2026 ERAS Cycle · Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation · Personal Statement
Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Personal Statement: The 2026 ERAS Guide
Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation is a moderately competitive specialty with 240 positions across 55 programmes (NRMP 2025 data). Matched applicants averaged Step 2 CK 248. Programme signals offered for 2026: 8. This is the editorial guide to writing a Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation PS that earns interviews — built for the 2026 cycle, no AI generation.
What Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation programme directors actually weight in the PS
The PS is where you tie your scores, experiences and letters into a coherent specialty narrative. Based on published programme-director surveys for Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation and our reviewer network's aggregate read of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation application cycles, the signals that move the needle in the PS specifically are:
- Specific patient encounter demonstrating the value of rehabilitation
- PM&R-specific clinical or research experience
- Letter from a physiatrist who supervised you
- Step 2 CK above 240
- Involvement with disability advocacy or rehabilitation research
The PS is structurally short — 700-850 words in practice — so prioritising which two or three of these to anchor on matters more than trying to address all of them. Your reviewer will help you decide which signals to lead with based on the rest of your application.
The Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation top concerns — and how the PS addresses them
Published feedback and selection-committee guidance identify the following as the most common Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation application concerns. The PS is the lever where several of these can be explicitly addressed:
- Generic personal statement that could describe any specialty
- No PM&R-specific elective or sub-I rotation
- Missing letter from a physiatrist
- Underestimating PM&R competitiveness at academic programs
- Limited understanding of the scope of the specialty in the personal statement
2026 ERAS application context
| Metric | Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation value |
|---|---|
| Positions offered | 240 |
| Positions filled | 240 (100%) |
| Programmes | 55 |
| Matched Step 2 CK average | 248 |
| Unmatched Step 2 CK average | 241 |
| Programme signals (2026) | 8 |
| Total applicants (most recent cycle) | 782 |
| US MD match rate | 89.1% |
Source: NRMP 2025 Main Residency Match Results & Data, AAMC 2026 program signalling participation list, and NRMP Charting Outcomes 2024.
The PS that earns Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation interviews
Three structural rules apply to every Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation PS that consistently earns interviews:
- Lead with specificity. The first 100 words decide whether your statement gets read past the first paragraph. Open with a concrete clinical encounter, a specific decision, or a precise inflection in your training — not with "ever since I was a child" or "I have always been passionate about". Generic openings are the most cited cliché in published programme-director feedback across every specialty.
- Earn the specialty rationale. Programmes ask the same question implicitly: why Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, why now, why this programme. The bridge between your CV and the specialty rationale must come from a real experience — typically a clerkship, sub-internship, away rotation, or research project that genuinely revealed the fit. Manufactured rationale is detectable to experienced selection-committee readers; specifics are not.
- Close on what you bring. The closing paragraph should give a programme a concrete picture of what you would be like as a PGY-1 in their residency. Not abstract ambition ("I want to make a difference") — specific clinical orientation, a concrete strength, and what you would contribute to a team in week one.
How our editing service handles Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation personal statements
Every Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation PS is reviewed by a physician matched to Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation or an adjacent specialty with prior Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation selection-committee experience. The editorial workflow is unchanged across specialties: a structural pass, a specialty-fit pass, a truth pass (cross-checking against your CV and experiences), and mechanical proofreading via Grammarly with generative-rewrite features disabled. The tracked-changes draft is returned in Word or Google Docs with a feedback memo. No GPT, no Claude, no AI generation at any step — in line with the AAMC's 2026 ERAS certification.
For the full ERAS application beyond the PS, see our personal statement service page, and the broader Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation application strategy page with signals and program-list guidance.
Frequently asked
How long should a Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation personal statement be?
The ERAS character limit is 28,000 characters, plain text only. Most successful Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation personal statements land between 700 and 850 words. Longer is not better — programmes review thousands of applications and reward statements that earn attention in the first 100 words and sustain it without padding.
What do Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation programme directors actually look for in the PS?
Per published programme-director surveys and our reviewer network, Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation PDs weight these signals on the PS: Specific patient encounter demonstrating the value of rehabilitation; PM&R-specific clinical or research experience; Letter from a physiatrist who supervised you. The PS is the discrete component where you control how these signals land — it is where you tie your scores, experiences and letters into a coherent specialty narrative.
How many programme signals does Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation offer in 2026?
8 total programme signals for 2026 (0 gold, 0 silver). 93% of ERAS-participating specialties opted in to signalling for the 2026 cycle. Signals are how programmes triage interview offers — the PS works in tandem with signals to communicate your fit at the programmes you signal.
What is the matched Step 2 CK average for Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation?
248 for matched applicants per 2024 NRMP Charting Outcomes. Unmatched applicants averaged 241. With Step 1 pass/fail since 2022, Step 2 CK is the primary numeric input to Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation applications. The PS is where you contextualise a score that is below or near the specialty mean.
Should the PS address a low Step 2 CK score in Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation?
Not directly — that is what other parts of the application are for (specifically the personal characteristics paragraph in the MSPE and your specialty-matched letters of recommendation). The PS should foreground the experiences and clinical judgement that demonstrate Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation fit. If you have a meaningful red flag, your reviewer will help frame it briefly and pivot to growth — but the PS is not where a score gap gets explained line-by-line.
Can I use ChatGPT or Claude to draft my Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation personal statement?
No. The 2026 ERAS application requires applicants to certify that the personal statement is not the product of artificial intelligence. This is materially stricter than AMCAS (which permits AI for brainstorming and editing). At MyERAS Editing every edit is performed by a physician reviewer with Grammarly used only for mechanical proofreading. See /no-ai-policy for the full editorial standard.
What about IMG applicants in Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation?
Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation has limited or no publicly reported IMG match data in NRMP's standard breakdown. IMG candidates considering Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation should build US-based clinical experience and specialty-specific LoRs aggressively, and consult our IMG application guide for the broader strategy.
Work with a Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation-matched physician reviewer
Specialty-specific editing, no AI generation, returned in tracked changes with a structured feedback memo.