A pediatric rehabilitation session in a clinical gym where a clinician assists a young girl raised arms on a balance ball, promoting motor skills, coordination, and confidence in a supportive environment.

Discover the Average Physical Therapist Pediatric Salary Today

24 April 2026 | Carvin Roa | 10 mins. reads

A pediatric rehabilitation session in a clinical gym where a clinician assists a young girl raised arms on a balance ball, promoting motor skills, coordination, and confidence in a supportive environment.

If you’re drawn to working with children and wondering whether pediatric physical therapy makes financial sense, the good news is straightforward. Physical therapist pediatric salary figures are competitive with other PT specialties, and the job satisfaction in this area is consistently high. Pediatric PTs work with children from infancy through adolescence, helping them develop motor skills, recover from injuries, and manage neurological or developmental conditions. It’s clinical work with a real, visible impact on young patients and their families. 

At Pioneer Healthcare Services, we place physical therapists in pediatric settings across the country. Here’s what you need to know about pay in this specialty, and what shapes it. 

Average Pediatric Physical Therapist Salary

The average physical therapist pediatric salary in the United States falls between $75,000 and $92,000 per year, based on current Bureau of Labor Statistics data and specialty salary surveys. That places pediatric PT in a comparable range to other outpatient PT specialties, with some variation based on setting and geographic market. 

Pediatric PTs working in early intervention programs, which serve children from birth to age three, often earn slightly less than those in outpatient pediatric clinics or hospital-based pediatric units. School-based positions follow a different compensation structure tied to teacher pay scales and school district budgets, which can push salaries somewhat lower in some districts. 

Hospital-based pediatric PT roles, including those in inpatient pediatric units or children’s hospitals, tend to pay at the higher end of the specialty range, often $88,000 to $100,000 or above in larger markets. These positions also typically come with comprehensive benefits packages. 

Factors Influencing Salary

Several factors shape where a pediatric PT lands in the salary range: 

  • Clinical setting: Children’s hospitals and outpatient pediatric clinics generally offer higher salaries than early intervention home-based programs or school-based positions. 
  • Specialty certifications: The Pediatric Clinical Specialist (PCS) credential from the American Board of Physical Therapy Specialties is the primary certification in this field. PCS-credentialed PTs typically earn more and have access to more competitive positions. 
  • Geographic location: Pediatric PT salaries are higher in metro areas with higher costs of living. California, New York, Massachusetts, and Washington tend to offer the top pay in this specialty. 
  • Years of experience: Pediatric PT salaries grow meaningfully with experience, particularly after clinicians develop expertise in specific populations such as neonatal care, cerebral palsy, or autism spectrum disorder. 
  • Caseload and productivity: Some outpatient pediatric settings use productivity-based bonuses that can increase total compensation above the base salary. 

One factor that’s easy to overlook: pediatric PTs who develop subspecialty expertise in areas like neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) PT, sensory processing disorders, or complex neurological conditions can command meaningfully higher salaries than generalist pediatric clinicians. 

Job Outlook in Pediatric Physical Therapy

The job outlook for pediatric physical therapists is positive. Physical therapy as a whole is projected to grow 15 percent through 2032, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Pediatric-specific demand is supported by several factors: 

The prevalence of autism spectrum disorder diagnoses has grown substantially over the past two decades, and physical therapy is a core component of early intervention services for many children on the spectrum. 

Advances in neonatal care mean more medically fragile infants survive and require ongoing developmental support, including physical therapy. 

School systems across the country are under sustained pressure to staff related services, including physical therapy, speech therapy, and occupational therapy. This creates consistent demand in the school-based sector, even as pay in that setting tends to lag hospital and outpatient rates. 

Children’s hospitals in most major markets report ongoing difficulty filling pediatric PT positions with experienced clinicians. That supply-demand gap supports both wages and job security for qualified candidates. 

    A blonde physical therapist works with a young boy in an open floor clinic. She is helping him do a fun exercise on a balance ball. He is looking at the camera and smiling while he holds a yellow exercise ball.

    Travel Pediatric PT: Opportunity in an Underserved Specialty

    Travel physical therapy is a strong option in the pediatric specialty because demand for experienced pediatric PTs often exceeds supply in a way that’s even more pronounced than in general physical therapy. Facilities looking for temporary coverage of pediatric caseloads frequently turn to travel PT staffing. 

    Travel pediatric PTs typically earn between $1,800 and $2,400 per week, with housing stipends on top of that base depending on your contract. Over the course of a travel contract, that’s often 20 to 30 percent more than a comparable permanent position would pay. 

    The settings available to travel pediatric PTs include children’s hospitals, outpatient pediatric clinics, early intervention programs, and school-based placements. Each of these offers distinct clinical experiences that can strengthen your overall expertise in the specialty. 

    At Pioneer Healthcare Services, we work with pediatric PTs who want to travel and connect them with contracts that match their specialization and preferences. If you’re a pediatric PT who’s curious about travel but not sure where to start, our team can walk you through what to expect and what opportunities are available right now.

      Tips for Negotiating Salary

      Knowing your market value is the starting point for any salary negotiation. Here’s what tends to work well for pediatric PTs: 

      • Reference specialty-specific data, not general PT averages. Pediatric PT salaries vary enough by setting that a general benchmark isn’t useful. Look for salary data that breaks out pediatric roles specifically. 
      • Highlight subspecialty experience. If you have NICU experience, expertise in sensory processing, or a track record with complex neurological conditions, name those explicitly. They’re meaningful differentiators. 
      • Pursue the PCS credential before negotiating senior positions. The certification strengthens your position considerably in any salary conversation. 
      • Ask about total compensation. Continuing education reimbursement, mentorship programs, flexible scheduling, and productivity bonuses can add meaningful value beyond base salary. 
      • Know the going rate in your specific market. Salaries for pediatric PTs in Boston and San Francisco are genuinely different from those in rural Appalachia. Understand which market you’re negotiating in. 

      At Pioneer Healthcare Services, we help physical therapists understand what their skills and credentials are worth in the specific markets where they want to work. Whether you’re exploring your first pediatric position or ready for a senior role in a children’s hospital, we’re here to help you find the right fit and go into that conversation with confidence. 

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