BLS May 2025 data, Las Vegas ER realities, and the number that makes Nevada's take-home beat states with higher gross salaries: zero state income tax.
Nevada registered nurses average $105,710 per year ($50.82/hr) per BLS OEWS May 2025 — the federal government's most current compensation data. That puts Nevada 4.2% above the national RN mean of $101,420, landing the state somewhere in the upper-middle tier nationally. You won't mistake Nevada for California ($150,280) or Massachusetts ($117,960), but Nevada beats the national average with no state income tax on top — which is a combination most states can't offer.
The practical range for Nevada RNs in 2026: new graduates at the major Las Vegas systems typically start $32–$37/hr. Experienced Med-Surg nurses with three to five years land $38–$46/hr. Night shift differentials run $3–$6/hr at most facilities. Specialty premiums for ICU, L&D, and OR push experienced nurses above $52–$58/hr at the highest-acuity facilities. University Medical Center of Southern Nevada, as the region's only Level I trauma center, pays at the top of the local range for ICU and emergency specialties.
One understated driver of Nevada's above-national wages: the state needs more than 3,000 additional nurses just to match the national nurse-to-population ratio. Despite a 57% increase in RN headcount in recent years, Nevada still ranks among the lowest in nurses per capita nationally. That persistent structural gap keeps wages elevated — hospital systems competing for a short supply of local nurses have to pay for it.
Nevada mean RN: $105,710 vs. national mean $101,420 — a $4,290 premium (+4.2%). Add zero state income tax and the effective advantage over same-pay peers in states like Colorado (4.55%) or Arizona (2.5%) grows further. At $105,710 gross, Nevada's 0% state tax rate saves roughly $2,600–$5,000+ annually compared to states in the 2.5–4.99% bracket — a meaningful number at the annual level.
Travel nurses in Nevada see posted base rates averaging $102,983/year (ZipRecruiter 2026) — essentially matching the staff RN mean, which reflects a market where local supply is genuinely tight. Total package including tax-free housing and M&IE stipends runs approximately $125,000 per year depending on facility, specialty, and tax home arrangement.
Las Vegas is the primary travel market and one of the more unusual ones in nursing. The city processes roughly 40 million visitors per year through its hospitality corridor. That volume has real clinical consequences: Las Vegas emergency departments run high volumes of alcohol-related presentations, heat illness (particularly in summer), and trauma from the entertainment environment, around the clock. ER and trauma travel nurses in Las Vegas are not working a typical community ED — volume and acuity are elevated relative to a metro of this size.
Nevada's zero state income tax is an underappreciated travel nursing variable. If you maintain a tax home in a no-income-tax state and work a Nevada contract, your blended tax burden drops considerably. If you're comparing Nevada contracts against California assignments (California income tax up to 13.3%), the take-home difference on equivalent gross pay is substantial enough to shift the math in Nevada's favor even when posted rates look similar.
Reno is the secondary travel market, anchored by Renown Regional Medical Center — northern Nevada's largest hospital and its only Level II trauma center. Renown Regional sees the staffing dynamics common to mid-size regional hubs: solid base demand, less competitive posted rates than Las Vegas, but a more manageable work environment outside the tourist corridor.
Las Vegas ER nursing is not glamorous in the way the city's marketing suggests. You will see the full consequence of 24/7 entertainment at volume: overnight intoxication, heat casualties in July and August, crowd-event trauma, and the healthcare needs of a transient population with no primary care connection. The nurses who thrive in this environment are the ones who find that pace energizing rather than grinding. High acuity, high volume, zero predictability in case mix. If that's your thing, Nevada's ER market compensates for it.
Nevada CRNAs earn approximately $259,168 per year (TheCRNA.com 2026 blended dataset) — 4.4% above the national CRNA mean of $248,320. Like many western states with large geographic footprints and sparse populations outside the major metros, Nevada's rural anesthesia market is essentially a permanent shortage zone.
Clark County (Las Vegas metro) concentrates most of Nevada's hospital system, but the state also encompasses vast stretches of rural territory — from the Mojave in the south to the Great Basin in the center and north. Rural critical access hospitals, surgical centers, and standalone facilities in these regions depend on CRNAs as their sole anesthesia providers. Recruitment for rural Nevada positions competes with urban Las Vegas salaries, driving the statewide average above the national mean.
For CRNAs comparing Nevada to neighboring states: Utah CRNAs earn approximately $247,000, Arizona CRNAs approximately $218,772, and California CRNAs approximately $236,233. Nevada's $259,168 positions it solidly in the top third nationally. Add the zero state income tax and Nevada becomes one of the stronger net-take-home CRNA markets in the western US.
