Iowa sits at the center of a Midwestern healthcare landscape defined by large academic medical systems, expansive rural communities, and a nursing workforce that spans everything from critical care at a major research hospital to primary care in counties where the nearest clinic might be an hour’s drive away. The University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics — one of the largest academic medical centers in the region — anchors a robust healthcare ecosystem that includes MercyOne Iowa, UnityPoint Health, and Genesis Health System. Iowa is also a full member of the Nurse Licensure Compact, having joined as one of the original signatory states on January 1, 2000, which means Iowa RNs and LPNs can practice in all other compact states without obtaining a separate license.
NLC compact membership
Iowa has been part of the Nurse Licensure Compact since its founding. If you obtain your RN license through the Iowa Board of Nursing, that license is recognized in all NLC member states — currently more than 40 states across the country — allowing you to work across state lines or take travel nursing assignments without applying for individual state licenses.
This matters most if you’re considering travel nursing after graduation, plan to work near a state border (the Quad Cities area, for instance, sits directly on the Iowa-Illinois line), or want flexibility to relocate without the cost and delay of a new licensure application. See our full breakdown at [/guides/nursing-license-by-state/] for how compact privileges work in practice.
One condition applies: your primary state of residence must be Iowa for the multistate privilege to be in effect. If you move your permanent residence to another compact state, you’ll need to update your license to that state.
Types of nursing programs available
Iowa offers the full range of nursing education pathways, from licensed practical nurse certificates at community colleges through doctoral programs at the University of Iowa. The dominant entry points are the ADN at community college and the BSN at four-year institutions, with accelerated BSN options available for candidates who already hold a bachelor’s degree in another field.
| Program type | Typical length | Typical total cost (in-state) | Common entry point |
|---|---|---|---|
| LPN certificate | 12–18 months | $5,000–$12,000 | High school diploma or GED |
| ADN (Associate Degree in Nursing) | 2 years | $8,000–$15,000 | High school diploma or prerequisites |
| BSN (Bachelor of Science in Nursing) | 4 years | $30,000–$50,000 | High school diploma |
| Accelerated BSN | 12–18 months | $25,000–$45,000 | Non-nursing bachelor’s degree |
| RN-to-BSN (bridge) | 12–24 months (part-time available) | $8,000–$20,000 | Active RN license + ADN |
| MSN | 2 years post-BSN | $25,000–$45,000 | BSN |
| DNP | 3 years post-BSN (or 2 post-MSN) | $35,000–$65,000 | BSN or MSN |
The ADN-versus-BSN decision is one of the most common questions prospective students face. Community college ADN programs in Iowa are significantly more affordable and get you to the bedside faster, but many hospital systems — including University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics — prefer or require BSN-prepared nurses for certain roles. We’ve covered the tradeoffs in depth at [/guides/adn-vs-bsn/].
Admission requirements
Requirements vary by program level, but most Iowa nursing schools follow a similar framework.
ADN programs (community college)
Community college ADN programs typically require a high school diploma or GED, a minimum GPA of 2.5–3.0 on prerequisite courses (anatomy, physiology, microbiology, English composition), and a passing score on the ATI TEAS or HESI entrance exam. Some programs also require CPR certification and a background check before clinical placement. Seats are competitive — programs like DMACC and Kirkwood receive more qualified applicants than they can admit — so stronger prerequisite GPAs improve your chances considerably.
BSN programs (four-year institutions)
Traditional BSN programs at University of Iowa, Allen College, and St. Ambrose University require high school transcripts, SAT/ACT scores (some schools made these optional post-pandemic), letters of recommendation, and personal statements. University of Iowa’s College of Nursing uses a selective admissions process for the upper-division nursing major, meaning students complete general education and prerequisite coursework first, then apply to the nursing major in their sophomore year. A competitive prerequisite GPA is essential.
Accelerated BSN programs
These programs are selective and intensive. Applicants need a completed non-nursing bachelor’s degree with a cumulative GPA of at least 3.0, all prerequisite science courses completed, and strong references. Some programs also conduct interviews.
