Illinois

Illinois Collaborating Physician Jobs – Top Opportunities for Licensed Physicians

Illinois requires NPs to collaborate with a physician until they reach 4,000 clinical hours — and all PAs require a written collaborative agreement with no exceptions. That creates consistent, high-volume demand for collaborating physicians across one of the largest healthcare markets in the country.

⏱ Get started in 24–48 hours 🏠 Remote supervision permitted ✅ We handle agreements & IDFPR filings 💰 No limit on number of NPs you can collaborate with
4,000 hrs
NP clinical experience threshold before full practice authority in Illinois
Up to 7
FTE PAs a physician may collaborate with under Illinois law
No limit
On the number of NPs a physician may collaborate with in Illinois
Why Illinois

Illinois NPs and PAs Both Create Consistent Demand for Collaborating Physicians

Illinois is a transition-to-independence state. NPs must collaborate with a physician until they have completed 4,000 hours of clinical experience and 250 hours of continuing education after their national certification. Until that threshold is met — which most currently practicing NPs have not reached — a written collaborative agreement with a physician is a legal requirement.

Separately, all Illinois PAs require a written collaborative agreement with a physician regardless of experience. The collaborating physician must file a Notice of Written Collaborative Agreement with the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation (IDFPR) before the PA can practice — and must file a Notice of Termination within 10 days of ending any agreement.

Illinois places no limit on the number of NPs a physician can collaborate with — and the large NP and PA workforce across Chicago and the broader state creates substantial, ongoing demand for collaborative physicians.

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Illinois State Requirements

NPs with fewer than 4,000 clinical hours and 250 CE hours post-certification must practice under a written collaborative agreement with a physician. No limit on the number of NPs per collaborating physician. 225 ILCS 65

All PAs (except hospital-based) require a written collaborative agreement. The collaborating physician must file a Notice of Written Collaborative Agreement with IDFPR before the PA may practice. Cap of 7 FTE PAs per physician. 225 ILCS 95

Prescriptive authority delegation must be filed separately with IDFPR. Schedule II controlled substances are limited to a 30-day supply; continuation requires prior physician approval and monthly case discussions.

If collaborating with a PA, the physician must file a Notice of Termination with IDFPR within 10 days of ending the agreement. IDFPR processing takes 4–6 weeks for new agreements. 68 Ill. Admin. Code § 1350

No proximity requirement. Remote supervision is permitted. Supervision is “deemed adequate” if the physician visits on-site at least monthly and remains available by telecommunications — but monthly visits are a safe harbor, not a strict mandate.

Your Role

What a Collaborating Physician Does in Illinois

You are not responsible for running the clinic. Your role is professional oversight — and Illinois permits remote supervision with no geographic restrictions.

Sign the Collaborative Agreement

Execute a written collaborative agreement defining scope of practice, prescriptive authority, supervision structure, and responsibilities for the NP or PA. The agreement must be maintained at the practice setting.

IDFPR Notice Filing (PAs)

For PA collaborations, file the required Notice of Written Collaborative Agreement with the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation before the PA begins practice. We coordinate this process for you.

Prescriptive Authority Delegation

Delegate prescriptive authority to the NP or PA as specified in the agreement. For controlled substances, file a separate Notice of Delegated Authority with IDFPR and ensure Schedule II requirements are met.

Monthly Case Discussions (Schedule II)

If Schedule II controlled substances are delegated, conduct monthly case discussions with the NP or PA and ensure all requirements for continuation of prescriptions beyond 30 days include prior physician approval.

Be Available for Consultation

Be reachable by telecommunications for consultation on medical problems, complications, emergencies, and patient referrals. Illinois places no geographic restrictions on collaborating physicians.

Earn Income Per Clinic

Receive income for each clinic you collaborate with. Illinois places no limit on the number of NPs you can collaborate with — giving you significant flexibility to grow your additional income.

Simple Process

Get Started in 3 Simple Steps

Many physicians in our network are matched and onboarded within 24 to 48 hours.

1

Apply

Submit your basic information and credentials. It takes less than 2 minutes and there is no obligation to proceed.

2

Get Matched

We connect you with Illinois NP practices and PA clinics that need a collaborating physician in your specialty area.

3

Start Collaborating

Begin your role with full support, clear expectations, and compliant agreements and IDFPR filings already structured and coordinated.

Our Difference

A Smarter Way to Work as an Illinois Collaborating Physician

Illinois’s IDFPR notice filing requirements, 4–6 week processing timelines, Schedule II protocols, and PA cap rules add complexity. We handle the details so you can focus on your role.

