Is Healthcare Support & Healthcare Administration a Good Job Market in Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington, PA-NJ-DE-MD?
Produced by Callings.ai on May 10, 2026
Executive Verdict
Market rating: balanced | Confidence: High
Healthcare remains one of the area's main job engines, with major systems like UPenn and Jefferson driving nearly 81% of new jobs in the city through early 2026, and more than 1,100 category postings observed across more than 300 companies over the last 90 days.[8][9] But landing a role is more competitive than that volume suggests: in Pennsylvania, employment in this occupation family was up 1.0% year over year in April 2026 while active postings were down 31.2%, a pattern that usually means more people chasing fewer openings.[10][11] The local backdrop is also softer than ideal, with metro unemployment at 4.8% and Philadelphia County at 5.6% in February 2026.[12][13] This is a workable market if you are flexible on employer type, worksite, and subrole, but it is not an easy-click market.
Best positioned: Candidates with recent hospital, clinic, or home-health experience plus BLS, CPR, or medical assistant certification and strong patient-care, documentation, and medical terminology skills have the best odds right now, especially if they can work on-site for large systems.[1][6][3][14]
Main caution: The biggest trap is treating this like a remote office market: about 95% of sampled postings were on-site, with less than 5% hybrid and less than 5% remote.[3]
What Changed Recently
- Philadelphia healthcare stayed unusually central to local job creation, with UPenn and Jefferson cited as driving nearly 81% of new city jobs through early 2026.[8]: The best odds are still clustered inside major health systems rather than scattered evenly across small offices.
- Pennsylvania healthcare support and administration employment was up 1.0% year over year in April 2026, but active postings for the same occupation family were down 31.2%.[10][11]: The field is still expanding, but the advertised-opening side of the market has tightened enough that timing and fit matter much more than a year ago.
- Recent Philadelphia-area openings include contract-to-permanent medical billing and healthcare data roles, not just bedside-support work.[4][5]: That creates a real bridge for candidates with billing, spreadsheet, reporting, or denial-resolution experience.
- Nationally, healthcare remained a primary driver of the 115,000 jobs added in April 2026 even as the broader labor market cooled.[16]: Healthcare is still more defensible than many sectors, but employers are clearly being more selective.
What This Means for You
Entry-Level Candidates
Difficulty: Moderate: about 90% of sampled postings are entry level, but advertised openings are still well below last year's pace statewide.[17][11]
Best target: On-site patient access, medical assistant, aide, and home-health roles inside large systems and care organizations.
Biggest mistake: Sending one generic resume for both bedside-support and office-support work instead of separating patient-care experience from admin workflow experience.
Next step: Apply within the first week of posting; the typical active listing has been open around 24 days, so slow application timing can cost interviews.[18]
Mid-Career Candidates
Difficulty: Competitive: only about 10% of the sample sits at mid level, with less than 5% at senior and less than 5% at lead+.[17]
Best target: Revenue cycle, specialty-clinic operations, patient access leadership, and practice-management roles where workflow ownership matters.
Biggest mistake: Holding out only for manager titles when many employers actually hire through coordinator, supervisor, or specialist roles first.
Next step: Create a second resume version centered on denials, scheduling metrics, throughput, documentation quality, team training, or reporting, and stay open to contract-to-permanent entry points.
Career Switchers
Difficulty: Moderate to hard without a healthcare proof point: employers are screening for medical terminology, documentation, communication, and customer service, not just generic office experience.[6]
Best target: Medical billing, scheduling, records, call-center or member-services, or data-support work that lets you prove healthcare workflow quickly.
