgery-preliminary (549), and internal medicine-categorical (359).[47] U.S. MD seniors secured 918 SOAP positions (39.6% of fills), U.S. DO seniors 511 (22.0%), and IMGs (U.S. and non-U.S.) 628 (27.1%), reflecting competitive dynamics where U.S. graduates benefit from higher priority in many programs despite broader applicant pools.[47] Approximately 56% of fills occurred in the first round and 80% by the second, underscoring the intensity of early competition; overall, SOAP boosts placement rates to 97.8% for active U.S. MD seniors and 98.4% for U.S. DO seniors when combined with main match results, though IMGs face lower success (e.g., 73.5% for U.S. citizen IMGs).[47][74] For unmatched applicants, SOAP represents a critical but uncertain pathway, as positions are limited and often in less competitive or preliminary specialties, with no guarantee of preferred fields; failure to match via SOAP necessitates alternatives like reapplication the following cycle, non-U.S. programs, or non-residency roles, amid evidence that repeated unmatched status correlates with diminished long-term career prospects in U.S. graduate medical education.[47] NRMP enforces binding commitments upon final acceptance, prohibiting further applications or negotiations, which enforces discipline but can lock applicants into suboptimal fits.[73]Post-Match Options and Implications
Applicants remaining unmatched following the conclusion of the Supplemental Offer and Acceptance Program (SOAP) may access the NRMP's List of Unfilled Programs through the R3 system until May 1, enabling direct outreach to programs with available positions.[75] Programs are not obligated to fill positions through formal processes post-SOAP, allowing unmatched applicants to contact them informally to inquire about training opportunities.[75] Additionally, the AAMC's Find A Resident service provides a platform for exploring open residency slots beyond NRMP participation.[76] For those unable to secure a position immediately, common strategies include pursuing a gap year to strengthen future applications, such as engaging in clinical roles like medical scribing to maintain skills, conducting research with mentors in the desired specialty, or completing USMLE Step 3 to demonstrate readiness—applicants passing Step 3 have reported securing more interviews in reapplications.[77] Reapplication in the subsequent cycle is frequent, often involving application revisions like tailored personal statements and letters of recommendation following a systematic review with advisors.[77] Alternative paths may encompass non-ACGME fellowships, advanced degrees such as an MPH, or preliminary year positions to facilitate later matching into categorical programs.[78] These outcomes carry significant implications, including a one-year delay in residency training and board eligibility, exacerbating student loan accrual without offsetting income from postgraduate medical education.[79] Psychologically, unmatched status often induces trauma, embarrassment, and isolation, though proactive gap-year engagement can mitigate long-term career setbacks.[79] Success rates vary by specialty; for instance, in orthopaedics, 58% of unmatched applicants rematch the following year, underscoring that while many eventually enter residency, persistent non-matching risks career pivots to non-clinical roles or international practice.[80] Overall, such delays contribute to physician shortages in competitive fields by extending the timeline to workforce entry.[77]Economic and Market Impacts
Effects on Residency Labor Market
The National Resident Matching Program (NRMP) organizes the residency labor market through a centralized, algorithm-driven process that requires applicants and programs to submit simultaneous rank-order lists, prohibiting pre-match commitments or post-match renegotiations. This structure emerged in 1952 to resolve pre-existing market instabilities, such as "unraveling," where hospitals made premature offers far in advance of the desired start date, leading to inefficient geographic mismatches and administrative burdens on both parties.[81] By enforcing uniform participation and binding outcomes, the NRMP achieves near-complete market clearance, with over 90% of positions filled annually, but it fundamentally alters supply-demand dynamics by removing price competition—namely, salary bidding—as a mechanism for allocation.[8] In a free-market scenario, excess demand for residency positions would typically manifest as upward pressure on stipends, as programs compete for top applicants. However, the NRMP's design suppresses such competition, resulting in resident compensation that remains standardized and low relative to the labor's marginal value, which includes 60-80 hour workweeks and high-stakes clinical responsibilities. Empirical modeling of matching data estimates that applicant surpluses in oversubscribed specialties depress salaries by an average of $23,000 annually, as programs exploit positional scarcity to avoid compensatory adjustments.[82] Average first-year (PGY-1) stipends stood at $59,279 in 2021, trailing those of physician assistants and nurse practitioners—who perform overlapping duties with less training—by 20-30%, despite residents' superior qualifications.[83] The system's monopsonistic features amplify employer leverage, as collective participation enables programs to coordinate implicitly on non-wage terms like hours and benefits without individual defection risks, akin to a buyers' cartel in labor markets. Historical evidence from the 1940s shows decentralized hiring spurred salary inflation in competitive urban areas, prompting hospitals to adopt the NRMP to stabilize costs amid rising intern pay demands.[84] While Medicare's Graduate Medical Education (GME) funding caps position supply independently, the NRMP reinforces this constraint by channeling applicants into fixed slots without alternative bargaining outlets, contributing to persistent physician workforce shortages downstream.[85] Analyses indicate that even absent the match, salaries would undercompensate labor value due to public funding distortions, but the centralized process exacerbates rigidity by eliminating decentralized wage discovery.[86]| Aspect | Pre-NRMP (Decentralized) | NRMP (Centralized Matching) |
|---|---|---|
| Salary Dynamics | Competitive bidding in high-demand areas drove localized increases (e.g., 1940s urban markets) | Uniform stipends with minimal variance; no post-interview negotiation |
| Market Stability | Prone to early offers and defaults, reducing efficiency | High fill rates (>93% in recent cycles), but at cost of suppressed compensation growth |
| Applicant Leverage | Individual negotiations possible, enabling premium pay for desirable candidates | Collective ranking reduces personal bargaining; binding outcomes limit opt-outs |