Chiropractic Industry Statistics – 2026

The chiropractic profession is one of the largest non-physician healthcare workforces in the United States. This page compiles employment, compensation, geographic, and patient data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the American Chiropractic Association, and industry analysis sources.

 

Key Takeaways

  • Approximately 70,000 chiropractors are currently licensed in the United States, with ~41,480 employed in clinical settings as of 2023 (BLS).
  • Employment is projected to grow 10% from 2023 to 2033, adding roughly 6,100 new jobs.
  • The median annual salary for chiropractors is $76,530. The top 10% earn over $142,580 per year.
  • Chiropractors treat more than 35 million Americans annually (ACA).
  • Spinal manipulation accounts for approximately 45.9% of chiropractic market revenue (industry analysis).
  • Back pain remains the leading diagnosis, affecting more than 70% of the population at some point in their lives.
  • North America holds approximately 42.23% of the global chiropractic market as of 2024 (industry analysis).

 

Chiropractic Industry Workforce & Employment Data

As of 2023, approximately 70,000 chiropractors are licensed in the United States, with roughly 41,480 employed in direct clinical practice according to BLS survey data. An additional 3,000 work in academic and management roles, and approximately 11,000 chiropractic students are currently enrolled across 19 nationally accredited doctoral programs. The profession graduates approximately 2,800 new practitioners annually.

Employment is projected to grow at a rate of 10% from 2023 to 2033 (faster than the average for all occupations), driven by an aging population and increasing demand for non-drug pain management.

 

MetricDataSource
Licensed chiropractors (U.S.)~70,000ACA
Employed in clinical practice (2023)41,480BLS OEWS
Working in academic/management roles~3,000ACA
Current chiropractic students (U.S.)~11,000ACA
New practitioners entering workforce annually~2,800ACA
Accredited doctoral programs (U.S., Canada, Puerto Rico)19ACA
Projected employment by 2033~61,200 (clinical)Industry analysis
Projected employment growth (2023–2033)10% (+6,100 jobs)Industry analysis

Note: BLS employment figures reflect wage-and-salary workers only. The full licensed workforce figure (~70,000) from the ACA includes self-employed practitioners, which represents a significant portion of the profession.

 

Chiropractic Industry Salary & Compensation Benchmarks

Chiropractor compensation varies considerably by setting, geography, and patient volume. The BLS reports a median annual wage of $76,530 as of May 2023, with the top 10% earning more than $142,580. The highest-paying settings tend to be hospitals and employment services firms, not private practice.

 

National Wage Distribution

PercentileHourly WageAnnual Wage
10th percentile$19.21$39,960
25th percentile$27.88$57,980
50th percentile (Median)$36.79$76,530
75th percentile$49.00$101,930
90th percentile$68.55$142,580
Mean annual wage$43.15/hr$89,760

 

Wages by Industry Setting

Industry SettingAnnual Mean WageNotes
General Medical & Surgical Hospitals$125,870Highest-paying setting
Employment Services$105,930Contract/per diem roles
Outpatient Care Centers$101,660Multi-provider settings
Offices of Other Health Practitioners$89,130Majority of employment (36,960 DCs)
Offices of Physicians$84,080Integrated care settings

  

Top-Paying Metro Areas

Metro AreaAnnual Mean Wage
Anchorage, AK$147,240
Reno, NV$134,410
Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario, CA$122,870
Killeen-Temple, TX$122,260
Rockford, IL$120,570

 

Geographic Distribution & Market Concentration

Chiropractic employment is concentrated in high-population states, but the highest concentration relative to local workforce size is found in the upper Midwest, particularly North Dakota, Nebraska, and Iowa. The states with the most total chiropractors (Texas, California, Florida, New York, Illinois) reflect overall population, not per-capita demand.

 

States with Highest Total Employment

StateTotal EmploymentJobs per 1,000 WorkersAnnual Mean Wage
Texas3,4200.25$94,040
California3,4100.19N/A (not released)
Florida3,3600.35$85,380
New York3,3300.35$93,540
Illinois2,5900.43$69,480

 

States with Highest Concentration (Location Quotient)

Location quotient (LQ) measures how concentrated an occupation is in a state relative to the national average. An LQ above 1.0 means the state has a higher-than-average share of chiropractors per worker.

