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Dermatology Residency Match: Stats, Strategy and How to Match

Written by Jessica Freedman, M.D. | Mar 27, 2026

Dermatology Residency Match 2026:

Stats, Strategy & How to Match

 

Dermatology is one of the smallest and most competitive specialties in medicine. This guide synthesizes the latest NRMP match data, applicant benchmarks, signaling strategy, and evidence-based advice to help you build the strongest possible application.

Key takeaways:

 

The field of Dermatology is tiny and nearly fully filled: 545 of 546 PGY-2 positions filled in 2026 (99.8%). There is almost no margin for error in the applicant pool.

Signaling is essential: Programs virtually never interview unsignaled applicants. Your 3 gold signals convert to interviews at a median rate of 54%; silver signals at 14%. Use them deliberately.

Research is a hard differentiator: Matched applicants averaged 27.7 abstracts, presentations, and publications vs. 19.0 for unmatched — a nearly 50% gap.

Rank enough programs: The single biggest behavioral gap between matched and unmatched applicants was contiguous ranks (8.8 vs. 4.5). Rank every program where you would train.

Step 2 CK matters: With Step 1 pass/fail, a Step 2 score of 257+ is the new numeric benchmark. Scores below 250 warrant serious strategic consideration.

 

2026 Dermatology Match Outcomes

Dermatology is among the smallest and most selective specialties in the NRMP match. The numbers below reflect just how narrow the field is and how little room exists for an incomplete application

546 PGY-2 positions offered across 156 programs

99.8% Fill rate — 545 of 546 positions filled

79.5% PGY-2 positions filled by U.S. MD seniors

100% PGY-1 fill rate — all 31 spots filled, every year 2022–2026

What this means for applicants: With a fill rate approaching 100% and only 546 PGY-2 spots available nationally, the pool of competitive applicants far exceeds the number of positions. Even highly qualified candidates are competing for an extremely limited number of seats. There is no room for a weak signal strategy, an incomplete research portfolio, or a short rank list.

 

At the PGY-1 level, all 31 positions across 15 programs filled, with U.S. MD seniors claiming 23 spots, DO seniors filling 6, and IMGs accounting for the remaining 2.

 

Who Matches into Dermatology: Scores, Research & Key Stats

 

The data below are from the 2024 NRMP Charting Outcomes report for U.S. MD seniors who listed dermatology as their preferred specialty. The 2026 Charting Outcomes report has not yet been released; this page will be updated when it is available.

Most important gaps at a glance: Matched applicants ranked nearly twice as many programs (8.8 vs. 4.5 contiguous ranks), had about 50% more research output (27.7 vs. 19.0), were nearly twice as likely to be AOA members, nearly twice as likely to have attended a top-40 NIH-funded school, and almost six times more likely to hold a Ph.D.

Table 1 — Matched vs. Unmatched Applicants, U.S. MD Seniors (2024 Charting Outcomes from the NRMP)

 
Measure Matched (n=314) Unmatched (n=126) Gap
Mean contiguous ranks 8.8 4.5 +4.3 ▲
Mean distinct specialties ranked 2.2 2.4
Mean USMLE Step 1 score* 245 235 +10 ▲
Mean USMLE Step 2 CK score 257 250 +7 ▲
Mean research experiences 6.4 4.9 +1.5 ▲
Mean abstracts / presentations / pubs 27.7 19.0 +8.7 ▲
Mean work experiences 2.3 2.5
Mean volunteer experiences 5.3 5.6
AOA membership 41.1% 23.8% +17.3% ▲
Top-40 NIH-funded school 41.7% 23.0% +18.7% ▲
Ph.D. degree 9.8% 1.7% +8.1% ▲
Other graduate degree 17.1% 17.2%

 

Dermatology Signaling: Gold, Silver & What the Data Show

Dermatology uses a two-tier signaling system: 3 gold signals + 25 silver signals (28 total). Signal data below are from 97 programs, sourced from JAAD and AAMC (2024 cycle).

