Is Physical Therapy a Good Career in Nevada?
Nevada · 2026 BLS salary data
Physical Therapy pay in Nevada
The median wage is $111,250/yr — 8% above the national median. Among U.S. states, Nevadaranks #4 of 51 states by median pay.
The numbers in Nevada
Real BLS state-level figures for Physical Therapy.
- Median salary
- $111,250/yr
- Pay range (25th–75th)
- $98,100 – $134,420
- National median
- $102,760/yr
- Employed in Nevada
- 2,030
Source: BLS Occupational Employment & Wage Statistics (OEWS), state estimates, May 2025 release.
What that pay is really worth in Nevada
Salary alone can mislead — Nevada costs about the U.S. average. Here's the median adjusted for local prices (real purchasing power).
- Cost of living (US=100)
- 100
- Nominal median
- $111,250
- Adjusted for cost of living
- ≈ $111,250
- State income tax
- None
Nevada's high pay is offset by cost of living — adjusted for prices it ranks #9 of 51, down from #4 on raw salary.
Nevada levies no state income tax, so more of that pay stays in your pocket than in high-tax states.
Cost of living: BEA Regional Price Parities (all items, US=100), 2024. Adjusted pay = nominal median ÷ (RPP/100) — purchasing power vs the U.S. average. State income tax = top marginal rate on wage income (Tax Foundation, 2025); your effective rate is lower and depends on income and deductions.
The verdict
Maybe — physical therapy is meaningful, in-demand, and well-paid, but the required doctorate (DPT) means heavy debt that can take years to clear. Worth it if you're committed to the field; risky if you're chasing pure ROI.
- Worth it If you're committed to hands-on health care and helping people recover
- It depends If you can manage the DPT cost with scholarships or a funded program
- Not worth it If you're optimizing purely for return on education cost
Pros & cons
Pros
- Meaningful, hands-on health-care work
- Much-faster-than-average projected growth
- Strong, above-median pay
- Varied settings: clinics, hospitals, sports, home health
- Autonomy and direct patient relationships
Cons
- Requires a Doctor of Physical Therapy (3 years post-bachelor's)
- High student debt relative to salary
- Physically demanding day-to-day
- Insurance/productivity pressure in many clinics
Who it's for
✓ A good fit if…
- People committed to health care long-term
- Those who want autonomy and patient contact
- Anyone who can limit DPT debt
✗ Probably not if…
- People unwilling to take on graduate debt
- Those seeking a fast, cheap entry
What people are actually asking
Real Reddit discussions on whether Physical Therapy is worth it — titles link to the original threads.
- “Is PT that bad of a career?”r/physicaltherapynegative/caution
- “Is everyone here ridiculously pessimistic or is the career ...”r/physicaltherapymixed
- “Do you like/enjoy being a PT or do you regret your decision ...”r/physicaltherapynegative/caution
- “If you could choose your career all over again would ...”r/physicaltherapyfuture/AI-anxiety
- “Is being a PT worth it?”r/physicaltherapyquestioning
- “Is a physical therapist assistant a good career?”r/careerguidancequestioning
- “Hello everybody, this is my first post. I wanted to get some ...”r/physicaltherapymixed