Nurse Practitioner Salary in United States

$112,000Regional estimate

The median Nurse Practitioner salary in the United States is $112,000. The salary range for Nurse Practitioners typically falls between $83,000 and $199,000. This estimate is based on regional data and may vary.

Pay percentiles

Regional estimate
25th percentile
$83,000
Median (p50)
$112,000
75th percentile
$151,000
Top 10% (p90)
$199,000

Gross annual, local currency.

Salary by seniority

Estimated
Junior$67,000-40%
Mid-level$99,000-12%
Senior$140,000+25%
Lead / Exec$196,000+75%

Total compensation

Base80%
Bonus8%
Equity4%
Benefits8%

Benefits are worth about $13,500 a year on top of cash pay.

Where this pay goes furthest

The same package, in local cost-of-living terms, across markets.

How we calculate this

These figures represent gross annual Nurse Practitioner salaries across various regions in the United States. The data is a regional estimate, not an official national average. Benefits add an estimated $13,500 per year to compensation.

Frequently asked questions

Is a $112,000 Nurse Practitioner salary considered good pay?

A median salary of $112,000 for a Nurse Practitioner is generally considered strong pay. It is above the 25th percentile of $83,000, indicating that half of Nurse Practitioners earn more than this amount.

How does a senior Nurse Practitioner salary compare to a junior Nurse Practitioner salary?

Senior Nurse Practitioners earn a median salary of $140,000, significantly higher than the junior median of $67,000. This reflects the increased experience and responsibilities typically held by senior practitioners.

What is the total compensation for a Nurse Practitioner?

Total compensation includes base salary plus benefits. The estimated value of benefits per year is $13,500, which should be considered alongside the base salary when evaluating overall earnings.

How are Nurse Practitioner salaries calculated?

Nurse Practitioner salaries are influenced by factors like experience, location, specialty, and employer. The figures provided represent percentiles and medians based on regional data, not a single calculation method.

Go deeper