Choosing Between FHG, FHO and FHO+: Which Ontario Primary Care Model Fits Your Practice Best?
Ontario family physicians are increasingly being asked the same question:
Which model actually fits how I want to practice?
The answer depends less on “which pays more” and more on how you want your day to look.
Some physicians prefer a high-volume clinic with full control over pace and income. Others want a stable roster and predictable workflow. And more recently, many are looking for a model that better reflects the full scope of family medicine, including all the work that happens outside the visit.
This is where understanding the differences between FHG, FHO, and FHO+ becomes important.
A quick note on income:
There is no single “average” income in any of these models.
What physicians earn depends heavily on:
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roster size and patient complexity
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clinic efficiency and visit volume
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preventive bonuses and incentives
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uninsured services and additional work
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overhead and clinic structure
The ranges in this article are illustrative and based on common practice patterns, not guarantees.
High-level comparison
Here’s the simplest way to think about the three models:
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FHG → best for volume, flexibility, and direct fee-for-service income
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FHO → best for stability, panel management, and continuity of care
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FHO+ → best for comprehensive care, work-life balance, and being paid for the full scope of work
Family Health Group (FHG):
The high-autonomy, volume-driven model
FHG is an enhanced fee-for-service model. It appeals to physicians who want control over their schedule and a direct relationship between the work they do and how they are paid.
What it looks like in practice
A typical FHG physician might:
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work 4 to 5 days per week
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see 25 to 40 or more patients per day
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run a mix of episodic and longitudinal care
Income (illustrative range)
Typical gross annual billings:
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avg. $480,000 to $600,000+
This reflects a high-efficiency, high-volume practice pattern.
Additional income sources
FHG physicians may also earn:
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preventive care bonuses (e.g., cancer screening targets)
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chronic disease management incentives
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a comprehensive care premium on eligible services
These can add meaningful income depending on performance and patient population.
Where FHG works well
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Strong control over schedule and workflow
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Clear link between activity and income
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High earning potential with efficient volume
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Less dependence on roster size
Where it can be challenging
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Income tied heavily to patient volume
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Limited compensation for indirect or administrative work
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Can lead to pressure to maintain a busy clinic
Quick summary
FHG is best suited for physicians who:
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like a fast-paced environment
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prefer autonomy
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are comfortable with volume-driven income
Family Health Organization (FHO):
The stable, roster-based model
FHO is built around capitation, where physicians are paid primarily for managing a defined patient panel.
It supports continuity, prevention, and long-term care.
What it looks like in practice
A typical FHO physician might:
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work around 3 to 4 days per week
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manage a roster of 1,000 to 1,800 patients
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balance visits with preventive and chronic care
Income (illustrative range)
Typical gross annual income:
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avg. $250,000 to $340,000 for smaller to mid-sized rosters
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avg. $340,000 to $460,000+ for larger, efficient rosters
Additional income sources
FHO physicians may earn additional income through:
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preventive care bonuses
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chronic disease management incentives
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access and continuity-related incentives
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shadow billing
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selected fee-for-service services
These can significantly impact total income depending on practice style.
Where FHO works well
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More predictable income compared to FHG
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Supports longitudinal, relationship-based care
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Less reliance on daily visit volume
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Incentivizes prevention and chronic disease management
Where it can be challenging
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Indirect care and admin work are not well compensated
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Structural limits on certain fee-for-service activities (often experienced at the group level)
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Income can be affected by outside use (negation in current model)
Quick summary
FHO is best suited for physicians who:
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want stability and predictability
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value continuity of care
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prefer a panel-based practice
FHO+ (Starting April 2026):
The modernized comprehensive care model
FHO+ builds on the FHO structure but better reflects how family medicine is actually practiced today.
It recognizes both direct and indirect care.
What is changing
FHO+ introduces:
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hourly payment for eligible work (around $80 per hour)
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compensation for indirect care and some administrative work
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removal of negation
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higher shadow billing rates
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increased after-hours premiums
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continuity expectations around 75 percent
What it looks like in practice
A typical physician might:
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work 3 to 4 days per week clinically
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manage a roster of 1,000 to 1,800 patients
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spend more time on coordination, follow-up, and team-based care
Income (illustrative range)
Typical gross annual income:
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avg. $290,000 to $390,000 for smaller to mid-sized rosters
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avg. $390,000 to $520,000+ for larger, efficient rosters
Additional income sources
In addition to capitation, FHO+ includes:
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hourly billing for clinical and indirect work
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enhanced shadow billing
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preventive and chronic care incentives
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after-hours premiums
This creates a broader and more balanced income structure.
Where FHO+ works well
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Better alignment with real-world family medicine
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Compensation for indirect care and coordination
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Reduced reliance on visit volume
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Improved overall sustainability
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Less financial friction from outside use
Where it can be challenging
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Requires more structured time tracking
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Includes continuity expectations
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Still includes limits on certain fee-for-service activities at a group level, though less central to income
Quick summary
FHO+ is best suited for physicians who:
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want a sustainable, long-term practice model
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value work-life balance
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want to be paid for the full scope of care
Income comparison:
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FHG
avg. $450,000 to $600,000+ annually
driven by volume and efficiency -
FHO
avg. $250,000 to $460,000+ annually
driven by roster size, incentives, and panel management -
FHO+
avg. $290,000 to $520,000+ annually
driven by capitation, hourly payments, and broader compensation
Work-life comparison
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FHG
high flexibility, but income tied to volume -
FHO
more balance, with moderate structure -
FHO+
strongest alignment with sustainable practice and modern workflow
Final thoughts
Each model serves a different type of physician.
FHG offers autonomy and strong earning potential for those comfortable with volume.
FHO provides stability and supports traditional family practice built around patient panels.
FHO+ reflects the direction primary care is heading. It acknowledges that care extends beyond the visit and begins to compensate physicians accordingly.
For physicians thinking about long-term sustainability and balance, FHO+ is likely to feel like a more complete model.