Biggest mistake: Assuming remote work will be the bridge into the field when this market is overwhelmingly in person.[3]
Next step: Add one fast proof point before another large application batch: BLS or CPR for patient-facing work, or a billing, reporting, or data-workflow project for admin roles.[1][4][5]
Salary Reality
moderate pay broad access
The cleanest direct local benchmark is older BLS wage data: healthcare support occupations in the metro averaged $17.51/hour in May 2024.[21] More recent posting data for this broader combined category centers on about $20 to $25/hour and about $50k to $79k annually, while Revelio Public Labor Statistics shows Pennsylvania new-opening pay around $51,426 in April 2026 and national new-opening pay around $58,112.[22][23][24]
That spread tells you this category is mixing lower-paid aide and assistant work with better-paid billing, records, and management work. It also means many "healthcare admin" salary anecdotes will overstate what entry patient-facing support jobs actually pay. Pennsylvania's offered pay for this occupation family still sits below the state's all-occupation new-opening pay of about $70,939.[24]
Access is relatively broad because many postings ask for a high school diploma or equivalent or a professional certificate, but wage growth is modest and the work is mostly in person.[25][7][3]
Best-paying path: The strongest pay usually sits in practice management, specialized billing or revenue-cycle work, healthcare data and reporting, and larger system employers; current Philadelphia examples include contract-to-permanent medical billing and data analyst openings.[4][5]
Caution: Do not overread top-end posted ranges. This category includes everything from low-wage frontline support to higher-paid admin roles, and some posting outliers are clearly not representative of normal hourly pay.[23][22][26]
Where the Opportunities Are Concentrated
Real opportunity is concentrated in large healthcare systems and care-delivery organizations, not a wide mix of unrelated office employers. Over the last 90 days, more than 1,100 postings were observed across more than 300 companies, with the most consistently active employers including Jefferson Health, Bayada Home Health Care, Virtua Health, Penn Medicine, University of Pennsylvania Health System, Jefferson Health Plans, and Actsretirementlife.[9][2] The sample is fragmented across employers rather than dominated by one name, but about 70% of postings come from enterprise organizations, which means formal screening, structured workflows, and less tolerance for vague resumes.[19][14] The role mix is also more patient-operations-heavy than remote-office-heavy. About 50% of sampled postings sit in healthcare services and about 45% in healthcare, about 90% are entry level, and about 95% are on-site.[20][17][3] Skills requests lean toward patient care, communication, medical terminology, phlebotomy, and documentation, so the market rewards candidates who can show hands-on workflow competence rather than just general clerical experience.[6]
- Large health systems (high): UPenn and Jefferson helped drive nearly 81% of new city jobs through early 2026, and Jefferson Health plus University of Pennsylvania Health System are among the most active named employers in the local posting sample.[8][2]
- Home health and senior-care providers (high): Bayada Home Health Care is one of the most active named employers in the local sample, and local reporting says home health services created the biggest jobs growth over the last decade as the region aged.[2][8]
- Revenue cycle, billing, and data-support teams (moderate): Philadelphia currently shows contract-to-permanent openings in medical billing and healthcare data analysis, making this a good second lane for admin-leaning candidates.[4][5]
Where to focus: Start with large systems and home-health employers, then use billing or revenue-cycle openings as a second lane if you want better pay or a faster office-based bridge.
