How to Identify and Establish Connections to IMG Friendly Residency Programs
- Samir Desai MD & Rajani Katta MD
- 3 days ago
- 9 min read
Targeting the Right Programs is Critical for IMG Residency Success
If you’re an IMG applying to the US residency match, it’s important to learn about IMG friendly residency programs. That’s because a successful residency match strategy focuses on applying to the right residency programs.
Although many applicants may end up applying to 100 or more residency programs, it’s important to recognize that not all programs will review your application in the same way. Some Internal Medicine residency programs will rarely, if ever, accept an IMG. For example, some programs are so highly competitive that they have far more US medical student applications that they can accept, and therefore they are less likely to look at IMG residency applicants.
There are always exceptions, of course. For example, an IMG who has spent several years with a particular residency program working closely with faculty and key decision-makers on research projects may be able to successfully match at that program.
As a general rule, though, it’s helpful to target residency programs that are known to be IMG friendly.
What does it mean to be an IMG friendly residency program?
I have worked closely with many IMGs, and have seen hundreds of IMGs successfully match into US residency programs. Our company MD2B Connect provides clinical rotations for IMGs, as well as residency application support services, which means I have worked directly with many, many fantastic IMG applicants over the past 25+ years.
In working with so many applicants, I've been able to identify multiple programs that we consider to be IMG friendly.
What do I mean by IMG friendly? An IMG friendly program, in my definition, is any program that has accepted an IMG in the previous five years. Obviously, there are going to be differences within that group. I break it down to three main tiers.
Top-tier: over 50% of residents in the program are currently IMGs
Middle tier: 25 to 50% of residents in the program are currently IMGs
Lowest tier: less than 25% of residents in the program are currently IMGs

How can you locate IMG friendly programs?
At the most basic level, you can start with a Google search to identify these programs. Your goal is to search for residency programs, and then evaluate all of their current residents and determine what medical school they have graduated from. This is obviously very detailed, painstaking work.
Start With the Big Databases
Most applicants instead start with FREIDA and AAMC Residency Explorer. More information on these resources and the type of information that they provide is found online.
Use the MD2B Connect IMG Friendly Residency Program Tool to Help Identify Programs
Because we work with so many IMGs, we've reviewed the available information on IMG friendly programs so that we can better help our applicants identify programs that they could be targeting.
Our resource of IMG friendly programs, outlining programs across the United States and within 6 different specialties, is available to everyone, and found on our website at www.MD2Bconnect.com.
We’ve gone through the statistics for 6 different specialties, including Family Medicine, Internal Medicine, Neurology, Pathology, Pediatrics, and Psychiatry.
What are some of the most IMG friendly states for Internal Medicine residency?
You’ll notice that we present this information by state. As you go through the resource for Internal Medicine programs, you’ll notice that 46 states have at least one residency program that’s considered IMG friendly. Although that's a lot of states, it's important to notice that many of these states have only one program, such as Colorado.
What are some of the states that have multiple IMG friendly Internal Medicine programs?
New York has 37 programs
Florida has 24 programs
Michigan has 23 programs
Connecticut has 12 programs
California has 11 programs
What should an IMG applicant do with this information?
As you’re looking through this list, it’s important to think about how you might target these programs. If a program has a history of taking IMG applicants, then the next step is to try to identify any potential connections or commonalities that you might have with that program.
What are potential commonalities that you might have with the residency program?
Completion of a rotation in that program
Multiple rotations completed in that state
Your current state of residence
Your permanent mailing address
Close connections to the state, such as previous residence or family members
A compelling reason to be interested in living in that state in the future
Connections with current residents in that program
Connections with current faculty members in that program
Connections with physicians in that local community, such as having completed a rotation with a local physician
An area of interest within medicine that is congruent with an area of medicine that is a focus of the program
Completing a rotation at that program is a very strong indicator of interest in the program
Study after study has demonstrated that audition electives are a powerful way of increasing a student's chances of matching with a particular residency program.
When you’re applying through the NRMP, your application can easily get lost in a sea of other highly qualified applicants. What distinguishes your one application from 1000 other applications that the program is reviewing for their 10 residency positions?
This can distinguish you: if you rotated at that program, and the faculty has come to know you as an individual, that can be an incredibly powerful distinguishing factor.
You may not be able to rotate at a program, but you may be able to work with local physicians.
An underlooked point of connection to an IMG-friendly residency program is physicians in that local community.
It can be challenging to rotate at a particular program, as they may not offer opportunities to outside students or graduates. This is where community physicians can be so valuable. Physicians within a community are often connected to one another, whether that’s through referral of patients, regular attendance at specialty-specific meetings, serving on hospital committees together, or simply shared social circles in a community.
Rotating with one of these physicians may help put you on the radar of a close-by residency program. You’ve already established your interest in this geographic area. In addition, letters of recommendation from a local physician, especially if they are known to the residency program faculty, may carry great weight with that program.
Some local physicians may even choose to advocate for you by speaking with or emailing their personal contacts in the residency program.
Being a resident of the state can provide a powerful boost to your application for an in-state residency program
Where do you live currently? This can be incredibly compelling to a residency program.
For example, one of my students lived one hour away from a particular rural residency program (let’s say in Louisiana). At the same time, two students from the New York area rotated at that residency program.
