Is Healthcare Support & Healthcare Administration a Good Job Market in Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington, PA-NJ-DE-MD?

Produced by Callings.ai on April 22, 2026

Executive Verdict

Market rating: balanced | Confidence: High

This is a balanced market leaning favorable over the next 3-6 months. Local education and health services employment reached 760.4 thousand in January 2026 and was up 2.8% year over year, while the local posting sample shows more than 400 postings across more than 100 companies over the last 90 days, trending up.[7][8] It is still not an easy market: metro unemployment was 4.5% in January 2026, up from 4.1% a year earlier, and the typical active posting has been open around 47 days.[9][10] Most openings are entry-level and on-site, so candidates with local availability, patient-facing workflow skills, and basic clinical credentials have the best odds.[11][12][13][14]

Best positioned: A locally available candidate targeting medical assistant, patient access, medical records, or home-care support roles who already has BLS or CPR plus strong documentation and patient-care workflow skills will be in the best position.[13][14]

Main caution: The biggest mistake is assuming "healthcare administration" here means remote office work; about 95% of the current posting mix is on-site and less than 5% is hybrid.[11]

What Changed Recently

What This Means for You

Entry-Level Candidates

Difficulty: Moderate. There are many openings, but the market is crowded and employers still screen for readiness rather than pure willingness.

Best target: Target medical assistant, patient access, home-care support, and medical records openings first; the local mix is about 80% entry-level and about 95% on-site, so these lanes are easier to break into than management titles.[12][11]

Biggest mistake: Applying only to remote admin jobs or using one generic resume for both patient-facing and records-heavy roles.

Next step: Build a resume that makes BLS or CPR, documentation, patient care, medical terminology, and infection-control tasks easy to spot in the first screen.[13][14]

Mid-Career Candidates

Difficulty: Moderate to competitive. You have leverage if you can show ownership of workflow, compliance, or team coordination, but pure title inflation will not carry you.

Best target: Aim for medical records, revenue-cycle, and practice-operations roles where documentation ownership matters; local medical records pay runs above the medical-assistant median in the available wage data.[19][20]

Biggest mistake: Positioning yourself as general admin instead of a healthcare operator who can improve accuracy, throughput, and patient flow.

Next step: Split your search into two tracks: one for specialist admin roles such as records or billing, and one for higher-trust frontline support roles where your experience can justify stronger pay.

Career Switchers

Difficulty: Moderate if you already have customer service, scheduling, insurance, or records experience; harder if you are trying to jump straight into management.

Best target: Switch fastest into patient access, scheduling, medical records, or billing-adjacent roles, not clinic-manager jobs, because the market skews heavily toward entry hiring and high school diploma-or-equivalent requirements appear often in local postings.[12][23]

Biggest mistake: Trying to present unrelated office experience as enough for healthcare without showing comfort with compliance, patient communication, or clinical workflow.

Next step: Translate your past experience into healthcare language: intake, documentation accuracy, confidentiality, scheduling discipline, insurance follow-up, and fast-paced face-to-face service.

Salary Reality

moderate pay broad access

Observed local pay is mixed by sub-role, not uniform across the whole category. Medical assistants show a local median of $45,830, with a 25th-75th percentile range of $37,050 to $54,930, while medical records specialists show a local median of $47,930 and a 75th percentile of $80,000.[20][19] In the local posting sample, hourly-paid roles center on about $20 to $24 / hour, with a broader band of about $17 to $36 / hour.[4] For context only, Robert Half projects nonclinical healthcare salaries to rise 1.6% in 2026 nationally and places intake or admissions specialists around a $42,500 midpoint, which is useful directionally but not a Philadelphia-specific wage benchmark.[22]

This is mostly a moderate-pay, broad-access market. The local hourly cluster suggests many real openings sit in frontline support, patient access, and workflow-heavy admin roles rather than in high-end healthcare management.[4]

The tradeoff is access versus comfort: there are entry openings, but most are on-site, competition is tighter than a year ago, and holding out for remote work or higher-status titles can stretch your search.[11][12][9]

Best-paying path: The strongest pay in the evidence sits in specialized admin lanes, especially medical records and better-paid specialty support roles, where the upper end clearly outruns general entry-level support pay.[19][20]

Caution: Do not overread top-end salary figures. The $80,000 medical-records figure is a specialty upper-quartile number rather than a typical starting offer, and national proxy forecasts still point to only modest nonclinical salary growth in 2026.[19][22]

