Between 2018 and 2024, companies reported $4.81B in payments to 132,798 New York physicians and teaching hospitals — broken down below by congressional district and county, plus who paid and who got paid. ‹ Back to the national map
Shaded by total reported payments. Hover an area for detail; click to drill in. ZIP→area mapping covers ~98% of payments (PO-box/unique ZIPs excluded). Source: CMS Open Payments, loaded by Civly.
2018–2024 reported payments, from Civly's loaded copy of CMS Open Payments. A payment is a disclosure, not an accusation.
physicians and teaching hospitals took at least one payment.
reported across 5,921,008 individual payments.
New York is one of the country's biggest markets for industry money, ranking 6th of 51 for total reported payments — $4.81B across 5,921,008 individual payments from 2018 to 2024, 6.1% of the $78.26B reported nationwide. Spread across the 132,798 New York physicians and teaching hospitals that took at least one payment, that's $36,228 per recipient — close to the $41,481 national average (19th of 51 per physician). Within the state, the biggest single payer was PFIZER INC. at $318M; Orthopaedic Surgery took in more than any other specialty; the state's largest individual recipient, Lenke Lawrence, was paid $22M across 420 payments.
Search any physician in New York and see what they were paid — click a result for their largest individual payments.
From Civly's loaded copy of CMS Open Payments. Being listed does not imply wrongdoing — most payments are routine. Names can be shared by multiple physicians; confirm by city and specialty.
Every state gets the same breakdown — payments mapped by district and county, top payers and specialties, and a doctor lookup. Or start from the national map.