Where you practice nursing dramatically affects your paycheck; we’re talking differences of $50,000-$70,000 annually for the same RN role.
A registered nurse in California earns an average of $120,000-$130,000, while an RN in South Dakota earns $60,000-$65,000. That’s double the salary for the same license, education, and responsibilities.
But raw salary numbers don’t tell the complete story. Cost of living matters enormously. That South Dakota RN might have better purchasing power than the California RN after housing costs.
This comprehensive guide breaks down RN salaries by state, explains WHY variation exists, provides cost-of-living context, and helps you make informed geographic career decisions.
Top 10 Highest-Paying States for Nurses (2025)
Based on median annual RN salary:
- California: $120,000-$135,000
- Hawaii: $96,000-$106,000
- Massachusetts: $93,000-$103,000
- Oregon: $92,000-$100,000
- Alaska: $89,000-$97,000
- Washington: $88,000-$96,000
- New York: $87,000-$95,000
- New Jersey: $84,000-$92,000
- Nevada: $83,000-$91,000
- Connecticut: $82,000-$90,000
Why California dominates:
- Strong nursing unions (CNA – California Nurses Association)
- Mandated nurse-to-patient ratios (legally safer staffing)
- High cost of living drives compensation
- Large, wealthy healthcare systems
Bottom 10 States for Nurse Salaries (2025)
- South Dakota: $60,000-$65,000
- Mississippi: $61,000-$68,000
- Alabama: $62,000-$70,000
- Iowa: $62,000-$71,000
- Arkansas: $63,000-$71,000
- Kansas: $64,000-$72,000
- West Virginia: $65,000-$72,000
- Oklahoma: $65,000-$73,000
- Tennessee: $66,000-$73,000
- Kentucky: $66,000-$74,000
Common characteristics:
- Lower cost of living
- Fewer unions
- Rural/smaller healthcare markets
- Less competition for nurses
Regional Salary Trends
West Coast (Highest):
- California, Oregon, Washington, Alaska
- Strong unions, high living costs
- $88K-$135K range
Northeast (High):
- Massachusetts, New York, Connecticut, New Jersey
- Major academic medical centers
- High cost of living
- $82K-$103K range
Mountain West (Moderate-High):
- Nevada, Arizona, Colorado
- Growing markets, moderate costs
- $75K-$91K range
Midwest (Moderate-Low):
- Illinois, Minnesota higher ($78K-$82K)
- Iowa, Kansas, South Dakota lower ($60K-$72K)
- Large variation within region
South (Generally Lower):
- Texas, Florida moderate ($70K-$78K)
- Mississippi, Alabama, Arkansas, lowest ($61K-$71K)
- Right-to-work states, weaker unions
Cost-of-Living Adjusted Rankings (Real Purchasing Power)
Raw salary doesn’t equal financial comfort. Housing costs matter enormously.
Best purchasing power (cost-of-living adjusted):
- Texas: $72K salary, low housing costs = strong purchasing power
- Minnesota: $78K salary, moderate costs = good value
- Arizona: $79K salary, moderate costs = comfortable living
- North Carolina: $70K salary, low-moderate costs = solid value
- Tennessee: $68K salary, low costs (outside Nashville) = decent purchasing power
Worst purchasing power despite high salaries:
- Hawaii: $100K salary, but housing costs 2-3x national average = struggle
- California (Bay Area/LA): $130K salary, but $3,000+ rent common = paycheck to paycheck
- New York (NYC): $93K salary, but $2,500+ rent = limited savings
Example comparison:
California RN:
- Salary: $130,000
- Rent (1BR Bay Area): -$36,000 annually
- After rent: $94,000
Texas RN:
- Salary: $75,000
- Rent (1BR Dallas): -$15,000 annually
- After rent: $60,000
A California nurse has a higher disposable income, BUT other costs (food, gas, taxes) are also higher. The real difference is smaller than it appears.
Factors Driving State Salary Differences
- Cost of living: Employers must pay enough for nurses to afford to live in the area. High-cost states = higher salaries.
