RN Median Hourly Pay, By State


 
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By Kelly Gooch

Median hourly base pay for registered nurses varies across states, with RNs in California earning the most, according to SullivanCotter’s “2025 Health Care Staff Compensation Survey Report.”

The survey, released in July, covers nearly 2.5 million healthcare employees across over 2,660 participating organizations, including more than 800,000 individual RNs, licensed practical nurses and nursing managers.

Here is the median per-hour base pay for RNs, by state, according to survey data:

Note: States are listed in descending order of pay. Seven states — Alaska, Connecticut, Hawaii, North Dakota, Vermont, West Virginia and Wyoming — were excluded due to insufficient data.

California — $66.00

Washington — $60.59

Oregon — $57.09

New York — $56.65

Massachusetts — $54.90

New Jersey — $52.69

New Hampshire — $49.57

Rhode Island — $49.34

Idaho — $49.23

Nevada — $47.79

Maine — $47.27

Minnesota — $47.16

Maryland — $46.54

Delaware — $46.43

Arizona — $46.35

Colorado — $46.34

Pennsylvania — $46.32

Illinois — $44.18

Georgia — $44.12

Wisconsin — $43.36

North Carolina — $43.35

New Mexico — $43.19

Missouri — $43.16

Montana — $43.03

Michigan — $42.95

Texas — $42.61

Florida — $42.17

Indiana — $41.68

Utah — $41.45

Ohio — $41.17

Nebraska — $41.13

South Dakota — $40.66

Oklahoma — $40.65

Virginia — $40.59

South Carolina — $39.56

Arkansas — $39.37

Louisiana — $39.30

Kansas — $39.28

Kentucky — $39.24

Tennessee — $38.54

Iowa — $38.00

Alabama — $37.65

Mississippi — $36.92


 
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COMMENTS

  • I am a Certified Family Nurse Practitioner nationally certified by exam; actively licensed in two states. Conservatively, I have $200,000 worth of education that I have paid for myself. When Nursing is in crisis, we are there, but Nursing's contribution to Health is not appreciated....And, scores of nurses left the profession rather than take the Covid shots....And, at the beginning of the Covid Epidemic, nurses did not even know if the new entity was life-threatening or not... It is estimated that, by the end of the year, we will be short 300,000 nurses. I looked at your article about income and found that, with everything that I have to offer, my pay will be between $40 and $70 an hour. The coming shortage will be like no other past shortage, and, until Nursing is truly valued, the Healthcare System is going to be crippled.

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