Life Sciences Recruiter Jobs

52 jobs

Biotech, pharma, clinical research, and medical device recruiting roles, agency and in-house.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What does a life sciences recruiter do?
Life sciences recruiters source and place talent across biotech, pharmaceuticals, medical devices, diagnostics, and clinical research. The roles they fill range from bench scientists, clinical research associates, and regulatory affairs specialists through to medical directors and C-suite leadership at biotech startups. The work demands more domain fluency than generalist recruiting: you need to understand the difference between preclinical and clinical-stage companies, read a scientific CV credibly, and speak the language of drug development phases, GMP environments, and regulatory pathways. That barrier to entry is exactly why the specialization pays a premium. Life sciences recruiters work agency-side at scientific staffing firms and search boutiques, in-house at pharma and biotech companies, and within RPO teams supporting high-volume clinical hiring.
Where are life sciences recruiter jobs concentrated?
Boston and the wider Massachusetts cluster lead the market, followed by the San Francisco Bay Area, San Diego, the New Jersey and Philadelphia pharma corridor, and Research Triangle Park in North Carolina. In Europe, hubs include Cambridge and Oxford in the UK, Basel in Switzerland, and the Netherlands. Remote and hybrid arrangements are common, particularly for clinical and regulatory recruiting where the candidate pool is national rather than local. Browse the listings on this page and filter by location or remote to see where current openings sit.
Do life sciences recruiters earn more than generalist recruiters?
Specialist recruiters generally out-earn generalists, and life sciences is one of the strongest niches. The candidate pool is scarce, the science vocabulary takes time to learn, and placement fees track the high salaries of the scientific and clinical roles being filled. Agency recruiters in this niche benefit from strong fee percentages and retained search work, while in-house life sciences TA roles at biotech and pharma companies tend to sit at the upper end of corporate recruiting pay bands. Many listings on this page include posted salary ranges so you can benchmark directly.
How do I become a life sciences recruiter?
There are two common entry routes. The first is starting at a scientific staffing agency that trains generalist recruiters into the niche; firms serving the biotech and pharma sectors regularly hire entry-level recruiters and teach the domain on the job. The second is transitioning from an adjacent background, such as a science degree, lab experience, clinical research coordination, or pharma sales, which gives you instant credibility with candidates and hiring managers. Either way, learning the basics of the drug development lifecycle, the main role families (research, clinical, regulatory, quality, manufacturing, commercial), and the difference between agency, in-house, and RPO models will accelerate your first year.