LIVE MARKET·29,716 POSTINGS · LAST 180 DAYS

Nursing Support salaries: $19.66/hr median.

Nursing support staff (CNAs, patient-care technicians) provide essential bedside care under registered nurse supervision.

Showing 15 titles (14 with pay data) across 7 tracks and 103 states. Latest data as of April 30, 2026.

Titles
15
14 with data
Postings
29,716
29,191 unique
Median /hr
$19.66
$40,897/yr
Tracks
7
103 states
04·WHERE NURSING SUPPORT PAYS·POSTING-WEIGHTED MEDIAN

Nursing Support pay across every state with live data.

01Alabama179 postings
$16.22/hr
02Alaska18 postings
$43.95/hr
03Arizona466 postings
$19.00/hr
04Arkansas32 postings
$17.08/hr
05California1,624 postings
$25.62/hr
06Colorado352 postings
$21.90/hr
07Connecticut276 postings
$21.11/hr
08Delaware85 postings
$17.65/hr
09District Of Columbia31 postings
$21.63/hr
10Florida1,742 postings
$17.06/hr
11Georgia558 postings
$14.91/hr
12Hawaii68 postings
$24.28/hr
13Idaho42 postings
$21.07/hr
14Illinois1,191 postings
$21.37/hr
15Indiana468 postings
$17.51/hr
16Iowa169 postings
$22.10/hr
17Kansas145 postings
$17.68/hr
18Kentucky147 postings
$17.81/hr
19Louisiana43 postings
$15.19/hr
20Maine78 postings
$49.54/hr
21Maryland495 postings
$20.89/hr
22Massachusetts1,507 postings
$21.06/hr
23Michigan406 postings
$20.60/hr
24Minnesota948 postings
$21.22/hr
25Mississippi36 postings
$13.46/hr
26Missouri340 postings
$19.33/hr
27Montana29 postings
$21.21/hr
28Nebraska67 postings
$27.54/hr
29Nevada39 postings
$21.31/hr
30New Hampshire49 postings
$19.27/hr
31New Jersey2,664 postings
$20.23/hr
32New Mexico184 postings
$18.71/hr
33New York2,039 postings
$20.42/hr
34North Carolina625 postings
$16.97/hr
35North Dakota78 postings
$35.12/hr
36Ohio1,151 postings
$16.91/hr
37Oklahoma140 postings
$15.91/hr
38Oregon246 postings
$30.72/hr
39Pennsylvania1,812 postings
$17.87/hr
40Rhode Island130 postings
$21.00/hr
41South Carolina209 postings
$16.48/hr
42South Dakota51 postings
$20.97/hr
43Tennessee187 postings
$17.47/hr
44Texas560 postings
$17.95/hr
45Utah102 postings
$18.26/hr
46Vermont20 postings
$71.95/hr
47Virginia516 postings
$19.21/hr
48Washington373 postings
$24.35/hr
49West Virginia132 postings
$17.16/hr
50Wisconsin343 postings
$20.55/hr
51Wyoming11 postings
$19.00/hr

Showing all 51 states with live data. Bars scale to the highest-paying state.

05·HOW TO BECOME·CAREER PATHWAY

How to become a Nursing Support.

Nursing support roles provide hands-on patient care under the direction of nurses and physicians. The category covers Certified Nursing Assistants (CNAs), patient care techs, hospital aides, monitor techs, unit clerks, and direct-care staff in long-term care and home health. These are the largest entry points into healthcare — short training programs, fast credentialing, and immediate patient contact.

Education·Min: High school diploma + state-approved CNA program · Preferred: CNA + specialty certifications (acute care, telemetry, dementia care)

Standard CNA path: enroll in a state-approved nursing assistant program (4-12 weeks), complete supervised clinical hours, and pass your state's competency exam to be added to the Nurse Aide Registry. Hospital PCT roles typically require a CNA plus phlebotomy and EKG training; specialty add-ons (telemetry, dialysis tech, OB tech) follow with short certificate programs.