We connect you with clinics

No searching, no cold outreach, no negotiating. Illinois NP and PA clinic opportunities come to you.

Start within 24–48 hours

Many Illinois physicians in our network are matched and onboarded within 24 to 48 hours of applying.

IDFPR-compliant agreements & filings

Our collaborative agreements are structured to meet Illinois law, and we coordinate required IDFPR notice filings for PA arrangements — including the 10-day termination notice requirement.

Ongoing opportunities

Access to a growing Illinois clinic network — not just a one-time placement.

No NP cap — scale at your pace

Illinois places no limit on the number of NPs you can collaborate with, giving you real flexibility to grow your income over time.

Fully remote, minimal time

Illinois has no proximity requirement. Remote supervision is fully permitted. Designed for physicians who want additional income without additional stress.

Illinois Clinics

Illinois Clinic Types We Work With

Illinois’s large NP and PA workforce — anchored in the Chicago metro and spread across the state — creates consistent collaboration demand across a wide range of clinic types.

💆Medical Spas
⚖️Weight Loss Centers
💉IV Hydration
💻Telehealth Platforms
🏥Primary Care
🧠Psychiatry Practices
Specialty Clinics
🩺Wellness Centers
Is This For You?

This Opportunity Is Ideal For

🏅

Licensed physicians with an active Illinois medical license

🌐

Physicians interested in remote or flexible roles

💰

Those looking to create additional income streams

📋

Physicians who value a structured, IDFPR-compliant approach

You do not need to be currently practicing in Illinois to qualify — but your Illinois medical license must be active and in good standing with the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation (IDFPR).

Collaborating Physician Opportunities in Illinois

Flexible Collaborating Physician Jobs — Work From Home, Part Time, or Alongside Your Current Practice

Illinois is one of the most accessible states in the country for physicians seeking collaborating physician opportunities. With no NP ratio cap, a 4,000-hour independence threshold that keeps most NPs in the collaboration window for years, and no geographic proximity requirement, Illinois physician collaboration fits naturally around any schedule — from full-time clinical practices to part-time and remote arrangements.

Collaborating Physician Work From Home

Illinois has no proximity requirement — meaning you can fulfill your entire collaborating physician role remotely. Physician availability by phone or video fully satisfies the immediate-availability standard. Most Illinois collaboration arrangements are structured entirely as work-from-home positions, with no required visits to the NP or PA’s clinic.

Part Time Collaborating Physician Positions

Illinois collaborating physician arrangements are structured as part time engagements — not second clinical jobs. Your role centers on availability for consultation and chart review as needed, not scheduled shifts. Physicians across Chicago, Naperville, and Springfield routinely hold multiple Illinois collaboration agreements alongside their primary practice with minimal time impact.

Remote Collaborating Physician Opportunities

Remote collaborating physician arrangements are explicitly supported in Illinois — the state’s rules confirm that telecommunication availability satisfies physician oversight requirements. This makes Illinois an ideal state for physicians seeking remote collaboration income, including those based outside Illinois who hold an active Illinois medical license.

A Meaningful Collaborating Physician Side Gig

For many Illinois physicians, collaboration starts as a side income stream — one or two NP or PA agreements generating consistent monthly income without disrupting their primary practice. With no NP ratio cap in Illinois and a 4,000-hour independence window that typically spans 2–3 years of full-time practice, each collaboration arrangement is a stable, long-term income source rather than a one-time engagement.

Current collaborating physician job openings in Illinois span every major specialty and geography — from Chicago medspa and aesthetics NPs to primary care clinics in the Metro East, behavioral health telehealth platforms, and IV hydration practices across suburban Cook and DuPage counties. We match you with the right NP or PA practice for your specialty, availability, and income goals.

Collaborating Physician Jobs in Illinois

Illinois Collaborating Physician Jobs — Chicago, the Suburbs, and Statewide

Illinois produces physician collaboration demand from two distinct sources: NPs under the 4,000-hour FPA threshold who need a written collaborative agreement with a physician, and PAs who require a filed IDFPR collaborative agreement for the life of their Illinois practice. Together these two provider populations support a large, diverse, and continuously replenishing market for collaborating physician jobs across Chicago’s North Shore and West Loop, the suburban Cook and DuPage county corridor, Springfield, Rockford, and Illinois’s rural communities. Whether you are looking for your first arrangement or a portfolio of concurrent collaborations, Illinois offers one of the most accessible and scalable physician collaboration markets in the Midwest.