Table 2 — Interview Conversion Rates by Signal Type (97 Programs, 2024 Cycle)

Signal Type Median Interview Rate Range
Gold signal 54% 15–100%
Silver signal 14% 2–49%
No signal ~0% 0–9%

 

Only 36% of programs offer interviews to any unsignaled applicant. Official field guidance is to limit applications essentially to your 28 signaled programs. Applying to programs outside your signal list is largely a wasted application fee.

 

How to Use Your Gold Signals

Your 3 gold signals are your most powerful lever. The difference between a gold and silver at your top programs is enormous — a jump from 14% to 54% median interview conversion. Resist the temptation to "save" gold signals for prestige programs you consider long shots. If a program is genuinely your top choice and your credentials make you competitive there, send the gold signal.

How to Use Your Silver Signals

For your 25 silver signals, think carefully about geographic fit, program size, and research mission alignment. Programs that are a strong match for your background are significantly more likely to act on a silver signal than those where you are a statistical outlier. Pairing a geographic preference signal with a gold or silver program signal at the same institution is a strong combination.

How to Improve Your Chances of Matching in Derm: A Strategic Roadmap

 

Away Rotations

A well-executed away rotation remains one of the most effective tools in a dermatology applicant's arsenal. It converts you from a name on a list to a known quantity, gives you a legitimate hook for a gold or silver signal, and in some cases leads to a direct interview offer. The field's official guidance explicitly permits signaling your away rotation programs.

Aim for 1–2 away rotations at programs where you would genuinely rank highly. A mediocre rotation at a top-10 program can hurt more than help. A strong performance at a well-regarded community academic program is often more valuable than a forgettable showing at a prestigious institution. Choose away rotation sites where you have a realistic chance of matching and then perform at your best.

 

Letters of Recommendation

Letters carry outsized weight in dermatology. The field is small enough that writers and program directors often know each other personally. A lukewarm letter from a famous name is generally less useful than an enthusiastic, specific letter from a respected dermatologist who knows your work well.

Most programs expect two to three letters from academic dermatologists who can speak directly to your clinical skills, intellectual curiosity, and fit for the specialty. A letter from a non-dermatologist can complement your derm letters but should not replace them. The strongest letters describe specific patient encounters, research contributions, or clinical moments rather than offering generic praise.

Away rotations are the best path to letters from outside your home institution, which signals that your reputation extends beyond your own program. If your school has no dermatology residency, strong letters from recognized figures in the field become especially critical.

 

USMLE Step 2 CK

With Step 1 now pass/fail, Step 2 CK has become the primary numeric differentiator in dermatology applications. The matched mean of 257 in 2024 sets the benchmark; scores at that level or above will clear most screening thresholds.

If your Step 2 score is below 250, seriously consider whether you can delay your application to retake the exam, or whether strengthening other parts of your application before applying makes more strategic sense.

 

Research & the ERAS Scholarly Works Section

The research gap between matched and unmatched dermatology applicants is among the largest of any specialty: 27.7 vs. 19.0 mean abstracts, presentations, and publications. A single poster presentation is not sufficient. Programs have historically used these counts as a proxy for intellectual engagement and academic productivity, and the bar has only risen as the applicant pool has grown more research-active.

ERAS has introduced a dedicated Scholarly Works section, allowing applicants to list and describe publications, abstracts, presentations, posters, book chapters, and other scholarly output in a structured, verifiable format. As programs begin using this section, the emphasis is expected to shift from raw counts toward the quality, relevance, and depth of individual contributions.

 

How to use the Scholarly Works section effectively: List only work where your contribution is substantive. Include DOIs or links where available. Be precise about your author position. Prioritize dermatology-relevant work at the top. Padding it with peripheral contributions will be noticed.

 

Dermatology-Specific Activities

ERAS provides three slots for most meaningful experiences. Programs want to see that your interest in dermatology is demonstrated, not just stated. The most meaningful evidence comes from derm-specific activities: dermatology research with a named mentor, a derm-focused student interest group leadership role, volunteer work in underserved dermatology clinics, participation in AAD or regional derm society meetings, or global health experiences with a dermatology focus.

