At $81,520, Arkansas RN wages sit nearly 20% below the national mean — a number shaped by rural hospital closures, a thin urban corridor, and a healthcare system under sustained financial pressure.
Arkansas registered nurses average $81,520 per year ($39.19/hr) per BLS OEWS May 2025 — the federal government's most current compensation data. That figure places Arkansas 19.6% below the national RN mean of $101,420. This is not a marginal gap. Nearly $20,000 per year separates the average Arkansas RN from the national average, and that spread reflects structural realities that are not changing quickly: a predominantly rural population base, a thin urban corridor concentrated in Little Rock and the Fayetteville-Northwest Arkansas metro, and a hospital system under sustained financial pressure.
The practical wage range for Arkansas RNs in 2026: new graduates at most non-UAMS facilities start in the $26–$31/hr range. Experienced Med-Surg nurses with three to five years land $32–$40/hr at community hospitals. UAMS and Baptist Health pay at the top of the local market. Baptist Health Arkansas pays approximately $48/hr on average per Glassdoor 2026 data — meaningfully above the BLS state mean, reflecting their market position as the largest private system in Arkansas. Night differentials typically run $3–$5/hr. Specialty premiums for ICU, OR, and L&D exist but are compressed compared to higher-wage states.
Northwest Arkansas — anchored by Washington Regional Medical Center and Mercy Northwest Arkansas in Fayetteville — is the fastest-growing economic corridor in the state and is pushing wages upward relative to rural Arkansas. The Walmart corporate presence and associated economic activity have pulled healthcare demand and wages higher in that corridor than the statewide BLS figure suggests. If you are comparing Arkansas nurse salaries, geography within the state matters substantially.
Arkansas mean RN: $81,520 vs. national mean $101,420 — a $19,900 gap (-19.6%). That is a structural deficit, not a temporary market condition. Arkansas's 3.9% flat state income tax (top rate, reduced from 4.4% via 2024 Act 1) offers modest relief at the margin, but it does not close a nearly $20,000 annual wage gap. A nurse relocating to Arkansas from a similarly low-tax neighboring state will take a real income cut; the tax rate does not compensate for the wage differential.
Travel nurses in Arkansas see posted base rates averaging $83,626 per year (ZipRecruiter 2026) — which is slightly above the BLS staff RN mean of $81,520. That relationship is unusual: in most high-demand states, travel pay commands a significant premium over staff rates. In Arkansas, the narrow spread reflects a market where local staff wages are already low, limiting how much higher travel agencies post to attract candidates while remaining cost-effective for facilities.
The total package changes the picture considerably. With tax-free housing and M&IE stipends averaging $1,388/week (GSA rates), total annual compensation for Arkansas travel nurses runs approximately $108,000 per year. That is where Arkansas travel nursing becomes genuinely competitive — not in the base pay, but in the stipend layer that converts a $83K posting into a $108K total package. Nurses who understand the stipend structure and maintain a qualifying tax home will see meaningfully better effective compensation than the base rate suggests.
Little Rock and Fayetteville are the primary travel markets. UAMS posts consistent demand, particularly in ICU, L&D, and specialty units — it is the state's only Level I trauma center and academic medical center, which means complex case volume that community hospitals cannot handle. Jonesboro (NEA Baptist Memorial) and Fort Smith (Mercy Fort Smith) round out the secondary markets. Rural Arkansas travel positions exist but come with the complications that accompany any assignment in a system under financial stress: facilities with uncertain futures, limited ancillary support, and patient populations with high acuity and limited social support infrastructure.
Arkansas's NLC compact membership is one genuine advantage for travel nurses targeting the state. Nurses holding a multistate compact license can work Arkansas contracts without a separate licensure application, cutting weeks off pre-assignment timelines. This makes Arkansas easier to staff for agencies and faster to access for nurses than non-compact states in the region.
Working in rural Arkansas means you will encounter patients who drove 45 minutes because the closer hospital closed its OB unit, or closed entirely. Camden lost its only hospital. Rural OB closures are widespread. The acuity picture is often higher than the census numbers suggest — patients who delayed care, who have no primary care relationship, who present sicker than they should because access was interrupted. If you take an assignment outside Little Rock or Fayetteville, know what you are walking into. The pay is not going to compensate for working understaffed in a facility that may be operating on a closure timeline. Do your due diligence on facility stability before signing a contract in rural Arkansas.
