BLS May 2025 data, real employer ranges, and what eNLC compact status actually changes for CT travel contracts.
Connecticut's nursing market sits in an interesting spot: wages run just above the national average, cost of living runs well above it, and the state joined the NLC compact in October 2025 — which means travel-contract logistics just got simpler. If you're a Connecticut nurse trying to figure out whether your pay is right, or a travel nurse evaluating CT contracts, here's the actual data.
All salary figures below use BLS OEWS May 2025 data (released May 15, 2026) as the federal anchor, supplemented with TheCRNA.com 2026 aggregator refresh for CRNA and ZipRecruiter/Vivian 2026 for travel nurse and specialty figures.
Connecticut registered nurses average $105,250 per year (BLS OEWS May 2025), which translates to roughly $50.60/hr. That's 3.8% above the national mean of $101,420 — a real but modest premium that partially erodes once you factor in Connecticut's cost of living index of approximately 1.13.
In practical terms: a CT RN earning $105K has roughly the same purchasing power as a nurse earning $93K in a cost-neutral state. That's not a knock on Connecticut — the state's combination of strong union presence, mandated staffing committees, and New England proximity creates real career advantages beyond the base rate.
Market breakdown by area:
Connecticut's wages are honest but not exceptional once you run the COL adjustment. Where CT actually outperforms its raw numbers: state law mandates nurse staffing committees with at least 50% direct-care RN membership. That's not nothing. I've worked in states where staffing decisions happen without any bedside input — having statutory committee seats is a real leverage point. Combined with the strong Yale New Haven and Hartford HealthCare union presence, CT nurses have more structural protection than the salary line suggests.
Base RN pay is the floor. Here's where the real differentiation happens by specialty:
Connecticut ICU nurses average $107,017 per year (ZipRecruiter/Salary.com 2026), or approximately $51.45/hr. That's a modest premium over general RN base — smaller than in states where ICU nurses are in severe shortage. CT's concentration of Level I trauma centers (Yale New Haven, Hartford Hospital) means you'll find strong professional development but not the outsized ICU premiums you'd see in a frontier state.
Emergency nursing in Connecticut averages $82,512 per year. The lower figure relative to ICU reflects the historical pattern — ER nurses in Compact states often see travel supplements that narrow the apparent gap. If you're an ER RN eyeing CT contracts, the all-in travel package changes the math (see Travel section below).
Connecticut per diem nurses typically command a 15–28% premium over staff rates, landing in the $58–$72/hr range at Yale New Haven and Hartford HealthCare. The premium reflects CT's union-negotiated shift differentials: nights add 12–18%, weekends 14–20%, and holiday differentials at YNHH reach 1.5x base.
Connecticut travel nurses average $96,205 per year in posted base pay (ZipRecruiter 2026). That's below the state's staff RN average — which is normal, since posted base doesn't include the tax-free housing and M&IE stipends that can add $30,000–$42,000/year to a travel package.
ICU travel nursing in Connecticut is a different story. ICU travel contracts in CT run approximately $57–$62/hr all-in, translating to $120,000+/year for a full-time ICU traveler including stipends. Stamford (Fairfield County) ICU positions pay an additional 12% above state averages due to NYC cost-of-living adjustments built into stipend calculations.
What eNLC compact status (October 2025) actually changes for travelers: if your home state is an NLC state and you hold a multistate license, you no longer need to apply for a separate Connecticut RN license before starting a contract. That eliminates 4–8 weeks of paperwork and the $200+ CT licensure fee. For last-minute contract-fill situations, this is significant. Important caveat: Connecticut's NLC participation has a statutory sunset of January 1, 2028 unless the legislature acts to extend or make permanent. Nurses doing multi-year career planning should note that the compact status is not guaranteed beyond 2027.
Connecticut imposes a state income tax of up to 6.99% on wages. Travel stipends (housing + M&IE) remain federally tax-free when you maintain a legitimate tax home, but CT state income does apply to your taxable hourly rate. Travel nurses from no-income-tax states (FL, TX, NV, WA, etc.) take a modest tax hit when working CT contracts — run the numbers on your specific structure, ideally with a travel nurse–literate CPA.
Connecticut nurse practitioners average $141,140 per year (BLS May 2025 OEWS). This places CT NPs solidly above the national NP mean of $137,300. Connecticut's NP pay advantage has structural support: the state granted full practice authority (FPA) in 2014 — well ahead of most of the country — which means CT NPs have had over a decade to build independent practice portfolios, which typically commands higher compensation.
The CT FPA nuance worth knowing: new NPs must complete a 3-year collaborative practice period (or 2,000 clinical hours) under physician or experienced APRN oversight before practicing fully independently. After that transition period, Connecticut NPs can diagnose, prescribe — including controlled substances — and practice without oversight. NPs in specialties like PMHNP and acute care NP at Yale New Haven and Hartford HealthCare regularly report total compensation (base + RVU bonuses + benefits) of $160,000–$195,000.
