A nurse residency pays a standard new-graduate RN wage — you are a fully licensed nurse, not a trainee at a discount. What varies is where you work and what comes with the base.
What drives the number
- Geography — the single biggest factor. High-cost metros (California, the Northeast, major cities) pay well above rural and lower-cost regions, but cost of living usually tracks it.
- Shift and differentials — nights, weekends, and holidays add meaningful pay on top of base.
- Setting — academic medical centers, community hospitals, and government/VA employers pay on different scales.
- Union contracts — where present, they often set transparent, step-based new-grad pay.
Look past base pay
Two offers with the same salary can differ by thousands once you count sign-on bonuses, health and retirement benefits, tuition reimbursement, and relocation. A residency's service commitment (often 1–2 years) is part of the deal, too — factor it in.
An honest note on numbers
We don't publish a salary figure on each program page, because reliable, current, program-specific pay data isn't something we can verify from public sources — and a wrong number is worse than none. For real figures, use the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics' Registered Nurse wage data by state and metro, your state nurses association, and the offer letter itself, which is the only number that binds.
Compare offers the right way
When you have offers in hand, compare total compensation adjusted for cost of living, then weigh the training quality — a stronger residency can be worth more than a few thousand dollars in year-one base. Start from how to choose a program.