2015 allnurses Salary Survey Results

allnurses.com conducted its first annual Salary Survey in January 2015 to find how various variables such as education level, licensure, experience, geographic location, and even gender affect nursing salary. More than 18,800 respondents provided some very interesting and credible data. Nurses General Nursing Salary Survey

The Survey

In January 2015, allnurses.com invited members and readers holding an active nursing license via the allnurses site as well as newsletters, emails and facebook to participate in a 10-minute online survey about nursing salaries. Respondents were asked 20 questions to characterize their educational background (degree, license), main roles as nurses, employer type, experience level, geographic location, etc....... After just 2 weeks from January 22 through February 3, more than 18,800 responses were received.

After reviewing the results, feel free to post your questions and comments. We can all learn from each other's input.

Respondent Profile

As shown in Figure 1, the majority of the respondents have a Bachelor's or Associate's Degree in Nursing(39.23% and 38.89% respectively), followed by Diploma (14.81%), Master's Degree in Nursing (6.38%), PhD (0.29%), Doctor of Nursing Practice(0.29%), and Doctor of Nursing Science(0.10%). With the difference in the number of BSN (6,891) and Associate (6,831) respondents so slim, it will be interesting to see what effect the mandates of some health systems requiring BSN or higher will have on these numbers in future surveys. To see what allnurses readers are already saying about this, go to BSN and Associate Nurses are Neck and Neck. Will this change?

FIGURE 1

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Figure 2 shows that the majority of respondents were overwhelmingly RNs (82.39%). A couple of questions this brings to mind: are fewer nurses beginning their career as LPNs/LVNs (14.84%), and will the number of APRNs (2.09%) increase fast enough to help meet the needs of a rapidly growing population in need of more autonomous healthcare providers.

FIGURE 2

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When asked, "Are you a manager or supervisor?" 17.58% (3,316) responded YES, while 82.42% (15,542) answered NO.

In response to the question, "What percentage of time is spent in direct patient care?", half of the respondents(51.85%) spend 75-100% of their time in direct patient care while 8.79% spend less than 5% in direct patient care. (Figure 3)

FIGURE 3

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It's not any surprise that the survey revealed that 92.26% of respondents are female and 7.74% are male.

FIGURE 4

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FIGURE 5

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Experience: Figure 6 show that 62% of the respondents have 10 years or less experience.

FIGURE 6

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Additional demographic of our respondents:

  • 82% work full-time; 11% part time; 7% other
  • 55% work at a Not-for-Profit facility
  • Facility Size: 25.47% less than 100; 21.45% = 100-300; 15.93% = 300-800; 11.94% = 800 - 1500; 11.54% = 1500 - 3000; 13.67% = more than 3000
  • Population Setting: 45.38% Urban; 32.15% Suburban; 22.47% Rural
  • 56% of nurses work in a hospital. To see the other places that top the list, read Where Do Most Nurses Work?

FIGURE 7

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FIGURE 8

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FIGURE 9 - Total Number of Respondents by Primary Specialty

Compensation

The interactive charts below will allow you to customize your view to include various filters that will affect the range of figures shown. You can do this by selecting items in the drop down menus at the top of the charts. Be sure to hover your cursor over the chart for more details.

These salary figures do account for cost of living indexes, which can greatly affect the value of salaries. Generally, the cost of living is highest on the West Coast and in the Northeast. The states in the South, Midwest, and sections of the Mountain West have the lowest cost of living. For more discussion about this, please read What States Pay the Highest and Lowest Nursing Salaries?

Although women dominate the nursing profession, do men make more money? - Read what our readers have said. Look at interactive graphs below and see what you think.

FIGURE 10 - Annual Salary Base Pay by Gender

FIGURE 11 - HourlyBase Pay by Gender

FIGURE 12

FIGURE 13

FIGURE 14

FIGURE 15 - Avg Salary by Degree/State

FIGURE 16 - Annual Salary by Degree/State

FIGURE 17 - Avg Annual Salary + Hourly Pay by Degree/State

FIGURE 18 - Annual Salary + Hourly Pay by Degree/State

Denver, Colorado

New grad ADN RN

Dermatology Clinic

5 years as LPN

24/hour no weekends or holidays

Where is the information for LVN/LPN's? Did I miss something?

Specializes in Peds, Med-Surg, Disaster Nsg, Parish Nsg.
suzanne.sammut said:
Where is the information for LVN/LPN's? Did I miss something?

In the interactive charts, you can click on LPN/LVN in the drop down menus at the top of each chart to customize your view.

Specializes in Geriatrics, pediatrics, LTC..

New RN grad with 4 years LVN experience. 3 years experience in the field of pediatric home health. $27/hr for lower acuity, $29/hr higher acuity trach/vent. Benefits not that great but hours are. Rural area in Texas.

Mchristy25 really? That's your take? Only 8% of the nurses were male! Based on just the numbers that means that almost every guy who replied had an advanced degree. It did not say whether or not the degree or the position was the exact same as their female counterpart, for instance they could be administrative roles or nurse practitioners. And In a primarily female dominated workforce like nursing it's awfully silly to think that men somehow have an advantage. PS. Negotiate everything, it's the one thing Men do differently they do not just say yes to get a job, negotiate everything, and prove your value.

You're right, nursing has evolved to require an advanced degree in something in order to stay competitive.

Specializes in Ambulatory Care, Rheumatology.

The Gender differences after a certain income bracket SO clear!

I need to work in a Northern State or California! Our pension stopped in 2004 and now theyare dispersing the money. Insurance and dental premiums continue to climb higher and no raise in sight. It bothers me that we do so much but are not compensated as we should be. We are the backbone of health care!

Specializes in Psychiatric, Med-Surg.

I just went through new hire training for a Polk County, Florida hospital. The brand new nurses with no experience were hired at $21.95 with full benefits after 30 days. That seems low to me, but I'm not a nurse either. They are required to complete a nurse residency program, so perhaps that's why.

By the looks of these numbers I'll stay put in New York (downstate) ... I am well compensated for the work I do. (My opinion)

omg so much information!

Kaplan College, ADN in San Diego

Working on RN-BSN

Labor and Delivery New Grad nurse

(1 1/2 weeks)

$40.86 base pay and $3.45 night shift diff

Easton, PA

19.80 Base + .75 differential

2 years LPN/LVN

Geriatrics