Connecticut CRNAs average $250,058 per year per TheCRNA.com's 2026 dataset, essentially at the national mean of $248,320. That's the state-level average — the real variation is geographic. Stamford-area CRNAs (Fairfield County proximity to NYC healthcare demand) can reach $276,000–$290,000/year, while hospital-employed CRNAs at academic medical centers in New Haven and Hartford cluster closer to $235,000–$255,000.
Connecticut has several academic anesthesia programs (Yale School of Medicine, UConn), and the state's compact status since October 2025 means CRNA travelers from other compact states no longer need a separate CT CRNA license for contracts. The same sunset caveat applies — NLC for CRNAs has the same January 1, 2028 expiration.
Connecticut's healthcare market is dominated by two large integrated systems, one regional powerhouse, and a cluster of academic affiliates:
The largest health system in Connecticut, YNHH encompasses Yale New Haven Hospital (1,541 beds, Level I Trauma), Bridgeport Hospital, Greenwich Hospital, Lawrence + Memorial (New London), Westerly Hospital (RI), and Northeast Medical Group. Yale's affiliation with Yale School of Medicine makes it the state's academic medicine anchor. YNHH reported RN base rates of $41–$55/hr in recent postings, with academic medical center differentials pushing YNHH New Haven above that range.
Hartford HealthCare is a 7-hospital system (Hartford Hospital, MidState Medical Center, Windham Hospital, Backus Hospital, Charlotte Hungerford, Natchaug Hospital, The Hospital of Central Connecticut) with the Level I Trauma designation at Hartford Hospital. HHC's recent posted RN rates run $40–$50/hr, with union-negotiated step scales common across the system.
Danbury Hospital and Sharon Hospital became part of Northwell Health's network in 2023. Northwell, headquartered in New York, has brought New York-caliber compensation structures to the Danbury/New Milford region. Nuvance RNs have reported hourly rates of $52–$58/hr for experienced nurses — above the statewide average, reflecting Northwell's NYC compensation benchmarking.
Stamford Health (316-bed community academic medical center affiliated with Columbia University Irving Medical Center) operates in Fairfield County — the highest-paying county in Connecticut due to its NYC commuter geography. Stamford Health RN rates typically run $47–$60/hr. CRNAs at Stamford command some of the highest anesthesia compensation in the state.
Connecticut requires hospitals to establish nurse staffing committees with a majority (at least 50%) of direct-care clinical nurses. That's a meaningful structural protection. These committees set unit-level staffing plans — not binding ratios like California's, but more than most states give nurses. In my experience, having a formal seat at the table is worth real dollars because it limits the overnight census-dump that kills your patient load at 3am. Know whether your unit's committee is active and whether nurses are actually using those seats before signing any CT staff contract.
Run your hourly rate, differentials, and overtime through the Paycheck Auditor — built by a working RN who's been underpaid on a travel contract and knows what to look for.
Audit My Paycheck →Connecticut registered nurses average $105,250 per year according to BLS OEWS May 2025 data, which is 3.8% above the national mean of $101,420. Hourly, that works out to about $50.60/hr. Fairfield County (Stamford/Bridgeport) runs highest; Hartford and north-central CT run slightly lower.
Travel nurses in Connecticut average $96,205 per year in posted base pay (ZipRecruiter 2026). When you add tax-free housing and M&IE stipends, total packages typically reach $120,000–$140,000/year for experienced ICU or OR travelers. eNLC compact status (since October 2025) eliminated the need for a separate CT license for nurses from other compact states.
Connecticut CRNAs average $250,058 per year per TheCRNA.com 2026 data, essentially at the national mean. Stamford-area CRNAs can reach $276,000–$290,000/year. Source: BLS OEWS May 2025 / TheCRNA.com 2026 dataset.
Yes. Connecticut joined the Nurse Licensure Compact (eNLC) effective October 1, 2025. Nurses with a multistate compact license from another NLC state can practice in Connecticut without a separate CT license. Important: Connecticut's NLC participation has a statutory sunset of January 1, 2028 unless the legislature extends it — nurses doing long-term career planning should track CT legislative action on NLC permanence.
Connecticut grants nurse practitioners full practice authority, but with a 3-year (or 2,000-hour) collaborative transition period for new NPs. After that period, Connecticut NPs can diagnose, treat, and prescribe — including controlled substances — without physician oversight. Connecticut was one of the earlier FPA adopters (2014) and NP compensation reflects that track record: state NPs average $141,140/yr.
Connecticut imposes a progressive state income tax with rates ranging from 2% (lowest bracket) to 6.99% (top bracket, income above $500K single / $1M married). Most staff RNs earning $80K–$115K land in the 5.0–5.5% effective marginal bracket. Travel nurse taxable wages (the hourly rate, not stipends) are subject to CT income tax while working in-state.