Arkansas CRNAs earn approximately $205,546 per year per TheCRNA.com 2026 blended data — placing the state in the lowest national quartile for CRNA compensation. That figure deserves context, and some caution. Arkansas has a small CRNA labor market. The state's rural hospital closures have eliminated CRNA positions that used to exist in smaller communities — Camden's hospital closure, OB service terminations across multiple markets, and general service consolidations have contracted the available employer base. When the labor market is thin, salary estimates from aggregator sources can be volatile; a single large contract renegotiation or the addition of a new employer can shift statewide averages meaningfully.
The structural reason for Arkansas's low CRNA compensation is not complicated: small, financially stressed hospitals in rural markets cannot pay what academic medical centers in high-volume states pay. UAMS in Little Rock is the dominant CRNA employer in the state and likely pays closer to national median. But the statewide average is pulled down by the thin rural market. For CRNAs comparing Arkansas to neighboring states: Tennessee CRNAs are in the $220–$240K range, Oklahoma in the $220K+ range, Texas varies widely by geography. Arkansas at $205,546 is below all of these, which reflects its labor market depth rather than the clinical demand for anesthesia services.
One legitimate opportunity in Arkansas CRNA practice: rural coverage gaps. Facilities that have lost anesthesia coverage because of staff departures or the closure of nearby competitors are sometimes willing to negotiate significantly above the published state average to secure coverage. Solo practitioners and locum tenens CRNAs working rural Arkansas can command better rates than the blended statewide figure suggests — but those arrangements require direct negotiation and carry the instability that comes with financially precarious facility partners.
Arkansas nurse practitioners average $116,030 per year per BLS OEWS May 2025 — roughly 15.5% below the national NP mean of $137,300. As with RN wages, the gap reflects the state's rural economy and compressed employer base rather than a devaluation of NP scope.
Arkansas NPs operate under a restricted practice model. The Arkansas State Board of Nursing requires NPs to maintain a collaborative practice agreement with a supervising physician. No full practice authority (FPA) bill has advanced in the Arkansas legislature as of 2026 per AANP tracking. This is a meaningful constraint on independent practice development, particularly in rural primary care where the physician shortage is most severe and where independent NP practice could theoretically fill access gaps most efficiently. The irony is not lost: Arkansas has some of the worst rural healthcare access metrics in the country, and its regulatory structure prevents the workforce model best positioned to address it from operating independently.
NP employment in Arkansas tends to concentrate in federally qualified health centers (FQHCs), UAMS clinics, and Baptist Health ambulatory care — all settings with existing physician infrastructure that satisfies the collaborative agreement requirement. Rural NPs working in underserved areas may qualify for the National Health Service Corps loan repayment program, which can add $50,000–$100,000+ in loan forgiveness value to compensation packages that are below national norms on base pay alone. Psychiatric NP positions carry the most acute shortage premium in Arkansas given the severe rural mental health access gap and the limited pool of competing providers.
Arkansas ICU nurses average approximately $90,219 per year based on 2026 aggregator data — a 10.7% premium over the general Arkansas RN mean. That specialty uplift is narrower than in higher-wage states, reflecting the same wage compression that defines the broader Arkansas nursing market. UAMS's Level I trauma ICU in Little Rock is the highest-acuity and highest-paying critical care environment in the state. ICU nurses at UAMS work with complex trauma, burn, and post-surgical cases that community hospitals transfer rather than manage. That acuity level commands top-of-market Arkansas pay, but even the UAMS premium stays well below ICU pay in higher-wage states.
ER nurses in Arkansas average approximately $71,723 per year. That number is notably lower than the general RN mean for the state, which runs counter to the national pattern where ER nurses typically command a premium. The suppressed ER RN figure in Arkansas likely reflects the rural ED reality: smaller facilities with lower acuity and lower volume that staff ER nurses at community hospital rates, pulling the statewide average down. UAMS and Baptist Health ER nurses earn more than this figure; rural critical access hospital ER nurses earn less. The spread within the state is wide.
