Career Comparison

CNA vs. LPN vs. RN: Which Healthcare Career Is Right for You?

Three paths into nursing, three very different lifestyles. Here’s an honest, side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to start.

14 min read Updated March 2026 4.4M nursing jobs in the US

The three roles at a glance

CNA

Certified Nursing Assistant

Education4–12 week program
Cost$0–$2,500
Median pay$38,000/yr
Top pay$48,000+/yr
Job growth4% (2022–32)
Open jobs/yr~220,000

LPN

Licensed Practical Nurse

Education12–18 month program
Cost$10,000–$25,000
Median pay$55,000/yr
Top pay$65,000+/yr
Job growth5% (2022–32)
Open jobs/yr~58,000

RN

Registered Nurse

Education2–4 year degree
Cost$15,000–$80,000
Median pay$82,000/yr
Top pay$120,000+/yr
Job growth6% (2022–32)
Open jobs/yr~193,000

What each role can and can’t do

The same patient, the same hospital floor — but each role has completely different legal boundaries on what they’re allowed to do:

CNA
Certified Nursing Assistant
The patient’s closest ally

CNAs spend more direct time with patients than any other role. You’re the first to notice subtle changes — a resident who’s eating less, skin that’s breaking down, confusion that wasn’t there yesterday. Your job is basic care plus keen observation.

Take vital signs, record I&O, weigh patients
Assist with bathing, dressing, feeding, toileting
Patient transfers, repositioning, range of motion
Collect specimens (urine, stool, sputum)
Give any medications (including OTC)
Perform wound care, start IVs, or draw blood
Make clinical decisions or diagnoses
Create or modify care plans
LPN
Licensed Practical Nurse
The clinical doer

LPNs handle the technical nursing tasks that CNAs can’t touch. You’re administering medications, performing wound care, and making observations — but always under the supervision of an RN or physician. Your role varies more by state than any other nursing position.

Administer oral, IM, and subcutaneous medications
Perform wound care, dressing changes, catheter insertion
Collect blood samples, monitor lab results
~
IV medications (some states with extra certification)
Create or modify nursing care plans
Administer blood products or push IV meds (most states)
Supervise RNs or make independent clinical decisions
Triage or independently assess patients
RN
Registered Nurse
The clinical leader

RNs have full clinical autonomy within the nursing scope. You assess, plan, implement, and evaluate — the entire nursing process. When something goes wrong at 3 AM, you’re the one making the call. That responsibility comes with the highest pay and the heaviest weight.

Administer all medications including IV push and blood
Create, modify, and evaluate nursing care plans
Start IVs, perform assessments, interpret diagnostics
Supervise CNAs and LPNs, delegate tasks
Triage patients, make independent clinical decisions
Patient and family education, discharge planning
Diagnose conditions or prescribe medications (need NP)
Perform surgery or order imaging independently
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A typical shift, three realities

CNA — Nursing Home, 7a–3p
7:00 Get report on 8 residents
7:30 Wake residents, toileting
8:00 Breakfast assistance, feeding
9:00 Baths, dressing, oral care
11:00 Vital signs, repositioning
12:00 Lunch help, your break
1:00 Afternoon care, call lights
2:30 Chart, give report, clock out
LPN — Clinic, 8a–5p
8:00 Review schedule, prep rooms
8:30 Room patients: vitals, history
10:00 Vaccines, blood draws, wounds
12:00 Lunch, call patients with results
1:30 Afternoon: EKGs, injections
3:00 Prior auths, refill requests
4:30 Restock, clean up, close
RN — Hospital, 7a–7p
7:00 Bedside report, assessments
8:30 Med pass (15–20 meds), start IV
10:30 Call MD, adjust care plan
12:30 Blood transfusion, monitor
2:00 Discharge teaching, new admit
5:00 PM med pass, chart on all pts
7:00 Give report, clock out

Pick the right role for your life

The right choice depends on where you are right now — not just where you want to end up:

Start as CNA

Speed + exploration
  • Need income in weeks, not years
  • Want to “test drive” healthcare first
  • Can’t afford long schooling right now
  • Plan to have employer fund your RN later
  • Not 100% sure nursing is for you

Go straight to LPN

Clinical work without a degree
  • Want to give meds and do wound care
  • Prefer clinic hours (Mon–Fri, no holidays)
  • Can commit to 12–18 months of school
  • Plan to work in long-term care or home health
  • Your state has strong LPN job market

