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Remote Work in Healthcare: Which Roles Are Actually Remote?

6 min read · Published July 1, 2025

Healthcare remote work expanded dramatically during the pandemic and has partially contracted since. Many postings labeled "remote" are actually hybrid, location-restricted, or carry licensing requirements that limit where you can work. Here's a clear-eyed breakdown of which roles genuinely offer remote flexibility and what caveats come with each.

Roles that are reliably remote

Medical coding and billing: The most consistently remote healthcare role. Coders and billers have worked from home for years, long before COVID. The work is documentation-based, requires no patient interaction, and is increasingly supported by AI-assisted tools. CPC, CCS, or RHIT credentialing opens doors; the AAPC and AHIMA job boards are the best sources for these roles.

Health informatics and clinical data analysis: Most analytics work in population health, EHR reporting, and quality improvement can be done remotely. Tools like SQL, Tableau, R, and Epic reporting workbenches are screen-share friendly. Organizations may require on-site for system go-lives or committee meetings, but baseline work is remote-compatible.

Utilization review and case management: UR nurses and case managers review charts, authorize care, and coordinate transitions — all documentation-based. Many insurance companies and managed care organizations hire RNs entirely remotely for these roles. Expect state licensure requirements for wherever you're reviewing cases.

Telemedicine / telehealth: Growing rapidly but requires clinical licensure in the patient's state. A compact nursing license (eNLC) or participating-state compact helps, but physicians face more complex multi-state licensing without the benefit of a federal compact. Telemedicine roles vary widely in schedule flexibility — some are truly async, others are live video only.

Roles that are partially or situationally remote

  • Healthcare project management: Remote during execution phases; on-site for go-lives and stakeholder workshops.
  • Clinical education and training: Curriculum development is remote; delivery is often on-site or hybrid.
  • Healthcare consulting: Road-heavy during active projects, remote between engagements.
  • Revenue cycle management (beyond coding): Director- and manager-level roles are often remote; front-end patient access roles are not.

Red flags in remote healthcare job postings

  • 'Remote in [State]' — this means the role is location-restricted. Verify before relocating or assuming you can work from anywhere.
  • 'Hybrid with travel up to 50%' — this is not a remote role. Travel-heavy roles are often posted as remote to attract candidates who won't read the details.
  • No mention of equipment or stipends — legitimate remote employers provide equipment or clear stipends. Vague postings often become hybrid by default.
  • State licensure required but no mention of compact — for clinical roles, check your licensure carefully before applying.

What to ask before accepting a remote healthcare role

  • Is this role truly work-from-anywhere, or are there state restrictions?
  • Are there required on-site days, weeks, or quarterly meetings?
  • Does the company provide equipment, or is there a stipend?
  • How does the team collaborate — synchronous (scheduled video) or asynchronous?
  • What are the on-call or shift requirements, if any?

Remote healthcare roles are real and growing — but they're a minority of the market. Focusing your search on informatics, coding, utilization review, and managed care will yield the highest concentration of genuinely remote opportunities.

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