On paper, the two New York students were stronger applicants. Despite that, the student with the Louisiana mailing address was the one who ultimately matched at the program. This may have been due to individual differences among the applicants, but I can’t rule out the potential role of geography.
Any potential connections to a particular state or geographic region can strengthen your attractiveness to a residency program
Why does indicating your connection to a state or interest in a state or geographic region matter? It matters for multiple reasons.
If you’re applying to a program in a rural area, for example, program faculty want to know that you’ll be happy working at their program and living in the area for the next three years. Your experience with that region can help make that clear.
Expressing your future interest in providing medical care in these geographic locations, if true, can also be an important factor for residency programs
If you have an interest in remaining in this particular geographic location for your future career, it is important to express that.
This can be an important selection factor for some residency programs. That's because some programs consider it their mission to improve access to care for their communities.
For example, certain communities in Louisiana may lack access to primary care physicians or to specialty care. For applicants who are interested in remaining in this state or region after their training, it can be important to express that.
Be honest about your professional goals.
Do not, under any circumstances, state that you’re interested in remaining in a rural part of Louisiana if you have no interest in doing so. Programs can usually see through this, and you may actually harm your chances.
However, if you have geographic ties to this location, or have a strong interest in rural care (for example), then it is acceptable, and can be favorable, to let the program know that.
Having professional goals in common can emphasize your fit with this residency program
Why would rural internal medicine programs in Louisiana not offer an interview to a superstar residency applicant? They may not interview that superstar applicant because the program's strengths, offerings, and goals may not “fit“ with the applicant's strengths, interests and goals.
Programs want residents who fit their culture and focus
The residency program is looking for applicants who will “fit“ with the program. Study after study has demonstrated that this concept of fit is incredibly important to residency program decision makers. A research-focused applicant, no matter how strong, may not "fit" well with a program that has a really strong focus on providing rural healthcare--unless that applicant is able to clearly outline her interest in rural healthcare in some way.
What are some examples of professional goals or interests?
Rural healthcare
Care for underserved populations
Health promotion
Health promotion in underserved populations
Basic science research
Translational research
An interest in emerging technologies in diagnosis
An interest in specific emerging treatments
An interest in a specific disease process
An interest in a specific therapeutic modality
An interest in collaborative, multi-specialty care
And many more
There are multiple ways to highlight your "fit" with specific residency programs
If you are an IMG who has done research on the use of ketamine in treatment-resistant depression, you might start looking for IMG friendly residency programs who have faculty or even entire centers devoted to emerging therapies for treatment-resistant depression, even if these therapies are not specifically focused on ketamine. In writing your personal statement for that program, you can see how you could start to really target this specific program.
The basic underlying foundation of applying to residency programs is to show them that you would be a great fit with their program, and then demonstrating that via each and every component of your application.
And all of that starts with intensely researching the residency programs to which you'll be applying.
Even if you’re a very strong applicant, and you don’t wish to put in the time and effort to research residency programs, we highly recommend targeting at least a few programs, and going deep with your understanding of what the program is seeking. This kind of information is critical when it comes to residency interviews as well as application materials.
When you identify IMG friendly residency programs, does the particular medical school or country that you're from make a difference?
In our resource detailing IMG friendly residency programs, we’ve provided links to each of the programs that we highlight.
As you go through these programs, you’ll notice that in some programs, they have multiple residents from a particular medical school.
For example, some of the family practice residency programs in Louisiana seem to have multiple residents from particular Caribbean medical schools. Other programs seem to have multiple residents from a particular country.
Should this impact your application strategy? Not necessarily. I definitely wouldn’t use this as a reason not to apply to a particular program. Instead, this may be a reflection of several important principles.
First, residency program directors are looking for residents who will be successful. They want residents who are happy training in the program, and who are able to excel in patient care and help the program reach its goals. If a program has a solid, positive track record with students from a certain school, they may look favorably upon other applicants from that school.
Another possibility is that networking may come into play. If the internal medicine resident is from a particular medical school, and a student from that school contacts them for advice, that resident may choose to discuss the student with their own program director. Having a personal recommendation from a current resident can be a very strong factor for a residency program director to take another look at that application. (And perhaps even extend an invitation to interview.)
With IMG friendly programs, are some more “friendly“ to US citizen IMGs? Are some IMG friendly programs more "friendly" to non-US citizen IMGs?
Every one of the programs on our list has to be looked at individually. But in looking over these programs, it does appear that some programs have more US citizen IMGs, and others have more non-US citizen IMGs.
Some of that may be due to visa issues. Or, as mentioned above, some of that may be due to the program's familiarity with certain schools.
The Bottom Line: Identifying IMG friendly residency programs can help you devise an effective residency match strategy.
Preparing for the residency match begins months in advance, and identifying the programs to which you'll be applying is a key part of your residency match strategy. We wish you the best of luck as you prepare for the match!
Dr. Samir Desai is the author of The Successful Match: Rules to Succeed in the Residency Match and is co-founder of MD2B Connect, the most trusted and highest-rated provider of hands-on clinical experiences for IMGs in the U.S.
Dr. Rajani Katta is the creator of The Residency Interview 101, the online course that helps applicants quickly and confidently prepare for their residency interviews. She is also the co-author of The Successful Match: Rules to Succeed in the Residency Match and served as Professor of Dermatology at the Baylor College of Medicine for over 17 years.