LIVE MARKET·1,437 POSTINGS · LAST 180 DAYS

Behavioral Health Nurse salary: $68.85/hr median.

Across 1,437 active postings · 2 titles with data · 85 states.

Browse Behavioral Health Nurse salary titles in Registered Nurse (RN), including posting volume, median pay, state coverage, and role-level comparisons.

Titles
2
2 with data
Postings
1,437
Median /hr
$68.85
$143,204/yr
Coverage
85 states
482 employers
01·PAY DISTRIBUTION·P10 → P90

How Behavioral Health Nurse pay is distributed across the market.

10% of postings pay under $44.00. The top 10% pay above $142.95.

P10
$44.00
P25
$53.11
P50
$68.85
P75
$100.00
P90
$142.95
P10
$44.00
$91,520/yr
P25
$53.11
$110,469/yr
P50 (median)
$68.85
$143,208/yr
P75
$100.00
$208,000/yr
P90
$142.95
$297,336/yr
03·STATE BREAKDOWN·n=1,437

Behavioral Health Nurse pay across every state with live data.

01Alaska AK14 postings
$69.10/hr
02Arkansas AR6 postings
$52.60/hr
03California CA86 postings
$55.70/hr
04Colorado CO49 postings
$52.26/hr
05Connecticut CT44 postings
$62.55/hr
06Florida FL24 postings
$71.25/hr
07Georgia GA7 postings
$77.50/hr
08Idaho ID5 postings
$60.50/hr
09Illinois IL31 postings
$63.38/hr
10Iowa IA36 postings
$44.00/hr
11Kansas KS13 postings
$50.30/hr
12Kentucky KY38 postings
$74.13/hr
13Maine ME49 postings
$61.21/hr
14Maryland MD40 postings
$76.38/hr
15Massachusetts MA114 postings
$63.51/hr
16Michigan MI5 postings
$59.19/hr
17Missouri MO5 postings
$52.06/hr
18Montana MT30 postings
$66.25/hr
19Nebraska NE31 postings
$44.00/hr
20Nevada NV5 postings
$74.00/hr
21New Hampshire NH73 postings
$64.89/hr
22New Jersey NJ25 postings
$91.70/hr
23New Mexico NM10 postings
$57.12/hr
24New York NY87 postings
$80.94/hr
25North Carolina NC15 postings
$53.17/hr
26North Dakota ND9 postings
$63.65/hr
27Ohio OH40 postings
$52.07/hr
28Oklahoma OK7 postings
$57.22/hr
29Oregon OR7 postings
$90.00/hr
30Pennsylvania PA25 postings
$60.87/hr
31Rhode Island RI7 postings
$59.77/hr
32South Dakota SD11 postings
$60.89/hr
33Tennessee TN7 postings
$53.17/hr
34Texas TX39 postings
$79.36/hr
35Utah UT8 postings
$50.25/hr
36Vermont VT7 postings
$63.88/hr
37Virginia VA39 postings
$67.17/hr
38Washington WA32 postings
$75.94/hr

Showing all 38 states with live data. Bars scale to the highest-paying state.

05·HIGHEST MEDIAN HOURLY·LAST 180 DAYS

Highest-paying job titles in the Behavioral Health Nurse track.

RoleCategory · TrackMedian /hrP25–P75PostingsΔ pay
Mental Health NurseRegistered Nurse (RN) · Behavioral Health Nurse$85.00$72.63–$100.00382 4.4%
Psychiatric NurseRegistered Nurse (RN) · Behavioral Health Nurse$63.00$53.11–$79.001,055 31.1%
06·HOW TO BECOME·CAREER PATHWAY·GENERAL TO REGISTERED NURSE (RN)

How to become a Behavioral Health Nurse.

Registered Nurses provide and coordinate patient care, educate patients and families about health conditions, and provide emotional support throughout treatment. The RN umbrella spans every clinical specialty — from ICU and ER to labor & delivery, oncology, OR, and ambulatory care — so the licensing path is shared but specialty training comes after.

Education·Min: ADN · Preferred: BSN

Most RNs complete either an ADN or a BSN, then pass the NCLEX-RN to earn state licensure. The market has shifted decisively toward BSN-preferred (and increasingly BSN-required) hospital hiring — Magnet-designated and academic medical centers typically require a BSN, and many hospitals will hire ADNs only on the condition they complete an RN-to-BSN bridge within 3-5 years.

DegreeDurationNotes
Associate Degree in NursingADN2-3 yearsEntry-level nursing degree offered at community colleges. Qualifies graduates to take NCLEX-RN.
Bachelor of Science in NursingBSN4 yearsPreferred by most hospitals and required for many positions, including Magnet-designated facilities. Opens doors to leadership and specialized roles.
Accelerated BSNABSN12-18 monthsIntensive program for students who already hold a non-nursing bachelor's degree. Lets career-changers reach NCLEX eligibility quickly.
Master of Science in NursingMSN2-3 years post-BSNRequired for advanced practice roles like Nurse Practitioner, Clinical Nurse Specialist, or nurse leadership.
Direct-Entry MSN3 yearsCombined RN-to-APRN route for non-nursing bachelor's holders who want to become an RN and an APRN in one program.
Licenses & Exams·3 credentials
RN LicenseRegistered Nurse LicenseRequired
Exam: NCLEX-RN · Issued by: State Board of Nursing

State-issued license required to practice nursing. Must pass NCLEX-RN and meet your state board's background and education requirements.

