Women's Health Nurse salary: $65.69/hr$2,628/wk$136,625/yr median.
Pay range $57.50$2,300$119,600–$73.71/hr$2,948/wk$153,317/yr across the middle 50% of active Women's Health Nurse Registered Nurse (RN) postings nationwide.
131 unique employers · 463 cities · 51 states. Pay moved +22.3% over the last 30 days.
How Women's Health Nurse pay is distributed.
10% of postings pay under $51.70/hr$2,068/wk$107,536/yr. The top 10% pay above $81.52/hr$3,261/wk$169,562/yr.
How Women's Health Nurse pay has moved month over month.
Median pay moved from $78.03 in Nov 2025 to $73.18 in Apr 2026 (-6.2%). Bars show monthly posting volume; the line tracks the posting-weighted median.
| Month | Median /hr/wk/yr | P25–P75 | Postings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nov 2025 | $78.03$3,121$162,302 | $66.74$2,670$138,819–$86.88$3,475$180,710 | 207 |
| Dec 2025 | $73.43$2,937$152,734 | $71.20$2,848$148,096–$77.42$3,097$161,034 | 124 |
| Jan 2026 | $72.72$2,909$151,258 | $70.59$2,824$146,827–$76.28$3,051$158,662 | 123 |
| Feb 2026 | $71.65$2,866$149,032 | $70.07$2,803$145,746–$75.02$3,001$156,042 | 115 |
| Mar 2026 | $59.90$2,396$124,592 | $54.60$2,184$113,568–$65.00$2,600$135,200 | 810 |
| Apr 2026 | $73.18$2,927$152,214 | $71.38$2,855$148,470–$75.72$3,029$157,498 | 75 |
Women's Health Nurse pay across every state with live data.
Showing all 42 states with live data. Bars scale to the highest-paying state.
The metros writing the biggest Women's Health Nurse paychecks.
| City | State | Median /hr/wk/yr | P25–P75 | Postings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| santa clara | CA · CALIFORNIA | $87.70$3,508$182,416 | $85.63$3,425$178,110–$89.45$3,578$186,056 | 15 |
| redwood city | CA · CALIFORNIA | $87.50$3,500$182,000 | $86.59$3,464$180,107–$89.38$3,575$185,910 | 10 |
| novato | CA · CALIFORNIA | $85.08$3,403$176,966 | $83.14$3,326$172,931–$88.53$3,541$184,142 | 10 |
| downey | CA · CALIFORNIA | $84.94$3,398$176,675 | $76.40$3,056$158,912–$86.29$3,452$179,483 | 12 |
| rockport | ME · MAINE | $78.45$3,138$163,176 | $75.75$3,030$157,560–$81.53$3,261$169,582 | 17 |
Where the top of the market is paying for Women's Health Nurse.
| Employer | Median /hr/wk/yr | Range | Postings |
|---|---|---|---|
| $80.13$3,205$166,670 | $54.25$2,170$112,840–$143.75$5,750$299,000 | 104 | |
| alliance services, inc. | $83.00$3,320$172,640 | $64.00$2,560$133,120–$84.00$3,360$174,720 | 7 |
| amn healthcare nursing | $75.15$3,006$156,312 | $48.83$1,953$101,566–$90.45$3,618$188,136 | 5 |
| compunnel healthcare | $75.00$3,000$156,000 | $64.00$2,560$133,120–$87.50$3,500$182,000 | 12 |
| cross country nurses | $81.69$3,268$169,915 | $52.25$2,090$108,680–$87.63$3,505$182,270 | 54 |
| fusion medical staffing-home health | $75.06$3,002$156,125 | $57.16$2,286$118,893–$85.05$3,402$176,904 | 14 |
| kaiser permanente | $111.95$4,478$232,856 | $61.55$2,462$128,024–$122.81$4,912$255,445 | 5 |
| lrs healthcare - travel nursing | $75.00$3,000$156,000 | $52.50$2,100$109,200–$82.50$3,300$171,600 | 5 |
| theraex staffing services | $95.00$3,800$197,600 | $62.00$2,480$128,960–$95.00$3,800$197,600 | 6 |
| trioptus | $76.97$3,079$160,098 | $73.15$2,926$152,152–$87.63$3,505$182,270 | 5 |
Showing all 10 employers with live pay data.
