Occupation Hub · SOC 29-1141
Registered Nurse Salary 2026 — Real Wage by State, Specialty, Travel vs Staff
Specialty wage table covering 14 RN paths (CRNA-track ICU $95-110K → school nurse $58-74K) + state real take-home with NLC overlay + travel/per-diem/staff net comparison + ADN→BSN→MSN→DNP ROI flowchart
TL;DR — Registered Nurse Salary
- National median: $86,070/yr (BLS OES May 2024). P25–P75: $70,180–$104,070; P90 $132,680. Mean $94,480.
- Specialty drives 30%+ of wage variance: CRNA-track ICU $95–110K, NICU $92–108K, L&D $88–102K, school nurse $58–74K. Bedside cert (CCRN/CEN/RNC-NIC) adds 5–10%.
- State gross is misleading: California $137K vs Texas $87K — but after 9.3% state tax + 14% RPP, take-home is comparable. Texas leads real RN take-home.
- Travel premium compressed in 2026: compact-state contracts $1,800–$2,800/wk = 10–25% net advantage over staff after benefits gap and housing rules.
- BSN is now the de-facto bedside-RN minimum in metro magnet hospitals. Cleanest 2026 path: ADN entry + 1–2 yrs bedside + online RN-to-BSN $10–20K + specialty cert.
Registered Nurse Salary at a Glance (BLS OES, May 2024)
Registered Nurses (BLS code 29-1141) are the largest licensed health-professional workforce in the United States — approximately 3.18 million employed, with the May 2024 OES release showing an annual median wage of $86,070 and a mean of $94,480. The middle 50% earn $70,180–$104,070; the top 10% exceed $132,680.
That distribution sits above LPN/LVN (median ~$60K) and below NPs ($129K), CRNAs ($216K), and PAs ($130K). Within RN, four variables drive most of the wage variance: state, specialty, setting, and travel-vs-staff. Each can shift income by $20–60K independently of the others — meaning a same-license RN at the high end of all four can earn $200K+ while a same-license RN at the low end earns under $60K.
| Percentile | Annual | Hourly |
|---|---|---|
| P10 | $63,720 | $30.63 |
| P25 | $70,180 | $33.74 |
| P50 (median) | $86,070 | $41.38 |
| P75 | $104,070 | $50.03 |
| P90 | $132,680 | $63.79 |
| Mean | $94,480 | $45.42 |
BLS OES 29-1141, May 2024 release. Excludes travel-nurse premium contractors and per-diem.
Specialty Drives 30%+ of RN Pay Variance
"NICU nurse salary," "ICU nurse salary," "labor and delivery nurse salary," "pediatric nurse salary" — these specialty queries are searched together because the wage spread across specialties is wider than most RN candidates expect. Below are 2024 medians sourced from BLS specialty filings, hospital wage surveys, and Bureau of Health Workforce reporting (treat as directional within ±5%).
| Specialty / unit | Typical median | Top quartile | Demand outlook |
|---|---|---|---|
| CRNA-track ICU (years 2–4 prep) | $95K–$110K | $130K+ | Pre-CRNA pipeline; competitive |
| NICU (Level III / IV) | $92K–$108K | $130K | Strong; specialty cert helps |
| Labor & Delivery | $88K–$102K | $120K | Stable; on-call premium |
| ICU / CCU (adult) | $88K–$104K | $125K | High; CCRN cert adds 5–10% |
| OR (operating room) | $88K–$100K | $120K | Stable; CNOR cert helps |
| ER | $85K–$98K | $118K | High; CEN cert helps |
| Med-Surg (general) | $76K–$90K | $105K | Common entry path |
| Pediatric (PICU) | $84K–$96K | $112K | Moderate |
| Pediatric (general floor) | $72K–$86K | $98K | Stable |
| Telemetry / step-down | $78K–$92K | $108K | Stable |
| Outpatient / clinic | $70K–$84K | $94K | Stable; M-F schedule premium |
| School nurse | $58K–$74K | $82K | 9-month calendar; lower wage |
| Hospice / home health | $74K–$92K | $108K | Growing; mileage stipends |
| Travel nurse (compact-state assignment) | $95K–$160K | $200K+ | Premium contracts; no benefits |
Specialty cert pays. A CCRN-credentialed ICU nurse typically out-earns a same-tenure non-cert ICU nurse by 5–10%. CNOR (OR), CEN (ER), CCRN (critical care), and RNC-NIC (NICU) certifications cost $250–$400 + 1,500–2,000 documented practice hours. Top hospitals reimburse the cost; many add a $1,500–$5,000 annual cert pay bump on top.