Collaborating Physician Jobs With No NP Ratio Cap

Illinois is one of the few states in the country with no cap on the number of NPs a physician may collaborate with simultaneously. There is no Board-imposed ceiling — physicians can scale their NP collaboration income in Illinois entirely based on their own availability and capacity. The only cap that applies is on the PA side, where a physician may collaborate with up to 7 FTE PAs. For NP arrangements, the market is effectively uncapped, making Illinois one of the most physician-friendly states for building a scalable supplemental income portfolio in the region.

Collaborating Physician for Nurse Practitioners — Illinois’s FPA Transition Window

Illinois NPs who have not yet completed the 4,000-hour FPA threshold need a collaborating physician for nurse practitioner arrangements — and most currently licensed Illinois NPs fall in this category. The 4,000-hour threshold typically represents two to three years of full-time clinical practice, meaning new NPs entering the Illinois workforce today will need physician collaboration for years before qualifying for independent practice. This transition window creates consistent, long-duration demand for physician collaborators across primary care, aesthetics, behavioral health, and weight management practices statewide.

Remote-Eligible — No Proximity Requirement

Illinois has no geographic proximity requirement for physician collaboration. The state’s adequacy standard — requiring monthly site visits or telecommunication availability — is widely satisfied through remote arrangements. Most Illinois physician collaboration positions are structured as fully or largely remote, with consultation provided by phone or video and chart review conducted through secure digital platforms. This remote-eligible structure makes Illinois arrangements accessible to physicians across the state and to Illinois-licensed physicians based elsewhere.

Chicago Medspa, Aesthetics, and Weight Loss Market

Chicago’s North Side, River North, Lincoln Park, and suburban Naperville and Oak Brook corridors host one of the most active medspa and medical weight loss markets in the Midwest. NP-operated aesthetic clinics and GLP-1 weight management practices in this corridor generate consistent demand for a collaborative physician with relevant clinical backgrounds in aesthetics, internal medicine, or primary care. These tend to be among the most flexible and well-compensated physician collaboration arrangements available in Illinois.

Looking to find collaborating physician positions in Illinois? CollaboratingPhysician.com maintains an active pipeline of collaborating physician jobs across the state and matches physicians with NP and PA practices within 24 to 48 hours. We verify specialty alignment, handle all IDFPR filings for PA arrangements, coordinate NP agreement structuring under 225 ILCS 65, and manage every arrangement from introduction through the full collaboration period — so you spend your time on the clinical relationship, not the compliance paperwork.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions — Illinois