How Women's Health Nurse pay shifts by schedule and contract type.
Parttime pays the most at $67.50/hr$2,700/wk$140,400/yr median — 8% above Fulltime at $62.50/hr$2,500/wk$130,000/yr. Travel Contract drives the volume with 1,431 active postings.
How to become a Women's 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.
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.
| Degree | Duration | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Associate Degree in NursingADN | 2-3 years | Entry-level nursing degree offered at community colleges. Qualifies graduates to take NCLEX-RN. |
| Bachelor of Science in NursingBSN | 4 years | Preferred by most hospitals and required for many positions, including Magnet-designated facilities. Opens doors to leadership and specialized roles. |
| Accelerated BSNABSN | 12-18 months | Intensive program for students who already hold a non-nursing bachelor's degree. Lets career-changers reach NCLEX eligibility quickly. |
| Master of Science in NursingMSN | 2-3 years post-BSN | Required for advanced practice roles like Nurse Practitioner, Clinical Nurse Specialist, or nurse leadership. |
| Direct-Entry MSN | 3 years | Combined RN-to-APRN route for non-nursing bachelor's holders who want to become an RN and an APRN in one program. |
State-issued license required to practice nursing. Must pass NCLEX-RN and meet your state board's background and education requirements.
CPR and basic emergency cardiovascular care certification — required at hire by essentially every inpatient employer.
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.
| Credential | Issued by | Pay 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% |
- 0-1 yearsNew 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.
- 1-3 yearsStaff 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.).
- 3-5 yearsSenior RN / Charge Nurse
Takes on leadership responsibilities, mentors new nurses, coordinates unit activities. Typically holds a specialty certification.
- 5-8 yearsClinical Nurse Specialist or Nurse Educator
Advanced roles requiring MSN. Focus on improving care quality, evidence-based practice, or training staff.
- 8+ yearsNurse Manager / Director
Leadership oversight of nursing units, budgets, and staff. MSN often required; MBA or DNP common at the director level.
- 15+ yearsChief Nursing Officer (CNO)
Executive leadership overseeing all nursing operations across a hospital or system. Requires MSN/DNP and extensive operational experience.
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.
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.
What clinicians ask about Women's Health Nurse pay.
What is the average Women's Health Nurse salary in 2026?
The median Women's Health Nurse salary is $65.69/hr (approximately $136,625/yr) based on 1,454 active job postings.
What is the pay range for Women's Health Nurse?
Hourly pay ranges from $57.50 at the 25th percentile to $73.71 at the 75th percentile, with the top 10% earning above $81.52/hr.
Which state pays Women's Health Nurse roles the most?
Alabama currently leads with a median of $69.39/hr across 0 postings.
How many employers are hiring Women's Health Nurses?
Our dataset shows 131 unique employers posting Women's Health Nurse roles across 51 states.
Where does TrueRounds get Women's Health Nurse salary data?
All salary figures are computed from active US healthcare job postings with listed pay ranges, collected over a rolling 180-day window and weighted by posting volume.
Explore other Registered Nurse (RN) tracks.
Women's Health Nurse sits inside the Women's Health Nurse track. Here are sibling tracks across Registered Nurse (RN) — same category, different clinical focus and pay envelope.
Active US healthcare postings. Weighted by volume. Refreshed daily.
Pay benchmarks are computed from active job postings with listed pay ranges, collected on a rolling 180-day window. Each role's percentiles are weighted by posting volume so a metro with two postings doesn't outweigh a metro with two hundred. Outliers (postings priced more than 4× the role median) are dropped to avoid contract-line distortion.
Use the data, then push back.
Bring these numbers into your next contract conversation. Recruiters know what the market pays — now you do too.