RN Salary by State: Real Take-Home, Not Just Gross
California's $137,690 RN median is the highest in the country — and the most-cited talking point in nurse compensation. But after California's 9.3% top state income tax and 14% RPP penalty, take-home is roughly equivalent to Texas at $87K gross. Highest paying nursing states is meaningless without that adjustment.
| State | RN median (gross) | State tax | RPP (2024) | NLC compact? | Real-wage rank |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| California | $137,690 | 9.3% top | 114.0 | No | #9 |
| Hawaii | $120,180 | 11% top | 112.1 | No | #22 |
| Oregon | $113,440 | 9.9% top | 104.8 | No | #11 |
| Massachusetts | $108,900 | 5% flat | 106.7 | No | #5 |
| Alaska | $105,520 | 0% | 104.8 | No | #3 |
| New York | $104,570 | 6.85% top | 114.2 | No | #28 |
| Washington | $103,790 | 0% | 110.1 | Partial | #4 |
| Nevada | $98,070 | 0% | 97.4 | No (pending) | #2 |
| Connecticut | $94,890 | 5.5% top | 108.5 | No | #19 |
| New Jersey | $96,640 | 6.4% top | 113.7 | Yes | #26 |
| Texas | $86,810 | 0% | 96.8 | Yes | #1 |
| Florida | $80,300 | 0% | 98.7 | Yes | #10 |
| Tennessee | $75,890 | 0% | 91.3 | Yes | #6 |
| Mississippi | $69,330 | 5% flat | 87.6 | Yes | #33 |
BLS OES May 2024 + BEA RPP 2024. Real-wage rank approximates ÷ (RPP/100) × (1 − effective state tax at $90K filing single). NLC status: NCSBN.
The Texas anomaly: Texas leads real RN take-home in 2026 — middle-tier gross ($87K), zero state tax, average RPP, and full NLC compact participation (you can do contracts in 40 other states without re-applying). Travel nurses optimizing real net commonly base in Texas / Tennessee / Florida and cycle through California / New York only when contract premiums justify the relicensure overhead. See our NLC Compact States 2026 guide for state-level mechanics.
Travel vs Staff vs Per-Diem: Which Wins on Real Net?
Travel-nurse rates compressed sharply after the 2021–2022 COVID surge. As of 2026, the financial premium is real but no longer extreme. Here are typical 2026 contract economics across the three engagement models.
| Model | Gross weekly rate | Annualized gross | Benefits | True net advantage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Staff RN (W-2) | $1,650/wk avg | $86K + benefits | Health/dental/vision/401k/PTO | Baseline |
| Per-diem (W-2 hourly, no FT commitment) | $2,000–$2,400/wk | $104K–$125K (if full) | Limited; no PTO; partial 401k | +10–15% if you backfill steady |
| Travel — compact state | $1,800–$2,800/wk | $95K–$145K | Stipend pkg (housing/meals tax-free); thin medical; no PTO | +10–25% over staff after fees |
| Travel — non-compact (CA/NY) | $2,400–$4,500/wk | $125K–$235K | Same as compact; per-state license fee | +25–40% over staff |
| Crisis / strike RN | $3,500–$8,000/wk | $180K–$415K | Cash-only; project-length | Episodic; high uncertainty |
Staff RNs who switch to travel for one or two assignments often make the gross premium appear larger than the net premium feels. Three offsets that reduce travel-nurse net: (1) duplicated-housing and tax-home rules — if you don't maintain a real tax home, your stipends become taxable; (2) gap weeks between contracts; (3) zero employer 401(k) match. Most travelers net 10–25% above comparable staff after these adjustments.
