Best States for Nurse Practitioners & Physician Assistants — The Complete 2026 Guide
Best States for Nurse Practitioners & Physician Assistants — The Complete 2026 Guide
Full practice authority states, rural vs. urban compensation, and how the rise of NPs and PAs is reshaping America’s response to the physician shortage and an aging population.
I spent years as an ER and ICU nurse before becoming a physician recruiter. In 16 years of placing physicians and APPs across the country, I have watched the role of Nurse Practitioners and Physician Assistants evolve more in the last five years than in the previous fifteen combined.
If you’re an NP or PA trying to decide where to practice — which state, which setting, rural or urban — this guide is built to answer the questions I get asked most often. And if you’re a recruiter trying to understand the APP market you’re hiring into, this will give you the full picture too.
The Best States for APPs — Full Practice Authority
The single biggest factor separating the best states for Nurse Practitioners from the rest is practice authority. States fall into three categories: Full Practice, Reduced Practice, and Restricted Practice.
What Full Practice Authority Actually Means
In Full Practice Authority states, NPs can evaluate patients, diagnose, order and interpret diagnostic tests, and initiate and manage treatments — including prescribing medications — under the exclusive licensure authority of the state board of nursing, without a mandated physician collaboration or supervision agreement.
This is not a minor administrative distinction. It affects how independently you can practice, how quickly you can open or join a practice, and in many markets, how much you can earn.
Massive Medicare Advantage market. Explosive population growth. One of the strongest APP markets in the country right now.
Booming retirement population. Phoenix is one of the highest-demand APP metros in the U.S.
Strong outdoor lifestyle draw. Growing demand in both urban Denver and rural mountain communities.
Among the strongest NP compensation markets in the country. Pacific Northwest lifestyle.
Significant rural access gaps creating strong demand and broad scope of practice opportunities.
Fast-growing population, zero state income tax, and a significant primary care access gap.
Among the broadest rural NP scope-of-practice environments in the country. High autonomy.
Not yet full practice authority, but moving in that direction. Zero state income tax. Fastest growing metros in the U.S.
Important note: Practice authority laws change as state legislatures act. Always verify current status with your state board of nursing or the American Association of Nurse Practitioners (AANP) state practice environment map before making a career or relocation decision.
Rural vs. Urban — Which Is Better for APPs?
This is one of the most common questions I get from NPs and PAs evaluating their next move, and the honest answer is: it depends entirely on what you’re optimizing for.
| Factor | Rural Practice | Urban Practice |
|---|---|---|
| Autonomy | Maximum — often the sole provider | Moderate — more physician collaboration |
| Loan Forgiveness | NHSC, state programs widely available | Limited availability |
| Cost of Living | Significantly lower | Higher, especially coastal metros |
| Base Compensation | Competitive, often with incentives | Higher absolute numbers |
| Specialist Access | Limited — more referral coordination | Extensive — easy specialist collaboration |
| Career Variety | Broad scope, fewer subspecialty paths | More subspecialty and advancement options |
| Community Impact | Profound — you are often irreplaceable | Meaningful, but more distributed |
For APPs who want maximum autonomy and a community that genuinely depends on them — rural is hard to beat. For APPs who want career variety, specialty collaboration, and higher absolute compensation — urban managed care is currently the strongest market.
Average APP Compensation in 2026
Compensation varies significantly by state, setting, and specialty. Here’s the honest range based on what I’m seeing in active placements across the country right now.
Nurse Practitioner Compensation
Outpatient primary care in competitive metro markets
Value-based primary care for senior populations
Plus loan forgiveness — significant total value
Higher acuity, specialized clinical settings
Physician Assistant Compensation
Outpatient family and internal medicine settings
OR-based and surgical subspecialty support
ER and urgent care settings
Plus incentives and loan forgiveness eligibility
The Rise of APPs and America’s Aging Population
Two forces are converging right now in a way that is permanently reshaping the role of NPs and PAs in American healthcare — and neither one is reversing anytime soon.
The U.S. is projected to face a shortage of 86,000+ physicians by 2034. In primary care and managed care specifically — the specialties serving the most patients — that gap is already being felt today, not in some future projection.
Roughly 10,000 Americans turn 65 every single day. The Medicare Advantage population is expanding rapidly in nearly every major U.S. market, driving extraordinary demand for primary care, chronic disease management, and Annual Wellness Visits.
In Medicare Advantage and managed care settings specifically, NPs and PAs are becoming the primary point of contact for millions of senior patients — managing chronic conditions, conducting wellness visits, and coordinating care that used to fall exclusively to physicians.
Are APPs Solving the Physician Shortage?
This is the question I get asked most often by both APPs and recruiters, and I want to give you an honest answer rather than a marketing one.
Partly — and significantly in specific areas. In primary care and managed care, APPs are making a real and measurable difference in access to care. Patients in underserved and growing communities are being seen, managed, and cared for by NPs and PAs who are filling gaps that would otherwise leave those patients without access at all.
But not completely. In complex specialty medicine — advanced surgical care, certain oncology decisions, complex critical care — the depth of physician training still matters in ways that current APP scope of practice doesn’t replace. The most effective healthcare organizations I work with don’t treat this as an either/or. They build collaborative physician-APP teams where each provider operates at the top of their training and license.
The organizations delivering the best outcomes for America’s aging population right now are not the ones replacing physicians with APPs or vice versa. They’re the ones who understand how to build teams where physicians and APPs each do what they do best — together.
How to Choose Your Next Market as an APP
If you’re evaluating where to practice next, here’s the framework I walk every NP and PA through:
- Check the practice authority status — verify current full/reduced/restricted status for any state you’re considering using the AANP state map
- Decide rural vs. urban based on what you’re optimizing for — autonomy and loan forgiveness vs. career variety and specialist collaboration
- Look at total compensation, not just base salary — loan forgiveness, sign-on bonuses, and lower cost of living can make a lower base salary the better total package
- Evaluate the physician-led structure — organizations with genuine physician-APP collaboration tend to have better clinical support and retention
- Confirm the patient population — Medicare Advantage, Medicaid, commercial — this affects both your clinical experience and the organization’s stability
- Ask about schedule specifics — outpatient only, call requirements, patient volume per day — get this in writing before accepting
Find Your Next Opportunity — Florida, Texas, and Beyond
1,600+ active physicians and APPs are registered on MDdocjobs right now. Browse outpatient, managed care, and rural positions across full practice authority states. Upload your CV and get found directly by employers.
The Bottom Line
This is the moment Nurse Practitioners and Physician Assistants have been building toward for years. The demand is real. The autonomy is expanding state by state. The compensation is competitive and growing. And the patient population that needs you — particularly America’s rapidly aging Medicare population — is growing every single day.
Whether you choose a full practice authority state like Florida or Arizona, a rural community where you’ll be the primary point of care, or an urban managed care setting with strong specialist collaboration — the opportunity in front of APPs right now is the strongest it has ever been.
If you’re ready to explore what’s available, browse active NP and PA positions on MDdocjobs across Florida, Texas, and all 50 states.
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