The rural ER nursing context in Arkansas is worth naming directly. Emergency departments at facilities where OB services have closed frequently inherit higher obstetric acuity — patients in active labor present to the closest open ED when the birthing unit is gone. ER nurses in rural Arkansas are managing presentations that, in better-resourced systems, would go to dedicated units. The pay does not reflect that expanded scope.
UAMS in Little Rock is Arkansas's only academic medical center and its only Level I trauma center. For nurses in Arkansas, UAMS is in a category of its own: it is the state's highest-paying employer, the facility with the most complex case mix, and the primary clinical training site for nursing and medical education in the state. UAMS runs a 504-bed teaching hospital, the only burn center in Arkansas, the state's only Level I pediatric trauma designation, and a network of specialty clinics. Nurses at UAMS work alongside resident physicians and fellows, manage cases that community hospitals transfer rather than handle, and earn at the top of the Arkansas wage range. UAMS nursing residency programs and specialty fellowships are competitive — positions fill quickly, and the training infrastructure is stronger than anything else in the state.
Baptist Health is the largest private healthcare system in Arkansas, operating multiple hospitals across the state with Baptist Health Medical Center – Little Rock as its flagship. Baptist Health pays approximately $48/hr on average for RNs per Glassdoor 2026 data — above the BLS state mean and second only to UAMS in the market. Baptist Health operates facilities in Little Rock, North Little Rock, Conway, Arkadelphia, Stuttgart, and other markets. It functions as the backbone of private acute care in central Arkansas and is the system most nurses outside UAMS will work within during a career based in Little Rock.
CHI St. Vincent, part of CommonSpirit Health, operates hospitals in Little Rock, Hot Springs, Morrilton, and Sherwood. The faith-based system brings mission-driven culture and consistent acute care coverage to central and west-central Arkansas. CHI St. Vincent Infirmary in Little Rock is a 500+ bed tertiary care facility. Wages track the Arkansas market rather than national CommonSpirit averages — the local labor market sets the floor, not the corporate parent's national scale.
Washington Regional Medical Center in Fayetteville is the dominant employer in Northwest Arkansas — the fastest-growing economic corridor in the state. Washington Regional operates as an independent, not-for-profit community health system with approximately 425 beds. The Fayetteville metro's economic growth (driven by Walmart, Tyson, and the associated corporate ecosystem) has pushed wages and healthcare demand higher in Northwest Arkansas relative to the rest of the state. Washington Regional is a meaningful exception to the statewide wage depression — nurses in this corridor earn closer to regional Midwest/Mid-South wages than the Arkansas BLS average suggests.
NEA Baptist Memorial Hospital in Jonesboro anchors northeast Arkansas healthcare. It is the primary tertiary referral center for a rural catchment area spanning multiple counties in the northeast corner of the state and portions of Missouri. NEA Baptist runs approximately 258 beds and provides services that smaller surrounding hospitals cannot, making it a regional hub with solid acute care volume. Wage levels track the Arkansas market; Jonesboro does not command the same premium as Little Rock or Fayetteville.
Between 50% and 60% of rural Arkansas hospitals are at financial risk of closure according to ACHI (Arkansas Center for Health Improvement) and reporting by THV11. This is not a background statistic — it is the operational context for nursing in this state. Camden lost its only hospital. Jacksonville saw significant service reductions. OB closures have been widespread across rural Arkansas: multiple hospitals have eliminated labor and delivery units in recent years, concentrating obstetric care in an increasingly limited number of facilities and lengthening the distance patients must travel to deliver.
For nurses, the rural hospital crisis manifests in specific ways. Understaffing in facilities that cannot recruit or retain nurses because wages are not competitive with regional markets. Skill mix problems when specialty nurses leave for better-paying markets and are not replaced. Scope creep at rural EDs that absorb clinical presentations their census and staffing ratios were not designed to handle. And the genuine risk that a facility where you take a staff position or travel contract may reduce services or close before the contract ends.
The Medicaid funding dynamics are a central driver. Arkansas extended Medicaid under the ACA (through its private option/Arkansas Works program), which improved coverage rates and reduced uncompensated care compared to non-expansion states. But proposed federal Medicaid cuts under OBBBA and related legislation threaten that foundation. Rural hospitals operating on thin margins with high Medicaid census are acutely exposed to federal reimbursement changes. Nurses considering long-term employment in rural Arkansas should factor facility financial health into their decision-making — not just current wages.