- Union strength:
- California, Oregon, and Massachusetts have strong nursing unions
- Collective bargaining drives wages up
- Right-to-work Southern states have weaker unions = lower wages
- Supply and demand:
- Severe nursing shortages = higher wages
- States struggling to recruit offer sign-on bonuses, higher base pay
- State mandates:
- California’s nurse-to-patient ratio laws increase nurse hiring = leverage
- States without mandates can work nurses harder = less need to pay premiums
- Facility type and location:
- Urban academic medical centers pay more than rural community hospitals
- Magnet hospitals often pay a 5-10% premium
- Regional economics:
- Wealthier states have more healthcare spending = higher salaries
- States with budget constraints pay less
Metropolitan Area Salary Hotspots
Highest-paying metro areas (regardless of state):
- San Francisco Bay Area, CA: $140,000-$160,000
- San Jose, CA: $135,000-$155,000
- Los Angeles, CA: $115,000-$130,000
- Oakland, CA: $125,000-$140,000
- Sacramento, CA: $115,000-$130,000
- Seattle, WA: $90,000-$100,000
- Boston, MA: $93,000-$105,000
- New York City, NY: $90,000-$100,000
- Portland, OR: $90,000-$98,000
- Honolulu, HI: $95,000-$105,000
Notice: California dominates due to unions + ratios + cost of living.
Travel Nursing Geographic Arbitrage
Travel nurses leverage geographic salary differences strategically.
How it works:
- Live in a low-cost state (South Dakota, Mississippi, Arkansas)
- Take 13-week travel contracts in high-paying states (California, Massachusetts)
- Maintain tax home in low-cost state
- Receive tax-free stipends for housing/meals while traveling
Example earnings:
- Staff RN in Alabama: $65,000
- Travel RN (same experience) taking California contracts: $120,000-$150,000
- Live frugally while traveling, save aggressively
Trade-offs:
- Constant relocation every 3 months
- Away from family/friends
- No job security or benefits
- Tough lifestyle long-term
New Graduate Nurse Salaries by State
New grads generally earn 5-10% less than experienced RNs.
Highest for new grads:
- California: $100,000-$115,000
- Hawaii: $80,000-$88,000
- Massachusetts: $75,000-$83,000
- Oregon: $75,000-$82,000
- Washington: $72,000-$80,000
Lowest for new grads:
- South Dakota: $50,000-$55,000
- Mississippi: $52,000-$58,000
- Alabama: $53,000-$60,000
- Iowa: $53,000-$61,000
- Arkansas: $54,000-$61,000
Many new grads start in their home state, then relocate for higher pay after 1-2 years of experience.
Should You Relocate for a Higher Salary?
Consider these factors:
Financial gain:
- Calculate actual take-home after taxes, housing, and living costs
- Is the net difference worth leaving your support system?
Licensure:
- Compact states (NLC) allow one license for 40+ states
- Non-compact requires separate licensure (time + $200-400 fees)
Family/support:
- Moving away from family, friends, and established life
- Childcare support from family may be more valuable than the salary difference
Cost of living reality:
- Research actual housing costs in the target city
- Use calculators (NerdWallet, Bankrate cost-of-living comparisons)
Loan repayment programs:
- Some low-paying states offer loan forgiveness for underserved areas
- May offset lower salary
Example decision:
Sarah (Alabama RN, $68K) considers California (would earn $125K):
- Difference: $57K
- California income tax (9%): -$11,250
- Higher rent: -$18,000 annually
- Higher costs (food, gas): -$5,000
- Net gain: ~$23K
- Worth it? Depends on her priorities.
Conclusion
Geographic location is one of the most controllable factors affecting nursing income. Choosing where to practice can mean a $50,000+ annual salary difference.
However, raw salary isn’t everything. Cost of living, quality of life, family proximity, and career growth opportunities all matter. Some nurses maximize earnings through travel nursing or short-term moves to high-paying states to pay off loans quickly.
Research thoroughly before relocating. Use salary calculators, connect with nurses in target states, and factor in total compensation (benefits, schedule, ratios) beyond base pay.