Nevada nurse practitioners average $132,680 per year per BLS OEWS May 2025 — about 3.4% below the national NP mean of $137,300. That below-national result for NPs is one of the few places where Nevada underperforms, and it reflects the concentration of NP employment in Las Vegas's urban market where physician supply is more robust than in truly rural states.
Nevada granted NPs full practice authority in 2013 via Senate Bill 172, making it one of the earlier FPA states in the West. Nevada NPs can diagnose, treat, and prescribe including controlled substances without any collaborative agreement or transition period. That regulatory clarity has enabled genuine NP-led practice in Nevada, particularly in rural primary care and mental health settings where physician supply is thin.
NP salary negotiation in Nevada tends to vary significantly by specialty and geography. Psychiatric NP positions in rural Nevada consistently carry shortage premiums well above the state average — the rural mental health access gap is severe. Primary care NPs in the Las Vegas metro face more competition from a larger NP workforce, but those in rural communities (Elko, Winnemucca, Ely, Fallon) typically command rural practice premiums of 15–25% above urban NP rates.
Nevada ICU nurses average approximately $112,537/year based on 2026 aggregator data — a 6.4% premium over the general Nevada RN mean, a narrower spread than many states because Nevada's base RN wages are already elevated by the staffing shortage dynamic. University Medical Center of Southern Nevada's ICU, as the only Level I trauma ICU in Clark County, is the top-paying and highest-acuity critical care environment in the state.
ER nurses in Nevada average approximately $88,325/year. That ER-to-general-RN premium is modest at 16.5%, which reflects the unusual dynamics of Nevada's emergency nursing market: the Las Vegas corridor has so many emergency facilities relative to its population (because tourist volume demands it) that ER nurse supply is comparatively robust within the metro. The shortage premium is more pronounced at the specialty-specific Level I trauma level than in the broader ER nurse category.
University Medical Center of Southern Nevada (UMC) is Clark County's only Level I trauma center and public teaching hospital, operating approximately 541 licensed beds in Las Vegas. UMC is Nevada's only designated Level I trauma center for a state of 3.2 million people — a notable concentration of critical care capacity in a single facility. As the county's safety-net hospital, UMC manages the full spectrum of trauma, burn, neonatal intensive care, and complex surgical cases that the private systems can't or won't carry. UMC pays at the top of the Las Vegas market for ICU, trauma, and emergency nursing, and runs one of the state's more established nursing residency programs. It is also one of the few Level I burn centers in the region.
Valley Health System, operated by Universal Health Services (UHS), runs six hospitals across the Las Vegas metro: Spring Valley Hospital, Centennial Hills Hospital, Desert Springs Hospital, Henderson Hospital, Summerlin Hospital, and Valley Hospital Medical Center. This network accounts for a significant share of Las Vegas's non-trauma acute care capacity. UHS facilities tend to be community-focused acute care hospitals with solid volume in medical-surgical, OB, and general ICU. Henderson and Summerlin campuses serve the fastest-growing suburban corridors in the metro.
HCA Healthcare's Nevada Division includes Sunrise Hospital and Medical Center (620-bed Level II trauma center — the largest private hospital in Nevada), MountainView Hospital, and Southern Hills Hospital. Sunrise is the dominant private hospital in Las Vegas in both bed count and trauma capability. HCA's Nevada facilities follow the national HCA pay structure, which tends to be competitive but not the top of market. HCA has invested over $300 million in clinical education in the Nevada region and operates the Galen College of Nursing's Las Vegas campus at Southern Hills Hospital — a direct pipeline investment to address the nursing shortage.
Dignity Health St. Rose Dominican operates three hospitals in the Henderson and Las Vegas area: Siena Campus, Rose de Lima Campus, and San Martín Campus. The faith-based CommonSpirit system brings more structured mission-driven nursing culture and tends to have lower volume and lower acuity than the UMC or HCA facilities, making it a reasonable option for nurses prioritizing work environment over top-of-market pay.
Renown Regional Medical Center anchors northern Nevada's healthcare market in Reno, operating as the region's only Level II trauma center with approximately 808 licensed beds. Renown is the largest employer in the Reno-Sparks metro and the dominant referral center for central and northern Nevada and portions of northern California. Nursing wages at Renown run slightly below the Las Vegas metro average, which tracks with Reno's lower cost of living relative to Las Vegas.
Nevada has no personal income tax. Full stop. Nine states share this status — Nevada, Texas, Florida, Washington, Wyoming, Alaska, South Dakota, Tennessee (investment income only), and New Hampshire (investment income only) — and for nurses comparing offers across state lines, the zero-tax states represent a genuine take-home advantage.