Where the Opportunities Are Concentrated

Real opportunity is concentrated inside healthcare services employers, not generic office-admin hiring. In the local posting sample, healthcare services account for about 95% or more of category demand, and the market is fragmented rather than controlled by one dominant employer.[25][15] The most consistently active names include Jefferson Health, Aveanna Healthcare LLC, Virtua Health, and Temple Health, which means the practical search map is hospital systems, outpatient networks, and home-based care operators rather than corporate back offices.[26] The skills mix explains where hiring is strongest. Employers most often ask for medical terminology, phlebotomy, documentation, patient care, communication, and infection control, while the most common certifications are BLS, CPR, and medical assistant credentials.[13][14] That points to a market where the best odds come from roles that sit close to patient flow or clinical workflow, even when the title sounds administrative. A current Philadelphia opening for a Medical Billing Specialist also shows billing demand is present, but the broader local mix still leans more toward care-support and operations support than remote revenue-cycle work.[21][11]

Where to focus: Focus first on on-site healthcare-services employers where patient care, patient access, and documentation overlap, then use records or billing as your secondary lane if your background is more administrative than clinical.

Skills and Credentials Worth Pursuing

Adjacent Roles to Consider

30 / 60 / 90-Day Plan

First 30 Days

Days 31-60

Days 61-90

Methodology and Confidence

This March 2026 report was generated on April 22, 2026. Latest direct national data: April 2026. Latest direct Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington, PA-NJ-DE-MD data: April 2026.

Confidence: Overall confidence: High. Recent local labor-market context and fresh local hiring signals point in the same direction, even though some sub-role pay data is older.

Limitations

References

  1. Federal Reserve Economic Data. Unemployment Rate · 2026-03 · fred.stlouisfed.org
  2. Federal Reserve Economic Data. Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers: All Items in U.S. City Average · 2026-03 · fred.stlouisfed.org
  3. Federal Reserve Economic Data. Average Hourly Earnings of All Employees, Total Private · 2026-03 · fred.stlouisfed.org
  4. Callings.ai. Callings.ai job-market aggregation · 2026-03 · callings.ai
  5. Federal Reserve Economic Data. All Employees, Total Nonfarm · 2026-03 · fred.stlouisfed.org
  6. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Health care and social assistance employment increased by 2.9 percent, or 680,500, from March 2025 to March 2026 : The Economics Daily : U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics · 2026-04 · bls.gov
  7. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Bureau of Labor Statistics Data · 2026-01 · data.bls.gov
  8. Callings.ai. Callings.ai job-market aggregation · 2026-03 · callings.ai
  9. Federal Reserve Economic Data. Unemployment Rate in Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington, PA-NJ-DE-MD (MSA) · 2026-04 · fred.stlouisfed.org
  10. Callings.ai. Callings.ai job-market aggregation · 2026-03 · callings.ai
  11. Callings.ai. Callings.ai job-market aggregation · 2026-03 · callings.ai
  12. Callings.ai. Callings.ai job-market aggregation · 2026-03 · callings.ai
  13. Callings.ai. Callings.ai job-market aggregation · 2026-03 · callings.ai
  14. Callings.ai. Callings.ai job-market aggregation · 2026-03 · callings.ai
  15. Callings.ai. Callings.ai job-market aggregation · 2026-03 · callings.ai
  16. Nj. Nj - warn_notice_layoff · 2026-03 · nj.gov
  17. Pa. WARN Notices · 2026-03 · pa.gov
  18. Nj. Nj - warn_notice_layoff · 2026-03 · nj.gov
  19. Edumed. Medical Billing and Coding Salary: Learn How Much You Can Make · 2025-01 · edumed.org
  20. Mymedicalassistingdegree. Medical Assistant Salary In Pennsylvania (2025) · 2025-01 · mymedicalassistingdegree.com
  21. Robert Half. Medical Billing Specialist Jobs in Philadelphia, PA · 2026-04 · roberthalf.com
  22. Robert Half. 2026 Nonclinical Healthcare Salary Trends: The Skills and Roles Driving Growth · 2026-01 · roberthalf.com
  23. Callings.ai. Callings.ai job-market aggregation · 2026-03 · callings.ai
  24. Callings.ai. Callings.ai job-market aggregation · 2026-03 · callings.ai
  25. Callings.ai. Callings.ai job-market aggregation · 2026-03 · callings.ai