The base rate in Arkansas understates total package value. Run your full take-home — base pay, stipends, tax-free comp, and blended tax impact — in under 2 minutes.
Arkansas Stipend Calculator →Arkansas is a full member of the Nurse Licensure Compact (NLC). Nurses who hold a multistate compact license issued from their primary state of residence can practice in Arkansas without obtaining a separate Arkansas license. For travel nurses, this means no additional licensure cost or waiting period before starting Arkansas contracts — a practical advantage that matters when agency timelines are tight. Arkansas nurses who hold a compact license issued by Arkansas can also practice in any other NLC member state without additional endorsement, giving them geographic flexibility within the compact network.
The compact license advantage is one of the few genuine structural benefits for travel nurses and mobile nurses in Arkansas. Neighboring Tennessee and Oklahoma are also compact members; Texas is compact as well. The entire southern corridor is well-integrated into the NLC network, which makes multi-state travel nursing in this region operationally smoother than working the non-compact West Coast or Northeast.
NP scope in Arkansas remains restricted as of 2026. The Arkansas State Board of Nursing enforces the collaborative practice agreement requirement — Arkansas NPs cannot practice independently of physician oversight. AANP tracking confirms no FPA bill has advanced in the Arkansas legislature through 2026. For NPs weighing state-to-state career decisions, this is a meaningful constraint. Neighboring Oklahoma passed FPA; Tennessee has FPA. Arkansas NPs who want independent practice authority need to either work within a system that satisfies the collaboration requirement (hospital systems, FQHCs, multi-provider clinics) or consider licensure in a neighboring FPA state for contract or telehealth work.
Arkansas's income tax rate is 3.9% flat (top rate), reduced from 4.4% via 2024 Act 1. This is a modest rate in the national context — lower than most northeastern and Pacific states, roughly comparable to neighboring states. At the Arkansas RN mean of $81,520, the 3.9% top rate costs approximately $3,180 per year in state taxes, which is not a major factor in the overall compensation calculation. The tax environment is not a meaningful offset to the wage gap relative to higher-paying states.
Arkansas registered nurses average $81,520 per year ($39.19/hr) per BLS OEWS May 2025 — 19.6% below the national mean of $101,420. That nearly $20,000 gap reflects structural realities: a predominantly rural state, a compressed urban employer base in Little Rock and Fayetteville, and widespread rural hospital financial distress. UAMS is the highest-paying employer in the state; Baptist Health pays approximately $48/hr average per Glassdoor 2026. The Northwest Arkansas corridor (Fayetteville/Rogers) runs above the statewide average driven by regional economic growth.
Travel nurses in Arkansas see posted base rates averaging $83,626/year (ZipRecruiter 2026) — slightly above the staff RN mean, reflecting persistent demand in a market that struggles to retain local nurses. Total package with tax-free housing and M&IE stipends averaging $1,388/week runs approximately $108,000 per year. That total package is where Arkansas travel nursing becomes financially competitive. Arkansas is an NLC compact state, so nurses with a multistate license can start contracts without separate licensure. Use the stipend calculator to model your full take-home.
Arkansas CRNAs earn approximately $205,546 per year (TheCRNA.com 2026) — placing the state in the lowest national quartile for CRNA compensation. The figure reflects a small, volatile labor market: rural hospital closures have eliminated CRNA positions across the state, contracting the available employer base. UAMS is the dominant CRNA employer and likely pays closer to national median; the statewide average is pulled down by the thin rural market. Locum tenens CRNAs covering rural Arkansas coverage gaps can negotiate above the blended average, but those arrangements come with facility instability risk.
No. Arkansas NPs do not have full practice authority as of 2026. The Arkansas State Board of Nursing requires a collaborative practice agreement with a supervising physician. No FPA bill has advanced in the Arkansas legislature as of 2026 per AANP tracking. This is a significant constraint in a state with severe rural primary care access gaps — the workforce model best positioned to fill those gaps is prevented from operating independently. NPs seeking independent practice authority should consider licensure in neighboring Oklahoma or Tennessee, both of which have FPA. Arkansas NPs can participate in NHSC loan repayment in underserved rural settings, which can offset the below-national base pay meaningfully.