Nurse Salary in Kansas 2026: RN, NP, CRNA & Travel Nurse Pay Guide
Kansas RN wages average $82,360 — 18.8% below the national mean. Here's what the data actually shows: specialty premiums, KU Med vs. Wichita market differences, and what rural nursing shortage numbers mean for your pay.
Kansas sits about 19% below the national RN mean. That gap is structural — right-to-work labor market, rural-heavy population, payer mix tilted toward Medicaid and Medicare — and it's not closing fast. The two anchor markets are the University of Kansas Medical Center corridor in the Kansas City metro and the Wichita cluster built around Wesley Medical Center and Via Christi Health. Outside those two metros, you're looking at critical-access hospitals with thin margins and vacancy rates that push travel demand well above what the baseline wage suggests.
The specialty story is where Kansas gets more interesting. CRNAs here earn $231,355 per year — a 181% premium over the staff RN mean, and only 6.9% below the national CRNA average despite the state's overall wage discount. ICU pay at $99,599 sits within 2% of ZipRecruiter's national specialty average. Travel nurse packages with tax-free stipends cross $115K. Kansas is eNLC compact, so licensure friction for interstate travel nurses is minimal.
Below is the complete pay picture: BLS May 2025 OEWS baseline, specialty numbers sourced from TheCRNA.com 2026 and ZipRecruiter 2026, major employer context, and the state-specific factors that shape what you'll actually take home.
Kansas RN Salary: What BLS May 2025 Actually Shows
The $82,360 mean puts Kansas in the lower third of states nationally, clustered near Nebraska ($88,330), Missouri ($85,900), and Oklahoma ($85,060). The gap from the national mean of $101,420 translates to $19,060 per year less than the average U.S. RN — real money that doesn't fully disappear even after adjusting for Kansas's cost of living advantage. The Wichita metro runs roughly 88 on a national COL index (100 = national average), and the Kansas City Kansas side is around 90–92. That discount helps but doesn't close the gap entirely.
Worth noting: Kansas is a right-to-work state with no history of large-scale hospital unionization. Union contracts in California, Massachusetts, Minnesota, and New York drive wage floors significantly above market rates. Kansas nurses don't have that backstop, and it shows in the baseline figures.
| Percentile | Annual Salary | Hourly |
|---|---|---|
| 10th | ~$62,400 | ~$30.00 |
| 25th | ~$70,800 | ~$34.04 |
| 50th (Median) | ~$79,500 | ~$38.22 |
| Mean | $82,360 | $39.60 |
| 75th | ~$93,200 | ~$44.81 |
| 90th | ~$107,500 | ~$51.68 |
Percentile estimates based on BLS OEWS May 2025 state wage distribution. Mean figure is exact BLS OEWS May 2025 data. Source: BLS OEWS May 2025.
The 90th percentile approaching $107,500 tells you where the ceiling is for staff RNs in Kansas — you can get there in specialty units at KU Medical Center or with senior charge nurse differentials in Wichita, but it requires several years of experience and the right unit. New grads in Wichita-area community hospitals typically start in the $62,000–$67,000 range.
Specialty Pay: Travel Nurses, NPs, CRNAs, ICU & ER
| Role | Annual Pay | Source | vs. National |
|---|---|---|---|
| Staff RN (mean) | $82,360 | BLS OEWS May 2025 | -18.8% |
| Travel Nurse (posted base) | $90,194 | ZipRecruiter 2026 | — |
| ICU / Critical Care RN | $99,599 | ZipRecruiter 2026 | Near national avg |
| ER / ED Nurse | $77,356 | ZipRecruiter 2026 | Below national |
| Nurse Practitioner (NP) | $127,900 | BLS OEWS May 2025 | -6.8% |
| CRNA | $231,355 | TheCRNA.com 2026 | -6.9% vs. national $248,320 |
A few things stand out in that table. First, ICU pay at $99,599 is essentially national-average territory despite the lower staff RN baseline — critical care units in Kansas, particularly at KU Med and Wesley's Level I Trauma, compete hard for experienced ICU nurses and price accordingly. Second, ER pay at $77,356 actually sits below the state staff RN mean, which reflects ED nurse aggregator data skewing toward rural community EDs where volumes and shift differentials are lower. Level I and Level II trauma ED nurses in Wichita and Kansas City earn well above that figure. Third, the CRNA premium — 181% above the staff RN mean — is the most reliable path to six-figure clinical pay in Kansas without leaving the state.