BSN, ADN, MSN, DNP: What Each Adds to Lifetime Income
Three RN entry credentials and two graduate paths each carry different lifetime earning curves.
- ADN / Diploma RN: 2-year associate degree → NCLEX-RN. Total tuition $8K–$25K (community college). Direct-to-bedside; many magnet hospitals now require BSN within 3 years of hire.
- BSN: 4-year bachelor's → NCLEX-RN. Total cost $40K–$120K. Required for most magnet hospitals, leadership roles, ICU/ED/L&D specialty hires, and any graduate path. BSN is now the de-facto bedside-RN minimum in 2026 metro markets.
- RN-to-BSN bridge: 12–24 months while working. $8K–$25K. Closes the BSN gap for ADN-holding RNs who want graduate paths.
- MSN: 1.5–3 years. Required for NP, CNS, CNM, nurse educator, nurse executive. Adds $40K–$50K median wage at NP level (RN $86K → NP $129K). See our RN → NP transition page.
- DNP: 3–4 years. Required for tenure-track nursing faculty, some CRNA programs, and a small minority of states for advanced practice. Pay parity with MSN at clinical level; matters mostly for academic and executive roles.
The cleanest ROI move 2026: ADN entry → 1–2 years bedside experience → online RN-to-BSN at $10–20K → certification (CCRN/CEN/RNC-NIC). Gets you to specialty bedside RN in $50K total credential cost, full income from year 1, and qualified for NP school by year 4 — without ever taking a $100K BSN front-loaded debt.
RN Career Path Beyond Bedside
Bedside RN pay tops out near P75 ($104K) for most specialties. Lifetime income growth past that point requires structural moves.
- Charge / shift supervisor — +$3K–$10K, no graduate degree required
- Nurse educator (hospital) — $90K–$110K, BSN minimum, MSN preferred
- Clinical nurse specialist (CNS) — $105K–$130K, MSN required
- Nurse Practitioner — $129K median, MSN required (see RN → NP page)
- CRNA — $216K median, DNP + 1-3 yrs ICU experience
- Nurse executive (Director/CNO) — $130K–$280K, MSN/MBA, 15+ years experience
- Nurse informaticist — $95K–$140K, BSN + informatics cert; one of the fastest-growing tracks
- Legal nurse consultant — $90K–$200K (variable), independent contractor / part-time
- Pharma / medical device clinical specialist — $110K–$170K, BSN + clinical-trials or device experience
Methodology & Data Sources
Primary wage figures: BLS OES 29-1141, May 2024 release; next release May 2026. State-level: BLS OES state files. Specialty wage estimates: blended from BLS, AACN national hospital wage survey, Bureau of Health Workforce, and aggregated AANC magnet-hospital reporting. Real-wage adjustment: BEA Regional Price Parities (2024). State income-tax: state DOR 2025 schedules. NLC compact membership: NCSBN, synced 2026-05-04. Travel-nurse contract benchmarks: aggregated 2025–2026 contracts from major staffing firms (Aya, Cross Country, Trusted Health) — directional only. Specialty certification details: AACN, ANCC, NCC issuing bodies. Self-reported wage aggregators (Glassdoor, ZipRecruiter, Indeed, Payscale) systematically inflate by 8–18% vs OES — when figures diverge, BLS OES is authoritative.
FAQ
- What is the national median RN salary in 2026?
- Per BLS OES (May 2024 release, the most recent — next May 2026), the national annual median wage for registered nurses (29-1141) is $86,070 with a mean of $94,480. The middle 50% earn $70,180 (P25) to $104,070 (P75); top 10% exceed $132,680. Hourly median $41.38.
- What state pays RNs the most?