A note on GPA
If your academic record is uneven, that doesn’t automatically disqualify you. Several Iowa programs and programs in neighboring compact states will consider applicants with lower GPAs, particularly when the overall application demonstrates other strengths. See [/low-gpa-nursing-schools/] for options.
For guidance on how to interpret GPA thresholds across program types, [/guides/nursing-school-gpa-requirements/] has a detailed breakdown.
Top nursing programs in Iowa
University of Iowa College of Nursing (Iowa City)
The University of Iowa’s nursing program is consistently ranked among the strongest in the Midwest. It holds CCNE accreditation and offers BSN, RN-to-BSN, MSN, DNP, and PhD programs. The College of Nursing is embedded within the University of Iowa Health Care system, which gives students direct access to a Level I Trauma Center, a nationally recognized cancer center, and specialty services that few other Iowa institutions can match. Faculty research output is substantial — the college receives significant NIH funding — and that research culture permeates clinical training. For students who want graduate education or academic nursing careers, Iowa City is the natural destination.
Allen College (Waterloo)
Allen College is a CCNE-accredited institution focused entirely on health sciences. It offers BSN, MSN, DNP, and post-graduate certificate programs. Because Allen College is smaller and health-sciences focused, students get a more concentrated clinical experience. The college has strong ties to UnityPoint Health, and many Allen graduates go directly into roles within that system. Waterloo sits in northeast Iowa, which gives students exposure to both urban clinical environments and rural community health challenges.
St. Ambrose University (Davenport)
St. Ambrose offers a BSN program and graduate-level options in the Quad Cities region. Its location in Davenport places students near Genesis Health System and MercyOne facilities on both sides of the Iowa-Illinois border — useful context for students interested in how NLC compact privileges work day-to-day. The program emphasizes community health alongside acute care.
Des Moines Area Community College (DMACC)
DMACC is one of the largest community colleges in Iowa and runs one of the state’s most established ADN programs. Tuition is low, the program is ACEN-accredited, and graduates consistently perform well on NCLEX. DMACC’s Des Moines campus is surrounded by major employer partners — UnityPoint Health, MercyOne, and Iowa Methodist Medical Center — making clinical placement and post-graduation hiring relatively straightforward for strong graduates.
Kirkwood Community College (Cedar Rapids)
Kirkwood is another high-volume ADN producer in the state. Its Cedar Rapids location sits in Iowa’s second-largest metro area, and the college has longstanding relationships with Mercy Medical Center and the University of Iowa Health Care system for clinical rotations. The ADN program is competitive for seats, and the college also offers a practical nursing certificate for students who want to enter the workforce as LPNs first.
Hawkeye Community College (Waterloo/Cedar Falls) and Iowa Central Community College
Both are solid regional options for ADN education. Iowa Central, based in Fort Dodge, draws students from central and north-central Iowa — a region where rural healthcare need is acute — and some graduates go on to fill positions at rural critical access hospitals where nursing shortages are most pronounced.
For a framework on how to evaluate programs beyond name recognition, see [/guides/how-to-choose-a-nursing-school/] and [/guides/nursing-school-accreditation/].
NCLEX pass rates and program quality
Iowa nursing programs generally perform near or above national NCLEX-RN pass rate averages. The University of Iowa College of Nursing and Allen College have historically posted strong first-time pass rates, typically in the 90–95% range. Community college ADN programs vary more year to year given class sizes and student populations, but programs like DMACC and Kirkwood have maintained competitive rates.
NCLEX pass rates shifted industry-wide after the introduction of the Next Generation NCLEX (NGN) in 2023, which tests clinical judgment more rigorously than the previous format. Programs that had already built clinical reasoning into their curricula — rather than relying on test-prep shortcuts — adapted more smoothly. Iowa’s larger programs had sufficient resources to update their coursework relatively quickly.
When evaluating a specific program, look at three years of pass rate data rather than a single year, which can reflect cohort-level variables rather than program quality. The Iowa Board of Nursing publishes annual program data. You can also find national comparisons at [/guides/nclex-pass-rates-by-nursing-school/].
If you’re building your NCLEX prep strategy, [/guides/nclex-prep-books-guide/] covers the resources that consistently produce the strongest results.