KU Medical Center vs. Wichita: The Two Markets That Drive Kansas Nursing Pay
University of Kansas Health System / KU Medical Center (Kansas City corridor)
The University of Kansas Medical Center is the single highest-paying healthcare employer in the state for registered nurses. As the state's only NCI-designated cancer center and only academic medical center, KU Med operates at a different compensation tier than community hospitals. The KU Health System has expanded aggressively in the Kansas City metro — KU Health System Olathe, KU Health System St. Francis in Topeka, and the main KUMC campus in Kansas City, Kansas — creating a regional network where academic-medicine wages set a higher floor for the surrounding market. Experienced RNs in specialty units at KUMC can earn toward the 75th and 90th percentile ranges, making it the closest Kansas equivalent to the premium-tier employers in larger states.
The Kansas City metro is also the one geographic area in Kansas where nurse wages feel compressive pressure from the Missouri side of the metro. Nurses with compact licenses frequently compare offers from KU Health System facilities against Kansas City, Missouri hospitals (SSM Health, Saint Luke's, Research Medical Center) — which creates modest wage competition that benefits nurses in both states.
Wichita: Wesley Medical Center and Via Christi Health
Wichita is Kansas's second major nursing market, anchored by Wesley Medical Center (HealthRise at Wesley, 760 beds, Level I Trauma — the only Level I Trauma center in the state) and Via Christi Health (Ascension), which operates four Wichita-area hospitals. The two systems together employ the majority of Wichita's hospital nurses and effectively set the local wage floor through competition for the same pool of experienced RNs.
Wichita has an unusual healthcare demand driver: its aviation and aerospace manufacturing industry. Cessna, Beechcraft (Textcraft), Bombardier, and Spirit AeroSystems collectively employ tens of thousands of workers whose occupational injury patterns — machining injuries, chemical exposures, altitude physiology in test-pilot medicine — create sustained demand for specialty-trained nurses in orthopedics, occupational health, and PACU/anesthesia. This is the "aviation-medicine sector" noted in regional workforce analyses. It doesn't dramatically move RN salaries, but it does sustain steady employment volume and CRNA demand in a mid-sized market that would otherwise be thinner.
Topeka and Smaller Markets
Stormont Vail Health (586 beds, Level II Trauma) dominates Topeka as the state capital's primary healthcare employer. Wages here run below Wichita and significantly below KUMC. Western Kansas — Dodge City, Garden City, Liberal, Hays — operates on critical-access hospital economics: smaller staff, thinner margins, and persistent vacancies that drive travel nurse contracting well above posted staff rates.
Kansas Nursing Shortage: What the Data Shows
The Kansas Nursing Workforce Center — housed at the University of Kansas School of Nursing — tracks the state's nursing labor supply and has been signaling a structural deficit for years. Projections from the Kansas Department of Labor estimate the state will need more than 18,000 additional registered nurses to meet demand, with shortages concentrated in western Kansas, southeastern Kansas, and the Flint Hills region. Five Kansas counties have fewer than 20 RNs total. Fifty counties have fewer than 10 APRNs. Those aren't gaps that market forces alone will close at current salary levels.
The practical consequence for nurses currently working in Kansas: the shortage is a negotiating fact. Staff RNs in rural markets often have informal premium arrangements or retention bonuses that don't show up in BLS aggregate data. Agency and contract nursing costs Kansas's psychiatric hospital system alone an estimated $60 million annually — a number that reflects how thin the staffing pipelines are in behavioral health specifically.
NP Scope of Practice in Kansas — Collaborative Practice Still Required
Kansas is a reduced practice state for nurse practitioners. APRNs must maintain a collaborative practice agreement with a supervising physician to prescribe and practice at the full scope of their education. This is a genuine operational constraint: collaborative agreements cost $500–$1,500/month in physician oversight fees, limit the ability to operate independent clinics in underserved rural areas, and cap the NP pay ceiling relative to full-practice-authority states.
The APRN Compact legislation (HB 2266) was introduced in 2025 to streamline multi-state APRN practice, but the House committee hearing was canceled. Full practice authority has not cleared the Kansas Legislature. As long as collaborative agreements remain mandatory, NPs in rural Kansas face the same access gap that FPA advocates have been citing for years: the areas most in need of independent NP coverage are the areas where finding a collaborating physician is hardest and most expensive.
The $127,900 Kansas NP mean (BLS May 2025) is real money by any measure — roughly 55% above the state staff RN baseline. But compared to the national NP mean of $137,300, it's 6.8% below. FPA states like Oregon ($148,030), California ($161,540), and Minnesota ($128,120) consistently outperform restricted-practice states on APRN wages, a pattern that's been consistent across every BLS OEWS release.
Income Tax, Cost of Living, and Take-Home Math
Kansas has a progressive income tax with three brackets for 2026: 3.1% on the first $15,000 of taxable income, 5.25% on $15,001–$30,000, and 5.7% above $30,000 (single filer rates). An RN earning $82,360 would face an effective Kansas state income tax rate of approximately 5.4% on ordinary income — moderate compared to high-income states like California (9.3%) or Oregon (9.9%), but not as favorable as states with no income tax (Texas, Florida, Nevada, South Dakota).
