Nursing Salary Survey 2014

Compensation is an extremely important aspect for the overwhelming majority of people who must work for a living, including the nurses who claim to do their jobs for purely altruistic reasons. Salary surveys can empower nurses because they unearth valuable information. Nurses General Nursing Article

As we welcome the dawn of a propitious new year that is brimming with plenty of promise and new beginnings, I wanted to bring up a topic that is influential to most people. Of course, the topic at hand is compensation.

While job satisfaction, personal gratification, altruism, achievement of individual goals, a love of science or a fondness for helping patients heal are all deeper reasons why many people might enter and/or stay in the nursing profession in the face of an increasingly challenging era in healthcare provision, it would be disingenuous to deny the significance of pay.

Salary is an important component for the vast majority of people who must work for a living, including those who claim to do their jobs for purely altruistic reasons. As much as we may love the work that we do, most of us would not continue to show up to work each day if our employers suddenly declared, "You will no longer receive a pay check every two weeks. Instead, we will repay you with compassion, compliments, gratitude and appreciation for a job well done."

To be perfectly frank, compassion does not pay the rent, gratitude will not fill the fridge with food, and caring will not prevent the utilities from being disconnected for lack of timely payment. The truth is that we all need appropriate compensation for the vital services that we render, so I wonder about the occasional person who states, "I love nursing so much that I'd do it for free!" I challenge these people to resign from their paying jobs and volunteer their nursing services for free for the remainder of their working years. Only the well-off can pull it off for an extended time.

With that having been said, informal salary surveys can be worth their weight in gold. The salary survey is a tool that benefits nurses because it gleans valuable information:

  • It makes us more aware of the average rates of pay for others in our profession.
  • It enables us to be reasonable when pursuing a fair pay rate from a potential employer.
  • It takes other factors into account, such as geographic variances and differences in specialties.
  • It regards the fact that salaries can be a tricky topic - some employees would never even dream of disclosing their pay to colleagues, and many organizations have policies in place that prohibit open discussion of wages. In other words, salary can be a very touchy subject.

If you wish to participate in the informal salary survey for 2014, please list the information in the following order:

  1. Geographic location
  2. Pay rate
  3. In which area / specialty do you work?
  4. What type of license do you have (RN or LPN)?
  5. What type of degree and/or certification do you have?
  6. How many years of experience do you have?
  7. Are you full-time, part-time, or casual / per diem / PRN status?
  8. What shift do you work?
  9. Do you receive any shift differential?
  10. Are you a manager or supervisor?

And if you do not want to provide any salary information, that's perfectly fine, too. Thanks!

-midwestern midsize city

-pay rate is 19 base.. starting pay 2 years ago with 1 year of RN experience was 17.60

-CVICU

-RN

-BSN, also CCRN

-3.8 years of experience

-Full-time

-Day shift

-Differential for weekends only if you are weekend option otherwise no differential. Night shift differential is $3.

-Not a manager/supervisor

Where do you live to stay away from that place. Thats sweatshop wages, wow!

Specializes in Nurse Scientist-Research.
-midwestern midsize city

-pay rate is 19 base.. starting pay 2 years ago with 1 year of RN experience was 17.60

-CVICU

-RN

-BSN, also CCRN

-3.8 years of experience

-Full-time

-Day shift

-Differential for weekends only if you are weekend option otherwise no differential. Night shift differential is $3.

-Not a manager/supervisor

Guess it might not be so bad as long as your rent is somewhere around $200-300/month or you can get a decent starter home for $45,000. Maybe then. . .

Specializes in burn ICU, SICU, ER, Trauma Rapid Response.
-midwestern midsize city

-pay rate is 19 base.. starting pay 2 years ago with 1 year of RN experience was 17.60

-CVICU

-RN

-BSN, also CCRN

-3.8 years of experience

-Full-time

-Day shift

-Differential for weekends only if you are weekend option otherwise no differential. Night shift differential is $3.

-Not a manager/supervisor

My guess MO. Back when Wisconsin hospitals were starting new nurses at $20 a hospital in St. Lewis offered my friend $13/hour.

Specializes in burn ICU, SICU, ER, Trauma Rapid Response.
Guess it might not be so bad as long as your rent is somewhere around $200-300/month or you can get a decent starter home for $45,000. Maybe then. . .

Those are rent / home prices where I live and new grads start at $30.

Specializes in Nurse Scientist-Research.
Those are rent / home prices where I live and new grads start at $30.