Do Illinois NPs need a collaborating physician?
Yes — until they reach the full practice authority threshold. Under 225 ILCS 65, Illinois NPs must collaborate with a physician until they have completed at least 4,000 hours of clinical experience and 250 hours of continuing education after their national certification. Once that threshold is met, they may apply for full practice authority and practice independently. Because most currently practicing NPs have not yet accumulated these hours, collaboration remains a widespread active requirement across Illinois.
How many NPs can I collaborate with in Illinois?
There is no limit on the number of NPs a physician may collaborate with in Illinois. This makes Illinois an unusually flexible state for physicians looking to scale their collaborative practice income. The only cap that applies is for PAs — a physician may collaborate with a maximum of 7 full-time equivalent PAs under 225 ILCS 95.
What IDFPR filings are required for PA collaborations?
For PA collaborations, the collaborating physician must file a Notice of Written Collaborative Agreement with the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation before the PA may begin practicing. If prescriptive authority is delegated, a separate Notice of Delegated Authority for Prescription Drugs must also be filed. If the agreement is later terminated, a Notice of Termination must be filed with IDFPR within 10 days. IDFPR typically takes 4–6 weeks to process new filings. We coordinate all required forms on your behalf.
Do I need to be physically present at the Illinois clinic?
No. Illinois has no proximity requirement for collaborating physicians, and remote supervision is fully permitted. Illinois regulations state that supervision is “deemed adequate” if the physician visits the practice site at least once per month and remains available by telecommunications — but this monthly visit is a safe harbor for adequacy, not a strict legal requirement. Many Illinois collaboration arrangements operate entirely remotely.
Are there special rules for Schedule II controlled substances?
Yes. In Illinois, a collaborating physician who delegates Schedule II prescriptive authority to an NP or PA must: limit prescriptions to a 30-day supply, require prior physician approval for any continuation beyond 30 days, conduct monthly case discussions with the NP or PA, and ensure the prescriber holds both a mid-level practitioner controlled substances license and DEA registration. The collaborating physician must also hold a valid Illinois controlled substances license and DEA registration to delegate controlled substance authority.
How quickly can I get started?
Many physicians in our Illinois network are matched and onboarded within 24 to 48 hours. Note that IDFPR filing and processing for PA agreements can take 4–6 weeks, so we initiate filings as early as possible. NP collaborative agreements do not require IDFPR pre-approval, so those arrangements can begin more quickly.
What does a collaborating physician position in Illinois actually involve day-to-day?
A collaborating physician position in Illinois is fundamentally different from a second clinical job. Your core obligations are: (1) being available by phone or video for consultation whenever the NP or PA is seeing patients — Illinois requires “immediate availability,” which telecommunication satisfies fully; (2) reviewing charts as needed for Schedule II delegation cases or as outlined in the collaborative agreement; and (3) remaining in good standing with the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation. There are no required in-person hours, no mandatory site visits, and no scheduled shifts. Most physicians holding Illinois collaboration arrangements report spending a few hours per month in actual consultation and review activity per agreement — making this one of the most time-efficient collaborating physician side gig structures of any state in the Midwest.
Are Illinois collaborating physician part time jobs available in my specialty?
Yes. Illinois has active collaborating physician job openings across a wide range of specialties — including primary care, family medicine, internal medicine, psychiatry, aesthetics/dermatology, emergency medicine, and obstetrics/gynecology. The specialty alignment requirement (NP’s certification area must align with physician’s practice) means the highest-demand positions are in primary care and family medicine for the broadest NP pool, but psychiatric-mental health NPs create strong demand for psychiatrists, and the Chicago-area medspa corridor creates consistent openings for physicians in dermatology and aesthetics. Whether you’re looking for one part-time arrangement as a supplemental income stream or a portfolio of multiple agreements, we have current collaborating physician openings that fit your specialty and schedule across the Chicago metro and statewide.
How do I find a collaborating physician in Illinois — and what should NPs and PAs look for in a partner?
For NPs and PAs: the most efficient way to find a collaborating physician in Illinois is through a managed matching network. Illinois’s framework has several moving parts — NP specialty alignment under 225 ILCS 65, IDFPR pre-filing requirements for PA arrangements (which take 4–6 weeks to process), Schedule II controlled substance delegation rules, and the IDFPR termination notice within 10 days of agreement end. A managed platform verifies specialty correspondence, handles all required filings, and matches you with a collaborative physician whose credentials fit your practice type. NPs and PAs who need to find collaborating physician partners in Illinois quickly will also find that managed matching is faster than independent outreach — most physicians in our network are introduced within 24 to 48 hours. Searching independently through Facebook groups, LinkedIn, or cold outreach to local physicians often results in informal agreements that lack the IDFPR documentation required for PA arrangements or that misalign on specialty for NP agreements — creating compliance exposure down the line. For physicians: physician collaboration in Illinois is a clearly defined role. You are available for consultation, you review charts when needed, and you remain in good standing with IDFPR. You are not managing the NP’s or PA’s patients, schedule, or operations. Understanding that distinction — between the legal obligations of a collaborative physician and the responsibilities of a clinical employer — is key to evaluating whether an Illinois arrangement is a fit for your schedule and income goals.
What does physician collaboration in Illinois actually require — and what is a collaborative physician responsible for?
Physician collaboration in Illinois is the structured arrangement under 225 ILCS 65 (for NPs) and 225 ILCS 95 (for PAs) that defines the physician’s legal role in supporting an NP’s or PA’s prescriptive and clinical authority. A collaborative physician in Illinois has three core obligations: (1) be immediately available for consultation by phone or video whenever the NP or PA is in clinical practice; (2) conduct chart review as defined in the agreement — particularly for Schedule II delegation cases; and (3) for PA arrangements, file the Notice of Written Collaborative Agreement with IDFPR before the PA begins practice. Beyond those defined obligations, the collaborative physician does not manage the NP’s or PA’s patients or clinical decisions. This bounded, defined role is why collaborating physician jobs in Illinois attract physicians who want meaningful supplemental income without disrupting their primary practice. The arrangement is not a clinical employment relationship — it is a physician collaboration arrangement with a specific, documented scope that both parties agree to in writing before any patient care begins.

Start Building Additional Income as an Illinois Collaborating Physician

Illinois NP practices and PA clinics need licensed physicians. We connect you with them and handle everything else — including IDFPR filings, agreement structuring, and prescriptive authority delegation. Join our growing network today.

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Or call us at +1 (817) 857-2726 to get started today.

Serving physicians and clinics across Illinois, including Chicago, Aurora, Joliet, Naperville, Rockford, Springfield, Elgin, Peoria, Waukegan, Champaign, Bloomington, Decatur, Evanston, Schaumburg, Bolingbrook, Palatine, Skokie, Des Plaines, Orland Park, Oak Lawn, Berwyn, and surrounding areas.

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