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Physical Therapist vs Occupational Therapist: Which Career Is Right for You? (2026)

AH
Ava Health Team
··7 min read

PT vs OT: The Core Difference

The most common confusion about physical therapy (PT) and occupational therapy (OT) comes from their overlapping patient populations. Both help patients recover function, but they focus on different aspects:

  • Physical Therapy (PT), focuses on movement, mobility, strength, and reducing pain. PTs address musculoskeletal, neurological, and cardiopulmonary conditions with the goal of restoring movement capacity. Classic PT outcomes: walking after a hip replacement, recovering range of motion after shoulder surgery, improving balance to prevent falls.
  • Occupational Therapy (OT), focuses on "occupations", the activities of daily life and meaningful tasks. OTs help patients regain the ability to perform self-care (dressing, bathing, cooking), work tasks, and cognitive functions after injury, illness, or developmental conditions. Classic OT outcomes: relearning how to use a spoon after a stroke, adapting a workspace for someone with a hand injury, sensory integration therapy for a child with autism.

Salary Comparison (2026)

SettingPT Annual SalaryOT Annual Salary
Hospital (inpatient)$82,000-$108,000$78,000-$102,000
Outpatient private practice$72,000-$96,000$68,000-$92,000
SNF (skilled nursing facility)$80,000-$105,000$76,000-$102,000
Home health$78,000-$105,000$74,000-$100,000
School system$62,000-$82,000$60,000-$84,000
Travel PT/OT$1,800-$2,800/week$1,600-$2,600/week

PTs historically earn slightly more than OTs, but the gap has narrowed. In school-based settings, OTs sometimes earn slightly more due to higher demand for pediatric OT services.

Education Requirements

  • Physical Therapist: DPT (Doctor of Physical Therapy), 3-year graduate program. Requires prerequisite science coursework. Must pass the NPTE (National Physical Therapy Examination). Most programs: $80,000-$160,000 total tuition.
  • Occupational Therapist: MOT (Master of Occupational Therapy) or OTD (Doctorate). 2-3 year graduate program. Must pass the NBCOT exam. Most programs: $60,000-$140,000 total tuition.

Both require extensive clinical fieldwork hours integrated into the curriculum. DPT is consistently doctoral-level; OT is transitioning to doctoral with OTD programs expanding, though MOT remains widely accepted for employment.

Work Settings

Physical Therapy Dominant Settings

  • Orthopedic outpatient (post-surgical, sports medicine, musculoskeletal)
  • Acute care (hospital inpatient), especially post-surgical and ICU mobility
  • Sports performance and athletic training-adjacent roles
  • Cardiopulmonary rehab
  • Neurological rehab (stroke, TBI, MS, Parkinson's), shared with OT

Occupational Therapy Dominant Settings

  • Pediatric (school-based, early intervention, developmental disorders)
  • Mental health and behavioral health (OT has historically been stronger in psych settings)
  • Hand therapy, OTs and PTs both practice hand therapy; certified hand therapist (CHT) credential available to both
  • Driving rehabilitation and assistive technology
  • Cognitive rehabilitation (stroke, TBI, dementia), shared with speech-language pathology

Job Market: PT vs OT (2026)

Both professions have strong job markets, but with slightly different demand patterns:

  • PT: High outpatient demand (baby boomer orthopedics surge); stronger in sports medicine and orthopedic settings; travel PT contracts consistently available
  • OT: Pediatric shortage is acute, pediatric and school-based OT positions are among the most difficult to fill in healthcare; behavioral health OT also growing; hand therapy well-compensated for dual PT/OT CHT holders

How to Choose: PT vs OT

Questions to ask yourself:

  • Do you prefer physical movement and exercise-based interventions? → PT
  • Are you drawn to cognitive, sensory, and ADL-level rehabilitation? → OT
  • Do you want to work primarily with pediatrics or school-age children? → OT (stronger pediatric tradition)
  • Do you want to work with athletes and orthopedic patients? → PT (dominant in sports medicine)
  • Are you interested in mental health and psychiatric settings? → OT (deeper mental health roots)
  • Do you prefer a more structured, movement-focused treatment model? → PT
  • Do you prefer creative problem-solving around meaningful daily activities? → OT

Shadow both professions before committing to a graduate program, the day-to-day experience differs more than descriptions convey.

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