Filling these slots with generic clinical or volunteer experiences — even impressive ones — is a missed opportunity. Your activities section should make it self-evident why you belong in this specialty before you walk into any interview room.

 

Rank List Strategy

The single biggest behavioral difference between matched and unmatched applicants in 2024 was contiguous ranks: 8.8 vs. 4.5. Rank every program where you would be happy to train. Do not leave programs off your list because you think you are overqualified or want to signal confidence in a top choice. The NRMP algorithm is applicant-optimal: ranking a program you would accept never hurts your chances at a higher-ranked one.

 

Rule of thumb: If you would accept the position, it belongs on your rank list. The algorithm works in your favor — your job is to maximize the number of acceptable programs, not to make strategic omissions.

 

Geographic Preference Signals

 

Geographic signals tell programs you have a specific interest in their region, which can carry meaningful weight at programs that prioritize building a locally committed resident class. If you have genuine ties to a region — because of family, a partner's position, or prior training — signal that authentically. Programs are skeptical of applicants who signal geographic interest broadly. Be selective, and write about your geographic preferences strategically across your application materials.

 

Frequently Asked Questions

How competitive is the dermatology residency match?

 

Dermatology is one of the most competitive specialties in medicine. In 2026, 545 of 546 PGY-2 positions filled (99.8% fill rate) across 156 programs, with U.S. MD seniors claiming nearly 80% of spots. The field offers fewer than 550 residency positions nationally each year, making it among the smallest specialties in the match.

 

What Step 2 CK score do I need for dermatology?

 

Based on 2024 Charting Outcomes data, matched dermatology applicants had a mean Step 2 CK score of 257, compared to 250 for unmatched applicants. A score of 257 or above is the current benchmark. If your score is below 250, consider delaying your application to retake the exam or focus on strengthening other components before applying.

 

How many programs should I rank in dermatology?

 

Matched dermatology applicants in 2024 ranked an average of 8.8 programs contiguously, compared to only 4.5 for unmatched applicants. Rank every program where you would be willing to train. The NRMP algorithm is applicant-optimal, meaning ranking a program you would accept cannot hurt your chances at a higher-ranked program.

 

Do ERAS signals matter in dermatology?

 

Yes. Signals are essential. Only 36% of programs offer interviews to any unsignaled applicant. Gold signals convert to interviews at a median rate of 54%; silver signals at 14%. Official field guidance is to limit applications to your 28 signaled programs. Applying to programs outside your signal list is largely an ineffective use of application fees.

 

How much research do I need to match into dermatology?

 

Matched dermatology applicants in 2024 had an average of 27.7 abstracts, presentations, and publications — compared to 19.0 for unmatched applicants. The research gap in dermatology is among the largest of any specialty. One or two poster presentations are insufficient. Programs expect a substantial and ideally dermatology-focused research portfolio.

 

Are away rotations necessary for dermatology?

 

Away rotations are not strictly required, but they are one of the highest-leverage tools available. A strong away rotation converts you from a name on a list to a known quantity, generates a strong letter of recommendation from outside your institution, provides a legitimate basis for a gold or silver signal, and in some cases leads directly to an interview offer. Most competitive applicants complete one to two aways.

 

Can DOs or IMGs match into dermatology?

 

Yes, though the path is significantly narrower. In 2026, U.S. MD seniors filled approximately 79.5% of PGY-2 dermatology positions. DO and IMG applicants should expect to need research portfolios, scores, and credentials at or above the matched MD senior benchmarks to be competitive, and their signal strategy and rank list must be particularly strong.

 

Sources & Data Notes

 

Match outcome data: 2026 NRMP Advance Data Tables.

 

Applicant characteristic data: 2024 NRMP Charting Outcomes in the Match: Senior Students of U.S. MD Medical Schools. 2026 Charting Outcomes data will be incorporated upon release.

Signaling data: JAAD (2025) and AAMC ERAS Statistics, 2024 application cycle, based on 97 participating programs.