- California has the highest gross median ($137,690), followed by Hawaii ($120,180), Oregon ($113,440), Massachusetts ($108,900), and Alaska ($105,520). But real take-home after state income tax and Regional Price Parity often inverts the ranking: Texas ($87K gross, 0% state tax, 96.8 RPP, NLC compact) leads on real take-home; California's 9.3% top-bracket tax and 14% RPP penalty erodes the headline gross significantly.
- How much do NICU nurses make?
- NICU (Level III/IV) RN typical median is $92K–$108K, with top quartile $130K and specialty cert (RNC-NIC) adding 5–10% at most magnet hospitals. Compares to general pediatric floor ($72K–$86K) — the unit (NICU vs general peds) drives most of that gap. Geographic variance amplifies: NICU RNs in CA earn $130K+ medians; in MS $80K.
- How much do ICU nurses make?
- Adult ICU/CCU RN median is $88K–$104K with top quartile $125K. CCRN-credentialed ICU RNs earn 5–10% above non-cert peers. ICU is also the typical pre-CRNA pipeline — most CRNA programs require 1–3 years of high-acuity ICU experience, and the wage profile in those years lifts to $95–110K with cert + overtime.
- How much do labor and delivery nurses make?
- L&D RN typical median is $88K–$102K, with on-call premium boosting top quartile to $120K. Compared to general OB-floor ($75K–$85K), the L&D specialty premium is real — driven by 24/7 staffing requirements, on-call scheduling, and high-acuity skill requirements. Inpatient OB / mother-baby units sit between.
- What is the highest-paying nursing specialty?
- Among RN-level (non-APRN) specialties: travel nursing into non-compact states (CA/NY) at $2,400–$4,500/wk = $125K–$235K annualized, then crisis/strike RN at $3,500–$8,000/wk. Among bedside specialties: NICU Level IV, CRNA-pipeline ICU, and L&D top out near $130K. Above RN level, CRNA ($216K BLS median) is the highest-paid APRN role, requiring DNP plus 1–3 years ICU.
- Is travel nursing worth it in 2026?
- The COVID-era 2021–2022 premiums have compressed. As of 2026, compact-state travel contracts run $1,800–$2,800/wk gross ($95K–$145K annualized). After offsets — duplicated-housing tax-home rules, gap weeks between contracts, zero employer 401(k) match — net advantage over staff RN is typically 10–25%. Non-compact states (CA, NY) and crisis assignments still pay 25–40% net premiums but with location and project-length constraints.
- BSN, ADN, or RN-to-BSN — which path?
- ADN is the cheapest entry ($8K–$25K, 2 years) but most metro magnet hospitals now require BSN within 3 years of hire — meaning you'll bridge anyway. The cleanest 2026 path is: ADN entry → 1–2 years bedside → online RN-to-BSN bridge ($10–20K, 12–24 months while working) → specialty cert. Total credential cost stays under $50K, you earn during the transition, and you qualify for graduate paths by year 4 — without taking a $100K front-loaded BSN debt.
- How does the NLC compact affect RN salary?
- The NLC (Nurse Licensure Compact) doesn't change wage rates directly, but materially expands access to high-rate work. As of 2026, 41 states issue multistate licenses. A compact-state RN can take contracts in 40 other compact states without per-state endorsement (which costs $100–$500 + 4–16 weeks waiting). This is the key infrastructure that makes travel nursing economically viable as a permanent career rather than a single contract. CA, NY, IL, MA, OR remain non-compact — those still require endorsement. See NLC Compact States 2026 for full mechanics.
- What is the BLS job outlook for RNs?
- BLS projects 6% employment growth for RNs 2023–2033 — about average. Headline growth is unevenly distributed: home-health and hospice show ~13–15% projected growth (aging-in-place demographic), while general medical-surgical hospital RN growth is closer to 4%. Specialty bedside (ICU/ED/L&D/NICU) shows persistent shortage premiums regardless of headline growth, driven by burnout and certification bottlenecks.