 

StateEmploymentLocation QuotientAnnual Mean Wage
North Dakota2602.25$80,200
Nebraska6002.21$72,260
Iowa9302.21$69,650
Wyoming1401.92$62,530
South Dakota2201.79$87,450

 

Regional & Market Segmentation

The following data is drawn from industry analysis of the U.S. chiropractic market.

 

SegmentData PointContext
Suburban market share (U.S.)~62% of total revenueHighest population density + awareness
Rural CAGR~27.2%Fastest-growing segment; expanding healthcare access
North America global market share~42.23% (2024)Largest share globally
Asia-Pacific projected CAGR (through 2030)~13.96%Driven by health awareness and urbanization
Franchise segment projected CAGR~28.5%Standardized delivery driving accessibility

 

Chiropractic Patient Volume & Treatment Breakdown

More than 35 million Americans, adults and children, visit a chiropractor each year (ACA). The profession is most frequently consulted for musculoskeletal conditions, particularly back and neck pain. Three in four patients (77%) describe chiropractic care as very effective.

 

Treatment Type by Revenue Share (Industry Analysis)

Treatment CategoryMarket Revenue SharePrimary Conditions Addressed
Spinal manipulation~45.9%Back pain, neck pain, headaches
Pain management services (all types)~53.2%Chronic and acute pain
Soft tissue therapy & exercisesIncluded in aboveMusculoskeletal recovery, long-term function

 

Leading Diagnoses

ConditionMarket Share / Prevalence
Back pain~24.3% of global market share; affects 70%+ of population
Neck painHigh prevalence; 10–15% chronic/recurring
Headaches/fibromyalgia10–20% of patient visits combined
Neuromusculoskeletal (NMS) diagnosesMajority of all chiropractic encounters

 

Patient Demographics

Age GroupRevenue ContributionCommon Drivers
Adults 18–64~62.34% of market revenueWork injuries, posture, musculoskeletal discomfort
Adults 60+ (geriatric)~52.7% of patients treatedAge-related degeneration, mobility, pain management
Children & adolescents10–15% of chiropractic visitsPosture, birth trauma, sports injuries

 

Patient Satisfaction Data

MetricFindingSource
Rate care as ‘very effective’77% of chiropractic patientsACA consumer survey
Chiropractic vs. other back pain treatmentsOutperforms prescription medication, deep-tissue massage, yoga, pilates, and OTC medication in consumer surveysACA
Highest-rated provider for low back painAbove physical therapists, specialist MDs, and primary care MDsACA
Pain reduction with manual-thrust manipulation94% of recipients experienced ≥30% reduction in pain vs. 54% for medical care recipientsACA clinical trial

 

Chiropractic Within the Broader Healthcare System

Chiropractic care is recognized by major clinical and federal healthcare bodies as a front-line, non-drug option for musculoskeletal conditions. Chiropractors are designated as physician-level providers in the vast majority of U.S. states and in the federal Medicare program. Coverage is available through Medicaid (30 states), the VA, DOD, FEHBP, federal workers’ compensation, and all state workers’ compensation programs.

 

Major Clinical Guideline Endorsements

OrganizationPosition on Chiropractic/Spinal Manipulation
CDC (Clinical Practice Guideline for Prescribing Opioids)Encourages non-opioid/non-drug therapies as first-line treatment for subacute and chronic pain
American College of PhysiciansRecommends non-drug treatments including spinal manipulation as first-line care for acute and chronic low back pain
DoD/VA Low Back Pain GuidelineIncludes spinal manipulation as a non-drug, noninvasive treatment option
The Joint CommissionRecognizes chiropractic in its pain management standards; accredits 20,000+ U.S. health systems

 

Federal & Insurance Coverage

Coverage TypeStatus
MedicareCovers spinal manipulation to correct subluxation
State workers’ compensationAll 50 states
Medicaid30 states include a chiropractic benefit
VA & DoD CHAMPUSDirect access to chiropractic services
Employer-sponsored health plansThree-fourths of workers have some chiropractic coverage
Private mandates (state)12 states specifically mandate private plan coverage

 

About This Report

This comprehensive report was developed for ClinicMind.

 

Sources

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