Go straight to RN

Maximum options + highest ceiling
  • Can invest 2–4 years in education
  • Want to work in hospitals, ER, ICU
  • Aiming for highest possible salary
  • Planning NP, CRNA, or management long-term
  • Want travel nursing flexibility
The uncomfortable truth about LPNs

Many hospital systems are eliminating LPN positions and replacing them with RNs. If you’re choosing between LPN and RN, know that the LPN job market is shrinking in hospitals while staying strong in long-term care, clinics, and home health. Going straight to RN gives you broader options — but takes longer and costs more. There’s no universally right answer.

The bridge path: you’re never stuck

Starting as a CNA doesn’t mean staying a CNA. Bridge programs let you advance while getting credit for existing experience:

CNA
9–14 mo
LPN
12–18 mo
RN
12–18 mo
BSN → NP

The smartest financial path: Start as a CNA ($38K/yr income), work for 1 year, then enroll in a CNA-to-RN bridge program while your employer pays your tuition. You graduate as an RN with zero debt, 2+ years of clinical experience, and immediate earning power of $65K–$95K. Meanwhile, a direct-entry RN student spent those same years paying $40,000+ in tuition with no income.

You can also skip LPN entirely — many community colleges offer direct CNA-to-RN (ASN) bridge programs that take 18–24 months. Your CNA clinical hours count toward prerequisites, and some programs give admission preference to applicants with CNA experience.

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Salary breakdown by setting

SettingCNALPNRN
Nursing home$16–$19/hr$24–$28/hr$30–$38/hr
Hospital$18–$24/hr$26–$32/hr$35–$50/hr
Home health$15–$20/hr$23–$28/hr$32–$42/hr
Doctor’s office$14–$17/hr$22–$27/hr$28–$36/hr
Travel / agency$25–$38/hr$35–$50/hr$50–$85/hr
Night differential+$1–$3/hr+$2–$4/hr+$3–$6/hr
Weekend differential+$1–$2/hr+$2–$3/hr+$3–$5/hr

The hidden math: A CNA earning $18/hr working night shifts ($21/hr with differential) at 40 hours per week earns ~$43,680/year. An RN earning $40/hr on days earns ~$83,200. That’s a $39,520/year difference — but the RN invested 2–4 years and $20,000–$60,000 to get there. If you start as a CNA and have your employer fund your RN degree, you earn $35,000–$43,000 during those same years instead of spending them in school with zero income.

Frequently asked questions

Should I start as a CNA before becoming an RN?

It depends on your finances. If you can afford 2 to 4 years of school, go straight to RN for the fastest return. If you need income now, start as a CNA, get your employer to fund your RN degree, and graduate debt-free while earning the entire time. Many nursing schools also give admission preference to CNA-experienced applicants.

Is LPN worth it or should I skip to RN?

LPN is worth it if you want clinical work faster and plan to stay in long-term care, clinics, or home health. However, many hospitals are phasing out LPN positions. If you want hospital work, go straight to RN. If you choose LPN, make sure your credits transfer to an LPN-to-RN bridge program.

Can a CNA make $50,000 a year?

Yes. Travel CNAs earn $25 to $38 per hour. Hospital CNAs in high-cost states earn $22 to $28 per hour. Night shift workers with overtime can push past $50,000 even at standard rates. It takes strategic choices, but it is achievable.

Which role has the best work-life balance?

LPNs in outpatient clinics have the most predictable schedules — Monday through Friday, no holidays. CNAs and RNs in facilities work rotating shifts including nights, weekends, and holidays. Home health offers flexibility but less predictability. Better schedules usually mean lower pay.

How long does it take to go from CNA to RN?

The fastest path is 2 to 3 years total: work as a CNA for 6 to 12 months, then complete a 2-year ASN program while working part-time. After passing the NCLEX-RN, you are a registered nurse. Some accelerated bridge programs can shorten this further.

Which nursing role is the least stressful?

No nursing role is low-stress, but the type of stress differs. CNA stress is primarily physical — heavy lifting and constant movement. LPN stress is task-oriented — medication accuracy and wound care. RN stress is decision-based — you are legally responsible for patient outcomes and make life-or-death calls. Most nurses say the meaning of the work outweighs the stress.

Starting with CNA? Smart move.

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