BLSBasic Life SupportRequired
Issued by: American Heart Association

CPR and basic emergency cardiovascular care certification — required at hire by essentially every inpatient employer.

Compact LicenseNurse Licensure Compact (NLC)Optional
Issued by: NCSBN

Multi-state license available in compact states (~40 states as of 2026). Valuable for travel nursing and telehealth — your home-state license lets you practice in any other compact state without re-applying.

Optional Certifications·Pay boost where known
CredentialIssued byPay impact
CCRN
Critical Care Registered Nurse
Standard credential for ICU/critical care RNs. Requires ~1,750 hours of direct critical-care experience.
AACN+8-15%
CEN
Certified Emergency Nurse
Validates specialty knowledge in emergency department nursing.
BCEN+5-10%
PCCN
Progressive Care Certified Nurse
For nurses caring for acutely ill adult patients in step-down and progressive care units.
AACN+5-10%
RNC-OB
Registered Nurse Certified - Inpatient Obstetric
Specialty certification for labor & delivery and high-risk OB nurses.
NCC+5-10%
OCN
Oncology Certified Nurse
Validates expertise in adult oncology nursing — infusion, inpatient, and outpatient settings.
ONCC+5-10%
CNOR
Certified Perioperative Nurse
Standard for OR/perioperative nurses; demonstrates competence across surgical specialties.
CCI+5-10%
Career Path·6 steps
  1. 0-1 years
    New Graduate RN / Residency

    Entry-level position, often in a structured 6-12 month nurse residency program. Focus on building foundational bedside skills with preceptor support.

  2. 1-3 years
    Staff RN

    Independent bedside nurse with growing autonomy and clinical judgment. Often the point at which a nurse picks a specialty (ICU, ER, OR, L&D, etc.).

  3. 3-5 years
    Senior RN / Charge Nurse

    Takes on leadership responsibilities, mentors new nurses, coordinates unit activities. Typically holds a specialty certification.

  4. 5-8 years
    Clinical Nurse Specialist or Nurse Educator

    Advanced roles requiring MSN. Focus on improving care quality, evidence-based practice, or training staff.

  5. 8+ years
    Nurse Manager / Director

    Leadership oversight of nursing units, budgets, and staff. MSN often required; MBA or DNP common at the director level.

  6. 15+ years
    Chief Nursing Officer (CNO)

    Executive leadership overseeing all nursing operations across a hospital or system. Requires MSN/DNP and extensive operational experience.

Work Environment
Hospitals (inpatient and ER)Outpatient clinics and ambulatory surgeryLong-term care and SNFsHome health and hospiceSchools and occupational healthTravel nursing assignmentsTelehealth

Schedule. Inpatient nursing is dominated by 12-hour shifts (typically 3 shifts per week). Outpatient roles run business hours with no nights/weekends. Travel contracts are usually 13 weeks at 36-48 hours per week.

Physical demands. Physically demanding: long stretches on your feet, frequent patient lifting and repositioning, and consistent exposure to bloodborne pathogens. Emotionally demanding in acute care.

Job Outlook·Strong
+6% (2022-2032)

Nursing remains one of the fastest-growing US occupations. The Bureau of Labor Statistics projects ~193,000 RN openings per year through 2032, driven by an aging population, retiring baby-boomer nurses, and the continued post-pandemic acuity bump. Travel and per-diem rates have settled below 2021-2022 peaks but remain above pre-pandemic baselines.

FAQ — Becoming this role·4 questions
How long does it take to become an RN?

Typically 2-4 years depending on the degree route. An ADN takes 2-3 years, a BSN takes 4. Accelerated BSN programs for second-degree students can finish in 12-18 months. After graduation you must pass the NCLEX-RN before practicing.

Is a BSN worth it over an ADN?

In most regional markets, yes. BSN-prepared nurses have access to a broader pool of hospital jobs (especially Magnet-designated centers), command higher starting pay in many systems, and have a clearer path into specialty units, leadership, and APRN programs. ADN remains a faster, cheaper entry point — particularly in rural or community-hospital markets.

What is the NCLEX-RN pass rate?

First-time pass rates for US-educated candidates have run 79-87% in recent years. Pass rates vary substantially by program. Most schools publish their first-time NCLEX rate, which is the cleanest signal of program quality.

Do I need a specialty certification to work in ICU or ER?

Not for your first job — most ICU and ER hires are new grads or general med-surg nurses entering a specialty residency. Specialty certifications like CCRN (ICU) or CEN (ER) are typically pursued after 1-2 years on the unit and often come with a small pay differential or a one-time bonus.

05·BROWSE 2 ROLES·FROM CNA TO PERFUSIONIST

Every clinical role we track, with live pay ranges.

Showing 2 of 2 roles. Median is hourly P50 across active postings.Browse the full directory →