Nursing Leadership salaries: $55.24/hr median.
Nursing leadership roles oversee clinical operations and staff management — charge nurses, nurse managers, and directors of nursing.
Showing 6 titles (6 with pay data) across 1 tracks and 87 states. Latest data as of April 30, 2026.
Compare the tracks that make up Nursing Leadership.
The titles paying most in Nursing Leadership.
The biggest job pools in Nursing Leadership.
| Role | Category · Track | Median /hr | P25–P75 | Postings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nurse Manager | Nursing Leadership · Nursing Leadership | $62.50 | $49.00–$81.05 | 1,988 |
| Nurse Supervisor | Nursing Leadership · Nursing Leadership | $51.00 | $44.50–$71.63 | 1,491 |
| Charge Nurse | Nursing Leadership · Nursing Leadership | $42.50 | $33.50–$50.50 | 1,283 |
| Director of Nursing (DON) | Nursing Leadership · Nursing Leadership | $77.45 | $71.15–$90.68 | 312 |
| Clinical Nurse Leader (CNL) | Nursing Leadership · Nursing Leadership | $68.85 | $58.88–$83.79 | 58 |
| Chief Nursing Officer (CNO) | Nursing Leadership · Nursing Leadership | $127.90 | $103.24–$153.17 | 7 |
Nursing Leadership pay across every state with live data.
Showing all 47 states with live data. Bars scale to the highest-paying state.
How to become a Nursing Leadership.
Nursing leadership roles run the operational and clinical management side of nursing — staffing, budget, quality, throughput, and workforce development for a unit, department, or system. The category includes charge nurses, nurse supervisors, nurse managers, directors of nursing, and chief nursing officers. Every leadership role builds on years of bedside RN experience plus progressively more education and operational responsibility.
Standard path: BSN + 5-10 years of clinical experience → MSN in nursing administration or MBA/MHA → progressive leadership roles from charge nurse to nurse manager to director to CNO. Most CNOs hold an MSN-NL or DNP plus 15+ years of nursing experience including operational leadership.
| Degree | Duration | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Bachelor of Science in NursingBSN | 4 years | Functional baseline for charge and lead RN roles. Some smaller systems still hire ADN-prepared charge nurses, but BSN is the norm. |
| MSN — Nursing Administration / Executive LeadershipMSN-NL | 2 years post-BSN | Standard credential for nurse manager, director, and CNO tracks. Covers healthcare finance, HR, quality, and systems leadership. |
| MBA / MHA | 2 years | Alternative or supplement to MSN-NL for nurse leaders moving toward CNO, COO, or system executive roles. |
| Doctor of Nursing Practice — ExecutiveDNP | 3-4 years | Doctoral terminal degree for executive nursing roles. Increasingly common for CNO and Vice President roles in academic systems. |
Active unencumbered RN license required for all nurse leader roles up through CNO. Bedside licensure remains the foundation for clinical credibility.
Required at most systems even for leadership roles that don't deliver direct care.
| Credential | Issued by | Pay impact |
|---|---|---|
| NE-BC Nurse Executive - Board Certified Standard board credential for nurse managers and directors. Eligibility requires a BSN, an MSN, and management experience. | ANCC | +5-10% |
| NEA-BC Nurse Executive, Advanced - Board Certified Executive-level credential for CNOs and senior leaders. Requires graduate-level education plus 2+ years in a senior executive role. | ANCC | +5-15% |
| CENP Certified in Executive Nursing Practice Executive nursing credential from the American Organization for Nursing Leadership. Common for VP and CNO tracks. | AONL / AONE | +5-15% |
| Clinical specialty board CCRN / CEN / CNOR / etc. Clinical specialty certifications carry forward into unit-level leadership — a CCRN charge nurse and a CNOR OR director both signal credibility with their teams. | AACN / BCEN / CCI | +5-10% |
- 3-5 years RNCharge Nurse
Shift-level leadership for a single unit. Handles assignments, admissions/discharges, breaks, and rapid-response coordination.
- 5-7 yearsLead RN / Unit-Based Council Chair
Recognized clinical and operational leader on a unit. Often the bridge role into formal nurse-manager appointments.
- 7-10 yearsNurse Manager
Full operational ownership of a unit or service line: staffing, budget, hiring, quality, and 24/7 unit performance. MSN often required.
- 10-15 yearsDirector of Nursing
Multi-unit or service-line oversight (e.g. all critical care, all perioperative services). Owns strategy and operational performance for that domain.
- 12-18 yearsVice President of Nursing / Associate CNO
System or hospital-level executive responsible for a major nursing domain. Often a stepping stone to the CNO seat.
- 15+ yearsChief Nursing Officer (CNO)
Top nursing executive in a hospital or system. Owns nursing strategy, workforce, and quality; partners with CMO and CEO on overall care delivery.
Schedule. Charge nurses work shifts; managers and above work primarily business hours with significant on-call exposure (24/7 unit accountability). Directors and CNOs work substantial weeks and weekends during crises, surveys, and major operational events.
Physical demands. Largely operational rather than physical. Leaders often back-fill bedside during staffing crises, especially nurse managers, so the underlying physical demands of the unit still apply intermittently.
Healthcare management overall is one of the fastest-growing US occupational categories. Nursing leadership specifically benefits from workforce churn (post-pandemic retirements, manager burnout) plus the ongoing build-out of value-based care, quality reporting, and Magnet certification programs.