$130-$360/hr genitourinary and surgical work, on your schedule
You grade a model's workups, surgical plans, and oncology recommendations, catching the infected obstructed kidney it watches instead of decompresses. You explain the AUA nuance a guideline summary flattens, remote and paid by the hour.
Trusted by top research companies


Hi, we're Zac and Jack, the founders of Terac. We want to talk to you directly, because you are the most important part of what we're building.
Terac is a community of experts. People who have spent years getting good at something specific and hard. The world is about to need more of you, not less. As AI takes on more of the world's work, the bottleneck shifts to the people who actually know what they're talking about.
Expert labor is the rarest resource in the world right now, and it is shockingly hard to find. The companies that need a urologist's read on a missed obstructing infected stone spend weeks chasing people, paying placement fees, and settling for whoever is available. Meanwhile thousands of qualified people are sitting with knowledge that no one ever asks for.
That gap is what we're here to close. Every project that lands on Terac is routed to the people who actually know the answer, on their schedule, paid fairly, and only when the work is verified. No middleman taking a cut of your time. No vague gigs. No chasing checks.
We care about every single person in this community. If you join Terac, you're not a row in a database to us. We read the feedback. We answer the emails. We will fight for you when a customer is being unreasonable, and we will be honest with you when something on our side is broken. The quality of this panel is our entire company, and we owe you a serious bar.
If you've made it this far, here is what we're asking: claim your profile. Put your expertise on the record. Let the world's most ambitious teams come find you for the work only you can do.
Urology questions
Still curious? Write to us at support@terac.com.
Urology sits where cancer, stones, and surgery meet, and both overtreatment and undertreatment cause harm. Your sense of when to decompress, when to watch a prostate cancer, and when AUA guidance bends to the patient is judgment a guideline summary cannot hold.
Yes. We verify board certification and an active or recent US license. Endourology, urologic oncology, or reconstructive experience routes you to higher-paying, more complex review work.
No. You evaluate text, workups, and surgical plans, not a real patient. There is no doctor-patient relationship and no clinical liability. You judge whether the model's reasoning is accurate, safe, and appropriately conservative.
Stone and hematuria workups, prostate and bladder cancer staging and management notes, renal mass plans, surgical and endourologic recommendations, and AUA-aligned reasoning chains. You grade each for accuracy, safety, and standard of care.
Flag it as an overtreatment error. Identify any plan that recommends surgery or radiation where active surveillance is the appropriate AUA path, and explain the risk stratification the model ignored so it learns when watching beats operating.
Why your expertise matters
Today's urologic AI gets the conservative calls subtly wrong. It watches an infected obstructed kidney that needs decompression tonight, and pushes surgery on a favorable-risk prostate cancer that belongs on surveillance. Knowing when to operate and when to wait takes a urologist, not an AUA table. Your corrections teach the model to keep a recommendation both safe and appropriately conservative.
How pay works
Work pays $130 to $360 an hour, with endourology, oncology, and reconstructive depth plus complex surgical reasoning at the top. Bill for time spent evaluating workups, surgical plans, and oncology recommendations. Most urologists contribute a few flexible hours a week.
What the work looks like
A sample of the genitourinary and surgical work you would pick up. Every project is scoped, remote, and paid on verified completion.
- Reject an AI plan recommending watchful waiting for an obstructing ureteral stone with fever and pyuria instead of urgent decompression.
- Catch the model pushing radical prostatectomy for low-risk Gleason 3+3 disease that AUA guidance would put on active surveillance.
- Spot the missing cystoscopy and upper tract imaging in an AI gross-hematuria workup for a patient with malignancy risk factors.
- Decide which of two AI plans for a small enhancing renal mass correctly favors partial nephrectomy to preserve function.
- Critique a machine-written recommendation for shockwave lithotripsy on a large lower-pole stone where size and location predict poor clearance.
- Flag an AI staging note that understages muscle-invasive bladder cancer and recommends inadequate therapy.
Specialties we match
Urology projects span a wide range of focus areas. Tell us where you go deep and we route the work that fits.
- Stone disease triage by size, location, and infection
- Endourologic intervention and decompression timing
- Prostate cancer risk stratification and surveillance
- Bladder cancer staging and management
- Renal mass workup and partial versus radical nephrectomy
- AUA guideline interpretation and nuance
- Hematuria evaluation and malignancy workup
- Reconstructive and urethral surgery planning
- Benign prostatic obstruction management
- Perioperative and oncologic decision-making
- Overtreatment avoidance and active surveillance
- Postoperative complication recognition