The math at the Nevada RN mean of $105,710: a comparable nurse in Arizona (2.5% flat) pays roughly $2,640 in state taxes. In Colorado (4.55% flat), approximately $4,810. In Oregon (graduated, up to 9.9%), approximately $7,400+. Nevada's zero rate keeps that entire amount in your paycheck. For travel nurses setting up Nevada contracts with a tax home in another zero-income-tax state, the stipend model compounds this advantage further — your blended effective tax rate can drop below most full-time staff nurses elsewhere.
The practical caveat: Las Vegas's cost of living has risen substantially in the last five years. Housing costs have increased significantly relative to the city's historical affordability. The take-home advantage from zero income tax is real but partially offset by housing costs that now exceed many Sun Belt metros that do levy income tax. That said, Nevada still compares favorably on net take-home math versus most coastal states.
Nevada's zero income tax changes the net pay calculation significantly. Run your full take-home estimate — base pay, stipend value, blended tax impact — in under 2 minutes.
Nevada Stipend Calculator →Nevada is not a member of the Nurse Licensure Compact (NLC). As of 2026, nurses from compact states cannot use their multistate license to practice in Nevada — a separate Nevada endorsement application through the Nevada State Board of Nursing (NSBN) is required. Processing times vary; plan for 4–8 weeks minimum for a Nevada endorsement.
This non-compact status puts Nevada in a small group of western holdouts that includes California and Oregon. Neighboring Utah, Arizona, Idaho, Montana, and Wyoming are all NLC members — meaning a nurse with a compact license issued in any of those states can cross into each other's markets freely but needs a separate application for Nevada. Given Nevada's nursing shortage, the legislature has considered NLC membership multiple times; a 2022 Nevada Board of Nursing survey found 92% of Nevada nurses supported joining the compact. As of 2026, no enabling legislation has passed, but the political trajectory appears favorable.
For travel nurses targeting Nevada assignments: build the endorsement application into your pre-assignment timeline. Many agencies will reimburse Nevada licensure costs as part of the contract package given the state's consistent demand for travel nurses. Apply early — don't wait until after you've accepted a contract start date.
Nevada NPs operate under full practice authority since 2013. The Nevada State Board of Nursing handles NP licensure exclusively; there is no physician collaborative agreement required and no supervised practice period. APRN licensure in Nevada follows a straightforward application through the NSBN with national certification verification.
Nevada registered nurses average $105,710 per year ($50.82/hr) per BLS OEWS May 2025 — 4.2% above the national mean of $101,420. The state's nursing shortage (needs 3,000+ more nurses to match national ratios) and Las Vegas's high-volume emergency market keep wages elevated. With zero state income tax, Nevada's effective take-home exceeds states with higher gross salaries in the 2.5–5% income tax range.
Travel nurses in Nevada average $102,983/year in posted base pay (ZipRecruiter 2026). Total package with tax-free housing and M&IE stipends runs approximately $125,000 per year. Zero state income tax amplifies the take-home advantage for travel nurses. Las Vegas is the primary market — UMC Southern Nevada, Sunrise Hospital (HCA), and Valley Health System consistently post travel demand, especially in ER, ICU, and L&D specialties.
Nevada CRNAs earn approximately $259,168 per year (TheCRNA.com 2026 blended data) — 4.4% above the national mean of $248,320. The premium reflects rural Nevada's anesthesia coverage gaps: large central and northern Nevada areas depend on CRNAs as their only anesthesia providers. With zero state income tax, Nevada is one of the strongest net-take-home CRNA markets in the western US.
Yes. Nevada granted full practice authority to nurse practitioners in 2013 via Senate Bill 172. Nevada NPs can diagnose, treat, and prescribe — including controlled substances — without any collaborative agreement or transition period. This makes Nevada one of the more established FPA markets in the West, with over a decade of independent NP practice embedded in its healthcare infrastructure. Rural NP positions carry shortage premiums of 15–25% above urban Nevada rates.
No. Nevada is not a member of the Nurse Licensure Compact (NLC) as of 2026. Nurses from compact states must apply for a separate Nevada endorsement through the Nevada State Board of Nursing. Processing typically takes 4–8 weeks. Neighboring Utah, Arizona, Idaho, and Montana are all compact members — Nevada's non-compact status is one of the few ways it differs markedly from the surrounding western market. A 2022 NSBN survey found 92% of Nevada nurses supported NLC membership; legislation has not yet passed as of this writing.