DegreeDurationNotes
State-approved CNA programCNA4-12 weeksMinimum 75 hours (federal floor) of classroom plus clinical training. Many states require 120+ hours. Programs are offered by community colleges, nursing homes, and the Red Cross.
Patient Care Technician programPCT12-20 weeksCombines CNA training with phlebotomy and EKG. Common requirement for hospital PCT roles.
Monitor / telemetry tech programCert4-8 weeksFocused training in cardiac rhythm interpretation. Often paired with CNA or PCT credentials.
Medication aide certificationCMA / QMA60-100 hoursState-regulated credential allowing CNAs to administer routine medications in long-term care. Not available in every state.
Licenses & Exams·3 credentials
CNA listingCertified Nursing AssistantRequired
Exam: State CNA competency exam · Issued by: State Department of Health / Nurse Aide Registry

Required to work as a nursing assistant. State Nurse Aide Registry maintained by each state's Department of Health. Federal minimum is 75 hours of training plus a competency exam.

BLSBasic Life SupportRequired
Issued by: American Heart Association

Required for nearly all hospital and skilled-nursing positions.

Phlebotomy certificationCertified Phlebotomy Technician (CPT)Optional
Issued by: NHA / ASCP / AMT

Required for hospital PCT roles in most systems. Short certificate program plus an exam (NHA, ASCP, or AMT).

Optional Certifications·Pay boost where known
CredentialIssued byPay impact
CMA / QMA medication aide
Certified or Qualified Medication Aide
Lets CNAs administer routine oral medications in long-term care. Recognized in roughly half of states.
State board+5-10%
Telemetry / EKG certification
Certified Cardiographic Technician / EKG Technician
Required for cardiac monitor and telemetry tech positions.
CCI / NHA+5-10%
Dementia / Alzheimer specialty training
Certified Dementia Practitioner (CDP)
Specialty credential for memory care and long-term care units.
NCCDP+3-8%
Career Path·5 steps
  1. 0-2 years
    CNA / Nursing assistant

    Entry point into clinical healthcare. Direct patient care under nurse supervision. Many use this stage to confirm interest before pursuing nursing school.

  2. 1-4 years
    Patient Care Tech / Acute Care CNA

    Hospital-based with broader scope (phlebotomy, EKG, point-of-care testing). Better pay than long-term care CNA roles in most markets.

  3. 3-7 years
    Specialty tech (telemetry, ED, OR, dialysis)

    Specialty-trained support role with focused scope. Often pursued as part of a longer plan toward nursing or allied health school.

  4. 5+ years
    Lead CNA / Senior PCT

    Mentor and trainer for new staff. Coordinates assignments and supports unit workflow.

  5. Path-dependent
    Transition to LPN / RN / Allied Health

    The most common 'level 5' for nursing support is a transition into a credentialed clinical role (LPN, RN, surgical tech, respiratory therapy, etc.). Many employers offer tuition reimbursement to fund the move.

Work Environment
Hospitals (med-surg, ICU, ED)Skilled nursing facilitiesLong-term and memory careHome health and hospiceRehabilitation centersOutpatient surgery and dialysis centers

Schedule. Hospitals run 12-hour shifts (3 per week) covering days, nights, and weekends. Skilled nursing typically runs 8-hour shifts with three coverage windows. Home health is largely daytime with travel between patients.

Physical demands. Among the most physically demanding roles in healthcare. Frequent patient lifting, transfers, and repositioning. Mechanical lifts have reduced injury rates but back, knee, and shoulder strain remain common.

Job Outlook·Strong
+4-5% (2022-2032)

Demand for CNAs and patient care techs is structurally high — driven by an aging US population, persistent SNF understaffing, and steady hospital throughput. Turnover is high (industry-wide annual turnover ~50% in long-term care), which keeps openings widely available.

FAQ — Becoming this role·3 questions
How fast can I become a CNA?

4-12 weeks in most states. The federal minimum is 75 hours of training plus a state competency exam, but many states require 120+ hours. Some employers (especially skilled nursing facilities) will pay for your training in exchange for a work commitment.

CNA vs PCT — what's the difference?

CNA is the regulated state credential. PCT (Patient Care Tech) is a hospital job title that typically requires a CNA plus phlebotomy and EKG training. Hospital PCT roles generally pay more than long-term care CNA roles.

Is being a CNA a good way to test out nursing as a career?

Yes — it's the most popular path. Many BSN and ADN students keep working as a CNA or PCT through nursing school. The clinical exposure helps in nursing school clinicals, and most employers offer tuition reimbursement once you're employed.