Cost-of-living adjustment matters here. The Wichita metro COL index runs approximately 88 (national = 100), meaning housing, groceries, and transportation are meaningfully cheaper than the national norm. Kansas City Kansas runs slightly higher, around 90–92. A nurse earning $82,360 in Wichita has a comparable standard of living to a nurse earning closer to $92,000–$94,000 in a 100-indexed market — which narrows the gap with the national mean more than the raw number suggests, though it doesn't eliminate it.
Compare Kansas to Other States
Use the free salary comparison tool to stack Kansas pay against neighboring states and the national mean.
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Kansas is an NLC compact member. A multistate license — whether issued by Kansas or any other compact member state — allows RNs and LPNs to practice in all 41+ compact states without separate endorsements. For travel nurses, this is the primary licensing benefit: pick up a Kansas contract without paying a separate application fee or waiting weeks for BON processing. For Kansas-based nurses, the compact license is their primary credential — no secondary endorsement needed to work across compact state lines.
Kansas joined the enhanced NLC (eNLC) early, and the Kansas State Board of Nursing processes multistate applications on a predictable timeline. If you're a travel nurse holding a compact license from any member state, you can accept a Kansas assignment immediately upon credential verification. The state has no compact license delays or implementation backlogs that have affected late-joining states like Massachusetts.
Kansas-based nurses with a multistate license have direct access to neighboring compact states without separate endorsements: Missouri, Oklahoma, Nebraska, and Iowa are all eNLC members, giving Kansas nurses a strong Midwest travel corridor. Colorado, another compact neighbor to the west, offers significantly higher wages for experienced RNs who want to test their options while holding a Kansas-issued multistate license.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the average RN salary in Kansas in 2026?
Kansas registered nurses average $82,360 per year ($39.60/hr) per BLS OEWS May 2025 data — 18.8% below the national RN mean of $101,420. The gap is structural: Kansas is a right-to-work state with no collective bargaining leverage for nursing staff, a rural-heavy population that concentrates hospital employment in a few markets, and a payer mix heavily weighted toward Medicaid and Medicare. Wages are highest at KU Medical Center in the Kansas City corridor. Outside that market and Wichita, staff RN wages drop meaningfully.
How much do travel nurses make in Kansas?
Travel nurses in Kansas see posted base rates averaging $90,194 per year (ZipRecruiter 2026). When you add tax-free housing and M&IE stipends on qualifying assignments, total compensation runs approximately $115,000–$120,000 per year. Rural western Kansas and the southeast corner of the state post the highest travel premiums — 20–35% above Wichita-area rates — because recruitment difficulty is substantially greater. Kansas is an eNLC compact member, so nurses with compact licenses can work here without a separate Kansas license endorsement.
What is the CRNA salary in Kansas in 2026?
Kansas CRNAs average approximately $231,355 per year per TheCRNA.com 2026 blended data — about 6.9% below the national CRNA mean of $248,320, but still a 181% premium over the Kansas staff RN baseline. Critical-access hospitals across western Kansas rely heavily on CRNAs as the sole anesthesia provider, which creates steady demand and leverage for experienced practitioners. KU Medical Center and Via Christi Health are the primary institutional CRNA employers in the state.
Do NPs have full practice authority in Kansas?
No. Kansas is a reduced practice state for nurse practitioners as of 2026. APRNs must maintain a collaborative practice agreement with a supervising physician, limiting independent clinic ownership, independent prescribing, and autonomous telehealth models common in full-practice-authority states. APRN Compact legislation (HB 2266) was introduced in 2025 but stalled. Full practice authority has not cleared the Kansas Legislature, and there is no confirmed timeline for change.
Is Kansas part of the Nursing Licensure Compact?
Yes. Kansas is an eNLC compact member. A Kansas multistate license — or any compact license from another member state — allows RNs and LPNs to practice in all 41+ compact states without separate endorsements. For travel nurses, this means you can take a Kansas assignment without paying separate application fees or waiting weeks for BON processing. Kansas joined the enhanced NLC early and has no implementation backlog issues.
Sources
- Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS), May 2025 — bls.gov/news.release/ocwage.htm
- BLS OEWS May 2025 State and Metro Area Data — bls.gov/oes/2025/may/oessrcst.htm
- TheCRNA.com 2026 CRNA Salary Data — thecrna.com
- ZipRecruiter 2026 Kansas Nurse Salary Data — ziprecruiter.com
- Kansas Nursing Workforce Center, University of Kansas School of Nursing — kumc.edu
- Kansas Hospital Association, Nursing Shortage Analysis — kha-net.org