Well, I was serious. I was thinking what rent/home prices were when I made $19/hr. Though I guess that's not the most accurate measure. Even in a depressed housing market some costs such as cars, airline tickets (for example) would not be as subject to local costs.

Specializes in CVICU, ASC.

  1. Geographic location MIDWEST/MISSOURI
  2. Pay rate $20.65/hr; more with night shift differential and time and a half on holidays (Memorial Day, 4th of July, Labor Day, Thanksgiving, Christmas)
  3. In which area / specialty do you work? ICU-no difference in pay for specialty
  4. What type of license do you have (RN or LPN)? BSN, RN
  5. What type of degree and/or certification do you have? ACLS, studying for CCRN which will increase pay rate by $.50/hr
  6. How many years of experience do you have? 1.9 years
  7. Are you full-time, part-time, or casual / per diem / PRN status? FULL TIME
  8. What shift do you work? SWING SHIFT, days, nights, weekends
  9. Do you receive any shift differential? only night shift
  10. Are you a manager or supervisor? NO

Specializes in Float Nurse.

  1. Geographic location: NJ
  2. Pay rate: $32
  3. In which area / specialty do you work? Med-Surg / Telemetry Float Pool
  4. What type of license do you have (RN or LPN)? RN
  5. What type of degree and/or certification do you have? BSN / ACLS
  6. How many years of experience do you have?
  7. Are you full-time, part-time, or casual / per diem / PRN status? Full Time
  8. What shift do you work? 7pm - 7am
  9. Do you receive any shift differential? $3.00 for floating + %12 for Night shift
  10. Are you a manager or supervisor? Neither

1. Geographic location: Ohio

2. Pay rate: $28/he

3. In which area / specialty do you work? ICU stepdown

4. What type of license do you have (RN or LPN)? RN

5. What type of degree and/or certification do you have? BSN

6. How many years of experience do you have? Less than 1 year

7. Are you full-time, part-time, or casual / per diem / PRN status? Full Time

8. What shift do you work? Swing, mostly 3pm-3am

9. Do you receive any shift differential? $1.25/hr from 3p-11p, $1.75/hr from 11p-7a and $1.50 extra on weekends.

10. Are you a manager or supervisor? Neither

Specializes in Emergency Nursing, Forensic Psych.

  1. Geographic location CALIFORNIA
  2. Pay rate $26/hr base; with plenty of overtime (1.5) and the same on holidays
  3. In which area / specialty do you work? Corrections
  4. What type of license do you have (RN or LPN)? LVN
  5. What type of degree and/or certification do you have? BLS/IV
  6. How many years of experience do you have? 3.5 years
  7. Are you full-time, part-time, or casual / per diem / PRN status? FULL TIME
  8. What shift do you work? days, swing, weekends, or swap shifts to cram 40 hr work wk into 2.5 days (meaning 4 days off/wk)
  9. Do you receive any shift differential? NO
  10. Are you a manager or supervisor? NO

Geographic location Connecticut

Pay rate $30/hr base

In which area / specialty do you work? med/surg Observation unit

What type of license do you have (RN or LPN)? RN

What type of degree and/or certification do you have? ASN

How many years of experience do you have? 2.5 years

Are you full-time, part-time, or casual / per diem / PRN status? part time

What shift do you work? 3-11

Do you receive any shift differential? yes

Are you a manager or supervisor? NO

Specializes in Cardiology, Cardiothoracic Surgical.

Southeast

Ambulatory Surgery

Payrate: 28/hr base, 35/hr weekends, OT over 40 hrs at base

Overall benes aren't quite as good as the hospital, but the lower cost of co-pays and monthly premiums balance it out.

RN, BSN, ACLS

>1 year exp

FT

Management: Only one other FT RN in the clinic, we manage the RN-related duties (med counts, conscious sedation, discharge, etc.)

Geographic location: West Tennessee, Memphis Metro

Pay rate: 27.50 prn, 22.25 when I was full time

In which area / specialty do you work? Critical Care

What type of license do you have (RN or LPN)? RN

What type of degree and/or certification do you have? BSN

How many years of experience do you have? 4 years

Are you full-time, part-time, or casual / per diem / PRN status? Currently PRN

What shift do you work? 7am-7pm

Do you receive any shift differential? night shift receives 6.00/hr diff. Wkn diff was just lowered from 8.00/hr to 6.50/hr

Are you a manager or supervisor? No