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    Home»Passive Income»The 3 Types of Leverage Every Physician Should Be Building (And Most Only Have One)
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    The 3 Types of Leverage Every Physician Should Be Building (And Most Only Have One)

    administraciónBy administraciónMarch 9, 2026No Comments8 Mins Read
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    The 3 Types of Leverage Every Physician Should Be Building (And Most Only Have One)
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    A few years ago I sat down to dinner with a group of physicians.

    High earners. Mid-career. Smart, hardworking people. And at some point one of them said something I haven’t been able to shake.

    “I feel like I’m working harder every year and somehow falling further behind.”

    Nobody disagreed.

    I kept thinking about that on the drive home. Because the problem wasn’t effort. Every person at that table was grinding. The problem was structural. All of that effort was flowing into one container. And that container, no matter how hard you work, has a ceiling.

    The physicians I’ve seen actually change their financial picture didn’t find a way to work harder. They built leverage. And not just one kind. Three.

    Disclaimer: This article is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, or investment advice. Any investment involves risk, and you should consult your financial advisor, attorney, or CPA before making any investment decisions. Past performance is not indicative of future results. The author and associated entities disclaim any liability for loss incurred as a result of the use of this material or its content.

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    What Leverage Actually Means

    Before we get into the framework, a quick definition. Because leverage is one of those words that gets used a lot without much precision.

    Leverage means small inputs creating larger outputs.

    Not a transaction, where you trade an hour and earn for that hour. Leverage is when work you did once keeps producing. When capital you deployed earns while you sleep. When a system runs without you in it.

    Most physicians are excellent at generating income. The training is long, the credential is real, and the market compensates accordingly. But income and leverage are different things. Income stops when you stop. Leverage compounds when you’re not looking.

    Here’s how the three types break down.

    Type 1: Career Leverage

    This is the one most of us already have. The one we built without thinking of it as leverage at all.

    Career leverage is the premium your specific expertise commands in the market. You spent a decade or more becoming a physician. That investment created something real. A credential, a skill set, a level of trust that most professionals never build. The market pays significantly more for what you know than it pays for generalized labor. That’s leverage.

    And it’s worth protecting.

    The mistake I see physicians make is treating their career as a fixed asset rather than something that requires active positioning. Reimbursements decline. Administrative burden increases. More hours get absorbed by documentation and overhead rather than actual care. The leverage you built during training can slowly get diluted if you’re not paying attention.

    Career leverage questions worth sitting with: Are you in an environment that actually values your expertise? Are you developing a specialty or reputation that makes you more valuable over time? Are you protecting your time from the parts of the system that want to consume it?

    If you answer those well, your career leverage holds and grows. But it still has a ceiling. Which is why most physicians who feel stuck aren’t doing anything wrong. They’ve just only built one type.

    Type 2: Investment Leverage

    Investment leverage is when your capital does work for you.

    Most physicians have investments. A 401k, a brokerage account, index funds. That’s a start. But there’s a real difference between having investments and having investment leverage.

    Leverage is when capital is deployed in assets that produce returns without requiring your ongoing time. Income, distributions, appreciation. The money works, and you don’t have to show up for it to happen.

    Real estate is one of the most accessible versions of this for most physicians. A rental property, a syndication, a fund. When it’s structured well, you invest capital, an operator manages everything, and you receive distributions. Or you have an incredible property manager that handles those clogged toilet calls. That’s investment leverage.

    I remember the first check I got from a passive investment. It was $47.

    That number sounds almost embarrassing to say out loud. But what it represented was completely different. That $47 came in without me seeing a single patient. Without me being on call. It came in because capital was working on my behalf. I remember thinking, okay, this is real. Now I just need more of it.

    That’s the shift. You stop looking for a windfall and start building a base of assets that produce income over time. The early numbers are small. The compounding is what eventually changes the math.

    A couple of things worth understanding as you go deeper here.

    True investment leverage means it’s actually passive. There’s a spectrum. If you’re fielding tenant calls at 10pm, that’s not really leverage. Being a limited partner in a well-run syndication is much closer to the real thing. Know where your investments actually sit on that spectrum.

    There’s also a learning curve, and it matters more than most people want to admit. The mistakes physicians make in this space aren’t careless. They’re the mistakes that happen when analytically sharp people step into a domain they haven’t studied yet. Due diligence, deal structure, operator vetting. These are learnable. But they have to be learned.

    Investment leverage is what breaks the time-for-money ceiling. Once capital is working, your income is no longer capped by the hours you can work. That’s the change that opens everything else up.

    Type 3: Business Leverage

    This is the one I see the most hesitation around. And honestly, the most misunderstood.

    Business leverage is when you build a system or platform that generates value beyond what you personally produce. When I say build a business, I know the reaction. No time. No business school. Don’t want a second job. All of that is fair.

    But here’s what I’ve actually observed in our community.

    The physicians who have the most genuine options in their careers, most of them have some form of business leverage. Not always a large company. Sometimes it’s a consulting practice. A course. A media presence that generates income on the side. A partnership in something they helped build.

    The common thread is they created something that doesn’t require their direct labor every time it produces value.

    This matters alongside investment leverage because the two reinforce each other. Business leverage generates capital. That capital gets deployed as investment leverage. The flywheel starts turning.

    The distinction worth making: business leverage is not the same as adding more work to your life. If you build something that requires constant effort to maintain, that’s a second job. The design is what separates leverage from burden. Systems, delegation, content that earns over time. That’s what makes it actually work.


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    What Happens When All Three Compound

    Here’s what I want to leave you with.

    Each type works on its own. Career leverage protects your clinical income and buys you time. Investment leverage breaks the income ceiling. Business leverage creates a vehicle that generates capital and funds more investment.

    But when all three are working together, the math changes in a way that’s hard to describe until you’ve seen it.

    Career income funds investments earlier. Investments produce distributions that reduce dependence on clinical hours. Business income creates flexibility that changes how you relate to your career altogether. Each one makes the others more powerful.

    You don’t have to build all three at once. Most people shouldn’t. The sequence that tends to work: protect and optimize career leverage first, start building investment leverage with what you’re generating, and explore business leverage when you have genuine capacity and clarity.

    But keep the vision of all three. Because that’s when physicians go from feeling trapped to having real choices. Not because they left medicine. Because they built enough alongside it that they could choose to stay.

    That’s the goal. And it’s more achievable than most people think.


    If you want to hear this framework in more depth, I covered it on a recent episode of the Passive Income MD podcast. And if you’re ready to move beyond the framework and into the specifics, the Leverage & Growth Summit is where we go deep on exactly this. Check it out at www.leverageandgrowth.com.

    Were these helpful in any way? Make sure to sign up for the newsletter and join the Passive Income Docs Facebook Group for more physician-tailored content.


    Peter Kim, MD is the founder of Passive Income MD, the creator of Passive Real Estate Academy, and offers weekly education through his Monday podcast, the Passive Income MD Podcast. Join our community at the Passive Income Doc Facebook Group.

    Further Reading

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