# Healthcare Jobs in Alaska · Alaska Jobs

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# Healthcare Jobs in Alaska

By the Alaska Jobs Desk · July 2026

As of 2026-07-13, Alaska Jobs tracks 2247 open Alaska public-sector positions from 323 employers, median posted salary $65,842 — [all the numbers](https://alaskajobs.org/numbers) .

Healthcare is the largest category on this board and the fastest-growing part of Alaska's economy. It is also the most misunderstood, because the biggest employers are not the ones most applicants expect. Here is who actually hires, how Alaska licensing works, and the loan-repayment money that most people leave on the table.

## The tribal health system is the backbone

The Alaska Tribal Health System is the largest healthcare provider in the state and the single biggest source of health jobs on this board. It is a network of regional nonprofit organizations that run hospitals, clinics, and village health services, and they hire staff of every background, not only Alaska Native applicants. The Alaska Native Medical Center in Anchorage is run jointly by the Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium and Southcentral Foundation. Around the state, the regional organizations are the anchor employers: SEARHC in Southeast, the Yukon-Kuskokwim Health Corporation in Bethel, Maniilaq in Kotzebue, Norton Sound Health Corporation in Nome, Bristol Bay Area Health Corporation in Dillingham, and Tanana Chiefs Conference in the Interior. These postings often carry sign-on bonuses, relocation, and subsidized housing in the rural hubs. The [employer profiles](https://alaskajobs.org/employers) show who is hiring right now.

## The private and community hospitals

Outside the tribal system, Providence Alaska Medical Center in Anchorage is the largest hospital in the state. The other community hospitals anchor their regions: Alaska Regional and Mat-Su Regional in Southcentral, Fairbanks Memorial (Foundation Health Partners) in the Interior, Bartlett Regional in Juneau, and Central Peninsula in Soldotna. The State of Alaska also hires public-health nurses and behavioral-health staff through [Workplace Alaska](https://alaskajobs.org/guides/workplace-alaska) , and the federal government hires clinicians through the Veterans Health Administration and the Indian Health Service.

## Licensing: settle this before you plan a start date

Alaska licenses health professionals through the state Division of Corporations, Business and Professional Licensing and the individual profession boards. The detail that catches nurses moving to Alaska: Alaska is not a Nurse Licensure Compact state , so a multistate license does not cover you here. Registered and practical nurses apply directly to the Alaska Board of Nursing, and the processing time is real, so start it before you commit to a start date. Physicians, therapists, pharmacists, and behavioral-health clinicians each go through their own board.

## The loan-repayment money most applicants miss

Alaska runs the SHARP program (Supporting Healthcare Access through loan Repayment), which pays down student debt for clinicians who work at approved underserved sites. It can stack on top of federal programs like the National Health Service Corps and Indian Health Service loan repayment, and tribal and rural employers routinely help arrange it. This is real money, often tens of thousands of dollars, and most applicants never ask about it. Before you accept an offer, ask the employer which program the position qualifies for.

## Rural and village health: the side door

The Community Health Aide and Practitioner program trains village-based providers through the tribal health system, and it is a genuine way into healthcare without a four-year degree. Behavioral health and substance-use treatment are in the highest demand statewide. Rural sites carry the State of Alaska geographic pay differentials, which the [community pay comparator](https://alaskajobs.org/tools/community-pay-comparator) lays out, and many come with housing. If a rural hub interests you, the place guides cover the reality on the ground: [Bethel](https://alaskajobs.org/guides/working-in-bethel) , [Nome](https://alaskajobs.org/guides/working-in-nome) , [Kotzebue](https://alaskajobs.org/guides/working-in-kotzebue) , and [Dillingham](https://alaskajobs.org/guides/working-in-dillingham) .

## Compare before you choose

A tribal or nonprofit health job, a Providence job, a State of Alaska public-health job, and a federal VA job can all pay well for the same work, but they run on four different pay and benefit systems underneath. The [salary pages](https://alaskajobs.org/salaries) put the posted numbers side by side; the benefits differences are covered in [the state benefits guide](https://alaskajobs.org/guides/pers-and-state-benefits) and [the federal jobs guide](https://alaskajobs.org/guides/federal-jobs-alaska) . Browse everything open now on the [healthcare board](https://alaskajobs.org/jobs/healthcare) .

## Quick answers

The Alaska Tribal Health System is the largest healthcare provider in the state and the biggest single source of healthcare jobs. It includes the Alaska Native Medical Center in Anchorage (run by ANTHC and Southcentral Foundation) and regional organizations such as SEARHC in Southeast, the Yukon-Kuskokwim Health Corporation in Bethel, Maniilaq in Kotzebue, and Norton Sound Health Corporation in Nome. The largest private and community hospitals are Providence Alaska Medical Center in Anchorage, Fairbanks Memorial (Foundation Health Partners), Mat-Su Regional, and Bartlett Regional in Juneau.

No. Alaska's tribal health organizations serve Alaska Native and American Indian beneficiaries, but they employ staff of any background. Some positions carry a Native hire preference under federal law, but the majority of clinical and support jobs are open to all applicants, and these organizations are among the largest employers on the Alaska Jobs board.

No. Alaska is not a member of the Nurse Licensure Compact, so a multistate nursing license does not authorize you to work in Alaska. Registered nurses and practical nurses must hold a license issued by the Alaska Board of Nursing, through the state Division of Corporations, Business and Professional Licensing. Build the processing time into your start date.

Alaska runs the SHARP program (Supporting Healthcare Access through loan Repayment), which pays down student debt for clinicians who work at approved underserved sites. It can stack with federal programs like the National Health Service Corps and Indian Health Service loan repayment. Tribal and rural employers often help arrange these, so ask which program a position qualifies for before you accept an offer.

## On the board

[Healthcare jobs in Alaska →](https://alaskajobs.org/jobs/healthcare) [Health employer profiles →](https://alaskajobs.org/employers) [Compare community pay →](https://alaskajobs.org/tools/community-pay-comparator) [All field guides →](https://alaskajobs.org/guides)

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Markdown mirror of https://alaskajobs.org/guides/healthcare-jobs-alaska · full index: https://alaskajobs.org/llms.txt