Nursing salary expectations in Iowa
Iowa RN salaries run below the national median, which currently sits around $86,000 annually. The state’s lower cost of living accounts for much of that gap — housing, transportation, and general expenses in Iowa City, Des Moines, or Waterloo are substantially cheaper than in coastal metro areas — but it’s worth understanding the numbers before committing to a program.
| Role | Iowa mean annual wage | National mean (BLS) |
|---|---|---|
| Licensed Practical Nurse (LPN) | $43,000–$49,000 | $54,000 |
| Registered Nurse (RN) | $65,000–$72,000 | $86,000 |
| RN — critical care / ICU | $74,000–$84,000 | $95,000+ |
| Nurse Practitioner (NP) | $108,000–$122,000 | $126,000 |
| Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetist (CRNA) | $185,000–$210,000 | $214,000 |
Geography within Iowa also matters. Nurses at University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics or large Des Moines system hospitals tend to earn toward the upper end of the RN range. Nurses at rural critical access hospitals may earn somewhat less on base salary but often benefit from loan repayment programs — the federal NHSC Loan Repayment Program offers substantial support for clinicians who commit to practice in Health Professional Shortage Areas, of which Iowa has many.
Iowa-specific financial support includes Iowa College Student Aid Commission grants, Iowa Vocational Rehabilitation funding for students with qualifying conditions, and institution-level scholarships at most of the four-year programs. If the cost-to-income ratio is a concern, [/guides/is-nursing-school-worth-the-debt/] works through the numbers for different program types and salary trajectories.
Frequently asked questions
Is Iowa part of the Nurse Licensure Compact?
Yes. Iowa joined the NLC on January 1, 2000, as one of the original signatory states. An Iowa RN or LPN license carries multistate privileges, allowing practice in all NLC member states without a separate license application, provided Iowa remains your primary state of residence.
Which Iowa nursing school has the best NCLEX pass rates?
The University of Iowa College of Nursing and Allen College consistently post pass rates above 90%. Community college ADN programs vary by cohort. Check three years of Iowa Board of Nursing data for any program you’re seriously considering, and look for trends rather than a single year’s figure.
How much does nursing school cost in Iowa?
ADN programs at Iowa community colleges typically run $8,000–$15,000 in total tuition and fees — among the most affordable nursing education options in the Midwest. BSN programs at four-year institutions range from $30,000 to $50,000 for in-state students. Federal financial aid, Iowa College Student Aid Commission grants, and employer tuition assistance (especially for RN-to-BSN students already working in healthcare) can reduce out-of-pocket costs significantly.
What are the biggest nursing employers in Iowa?
University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics in Iowa City is the state’s largest single employer and one of the most prominent academic medical centers in the Midwest. The major health systems — UnityPoint Health, MercyOne Iowa, and Genesis Health System in the Quad Cities — collectively employ thousands of nurses across the state. Rural critical access hospitals represent a growing category of employer, particularly in western and southern Iowa where physician and nursing shortages are most acute.
Can I work as a travel nurse with an Iowa license?
Yes, and the NLC compact membership makes Iowa an attractive home state for travel nursing. You can take assignments in any of the 40+ compact states using your Iowa multistate license. The main requirement is that Iowa remains your declared primary state of residence. If you take a long-term assignment and effectively relocate, you’ll need to transfer your license to your new home state.
What’s the fastest way to become an RN in Iowa?
An ADN program at a community college takes approximately two years from enrollment (after prerequisites). If you already hold a non-nursing bachelor’s degree, an accelerated BSN program compresses the clinical coursework into 12–18 months. Both pathways lead to NCLEX eligibility and full RN licensure through the Iowa Board of Nursing.
Does Iowa have rural healthcare incentives for nurses?
Yes. Iowa has significant primary care and nursing shortages in its rural counties, and several federal and state programs address this. The NHSC Loan Repayment Program provides up to $30,000 (two-year commitment) or $50,000 (three-year commitment) for nurses practicing in federally designated shortage areas. Some rural Iowa hospitals also offer their own signing bonuses and loan repayment packages. Rural practice isn’t for everyone, but the financial and career trajectory can be compelling for new graduates willing to consider it.