Skills and Credentials Worth Pursuing
- BLS certification (table stakes): BLS certification shows up among the most common stated requirements in the local sample, making it one of the fastest ways to clear screening for patient-facing support roles.[1]
- Medical assistant certification (table stakes): Medical assistant certification is tied for the most commonly cited certification in the local sample, so it helps separate applicants in a tighter opening market.[1][11]
- CPR certification (table stakes): CPR certification appears regularly in local postings and signals readiness for patient-contact roles with little extra explanation needed from the candidate.[1]
- Medical terminology (table stakes): Medical terminology is one of the most-requested skills in local postings, and it matters on both the clinical-support and admin sides of this category.[6]
- Documentation and EHR-style workflow (differentiator): Documentation is a frequently requested local skill, and employers are moving toward skills-based hiring that rewards proven workflow competence over generic credentials alone.[6][27]
- Phlebotomy, vital signs, and infection control (differentiator): Phlebotomy, vital signs, and infection control all appear in the local skill mix, so they help move a candidate from general support status to more job-ready patient-care status.[6]
- Communication and customer service (table stakes): Communication and customer service are both requested in local postings because patient access, intake, scheduling, and records work all depend on clean handoffs and front-line problem solving.[6]
- Digital fluency and AI collaboration (premium): Philadelphia employers are emphasizing skills-based hiring and human-AI collaboration, and nationally 79% of nonclinical healthcare leaders say they pay more for specialized skills.[27][7]
Adjacent Roles to Consider
- Healthcare data analyst (pivot): Philadelphia has active healthcare data analyst openings alongside billing roles, making analytics a realistic step-out path for admin candidates who already work with spreadsheets, reporting, or revenue-cycle data.[4]
- Health-plan member services representative (bridge): Nonclinical healthcare pay growth is strongest in administrative member services, making payer-side service roles a practical neighbor for patient access or front-desk candidates.[7]
- Licensed practical nurse (LPN) (pivot): For aides and patient-care techs who want a stronger wage path, moving into a licensed clinical track is a true next-category step in a field projected to grow faster than average nationwide.[15]
- Hospital operations or business coordinator (both): Large systems dominate much of the local opportunity, so operations or business-coordinator jobs can be a sideways move for experienced schedulers, billers, or practice staff who want less patient-facing work.[2][14]
30 / 60 / 90-Day Plan
First 30 Days
- Split your search into two lanes: patient-facing support and admin or revenue-cycle, with a separate resume for each.
- Get one missing table-stakes credential now—BLS, CPR, or medical assistant certification—based on the lane you choose.[1]
- Build a target list of enterprise employers first: Jefferson Health, Bayada Home Health Care, Virtua Health, University of Pennsylvania Health System, Jefferson Health Plans, and Actsretirementlife.[2]
- Set commute boundaries and shift preferences now; most of this market is on-site, so logistics matter early.[3]
Days 31-60
- Add proof of workflow skill, not just tenure: a clean intake script, denial-resolution example, documentation sample, or rooming checklist.
- Use staffing firms and contract-to-permanent openings for billing, records, and data support if direct applications stall.[4][5]
- Follow up on applications at day 7 and day 14 instead of waiting a month.
- Ask current or former coworkers for referrals into large systems, specialty clinics, and home-health teams.
Days 61-90
- If interviews are thin, widen to adjacent roles such as health-plan member services or healthcare data support.
- If you are stuck in low-wage frontline roles, decide whether to climb within admin or revenue cycle or begin a licensed-clinical pivot such as LPN rather than endlessly reapplying to the same title.
- Track rejection patterns by lane; if patient-care roles stall, add phlebotomy, vital signs, or infection-control training, and if admin roles stall, strengthen reporting or billing skills.[6]
- Negotiate harder only when you can point to a scarce skill, since employers nationally are paying premiums for specialized skills more than general availability.[7]
Methodology and Confidence
This April 2026 report was generated on May 10, 2026. Latest direct national data: April 2026. Latest direct Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington, PA-NJ-DE-MD data: May 2026.
Confidence: Overall confidence: High. This report is anchored in recent local labor data and supplemented with current hiring and salary signals.
Limitations
- Local occupation data does not update in real time, so the clearest government read on unemployment is from February 2026 while some wage benchmarks are older than the hiring signals used elsewhere in this page.
- This category groups very different jobs together, from aides and medical assistants to billing, records, patient access, and practice-management work, so pay and competition can vary sharply by subrole.
- Some occupation-trend indicators used here are available only at the Pennsylvania statewide level, so they are a proxy for Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington rather than a metro-only measure.
- The Callings.ai job database is a partial, deduplicated sample of online postings, so it is more reliable for direction of demand, leading employer names, and recurring skill patterns than for exact counts or exact market share.
- Several recent local risk signals came from retail and manufacturing WARN notices rather than healthcare employers, so they describe the broader job-market backdrop more than direct cuts inside this occupation.
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