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How to become a Nurse Practitioner in North Dakota. Data verified 2026-03-20. Source: LicenseMap (getlicensemap.com).
Nurse Practitioner — APRN
Some information on this page has not been fully verified.
71% of data points are verified against official sources. 14 fields based on preliminary research. We recommend confirming details with your state's licensing authority. See sources below · Report incorrect data
Full Practice Authority
Practice Authority
Required
Certification
Schedule II-V (independent)
Controlled Substances
12 hrs
CE Hours
$600
Total Fees
Non-Member
APRN Compact
Graduate Degree & Program Accreditation
VerifiedDegree Required
MSN or DNP from accredited nursing program
Program Accreditation
CCNE (Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education) or ACEN (Accreditation Commission for Education in Nursing)
Program Length
2-4 years (MSN: 2-3 years; DNP: 3-4 years)
Clinical Hours
500 hrs
Prerequisite
Active RN license in North Dakota or compact state; BSN preferred or required by most programs
Specialty Tracks
Nurse practitioners must earn a Master of Science in Nursing (MSN) or Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) degree from a CCNE or ACEN accredited program. Programs typically include 500-1,000+ supervised clinical hours and prepare NPs for national certification in their chosen specialty.
Certification Requirements
VerifiedNational Certification Required
AANP or ANCC Board Certification
Certification Body
AANP (American Academy of Nurse Practitioners) or ANCC (American Nurses Credentialing Center)
Certification Exam
AANP Certification Examination or ANCC NP Board Certification Examination in chosen specialty
Certification Fee
$315
Specialty Certification
National board certification in population-focus area required (e.g., FNP, AGPCNP, PMHNP)
Most states require nurse practitioners to hold national board certification from the AANP (American Association of Nurse Practitioners) or ANCC (American Nurses Credentialing Center). Certification exams are specialty-specific and must align with the NP's graduate education.
Practice Authority Level & Independence
Mostly verifiedFull Practice Authority
Practice Authority Level
Independent Practice
Yes
Collaborative Agreement
Not Required
Supervision Details
NPs practice independently in North Dakota with full practice authority
Practice authority levels vary by state: Full Practice Authority (FPA) allows NPs to evaluate, diagnose, and prescribe independently. Reduced Practice Authority requires a collaborative agreement. Restricted Practice Authority requires physician supervision. Some states offer a transition period before granting full independence.
Prescribing & Controlled Substances
Mostly verifiedPrescriptive Authority
Granted
Controlled Substances
Schedule II-V (independent)
DEA Registration
Required
No Collaborative Agreement Required for Prescribing
State Controlled Substance Registration
North Dakota requires state controlled substance registration for prescribing scheduled medications
Prescriptive authority varies by state and practice authority level. Full Practice Authority states generally allow NPs to prescribe independently, including controlled substances. Reduced and restricted states may require collaborative agreements or physician oversight for prescribing. DEA registration is required for controlled substance prescribing.
| Fee | Amount |
|---|---|
Application Fee APRN application fee $100 plus $20 processing fee | $110 |
Certification Exam Fee AANP or ANCC certification exam fee; varies by membership status | $315 |
License Fee Included in application fee; additional criminal background check fee of $42.75 | $120 |
DEA Fee DEA registration for 3 years; required for prescribing controlled substances | $888 |
Renewal Fee APRN renewal fee; varies by license type held | $90 |
Total Initial Fees Approximate total including application, processing, and background check fees (excludes DEA and national certification exam which are separate) | $600 |
Renewal & Continuing Education
Mostly verified2 years
Renewal Period
12 hrs
CE Hours Required
$90
Renewal Fee
Pharmacology CE Requirement
15 hours pharmacology CE required for APRNs with prescriptive authority per renewal cycle
Practice Hour Requirements
Documentation of active NP practice required; specific hour requirements per board rules
Regulatory Board
NP licenses must be renewed on schedule with the state board of nursing. Most states require continuing education hours, often with specific pharmacology CE requirements. Many states also require proof of active practice hours and maintenance of national board certification.
Out-of-State Reciprocity
Mostly verifiedAccepts Out-of-State Credentials
APRN Compact
Non-Member
Endorsement Available
Yes
Reciprocity Requirements
The APRN Compact allows nurse practitioners to practice across state lines in member states. For non-compact states, NPs must apply for licensure by endorsement, which typically requires national certification, verification of credentials, and meeting state-specific requirements including practice authority regulations.
North Dakota is one of only four states to have enacted the APRN Compact. Full practice authority with no transition-to-practice requirements. Requires 45 hours of pharmacology evidence for initial APRN licensure.
North Dakota grants Full Practice Authority - NPs may practice independently without physician supervision.
APRN application requires evidence of 45 pharmacology hours or national certifier confirmation.
NPs may prescribe Schedule II-V controlled substances independently.
12 CE hours required per 2-year renewal cycle for RN; 15 pharmacology hours required for APRNs with prescriptive authority.
North Dakota has enacted the APRN Compact (one of the first four states); multistate APRN licenses will be available once 7 states enact.
Criminal history record check with fingerprints required (prints must be less than 180 days old).
APRN Compact not yet active as of March 2026. Requires 7 states to enact; fewer than 7 have done so.
Explore requirements for other professional licenses in North Dakota.
How this state compares to 50 others for this profession
Timeline
#1 of 51
Salary
#42 of 51
Cost
#39 of 51
Processing
#1 of 51
Based on May 2024 Bureau of Labor Statistics OEWS data for Nurse Practitioners (SOC 29-1171)
Entry Level
$103,280
25th percentile
Median
$123,220
-5% vs. national avg ($129,210)Experienced
$130,590
75th percentile
Wage Distribution (Annual)
1,260 employed in this state
Source: BLS OEWS – Nurse Practitioners (May 2024)
National employment projections for 2024-2034
Projected Growth
+26%
Very High DemandNew Jobs
+84,200
over 10 years
Annual Openings
29,200
per year (avg.)
323,600 currently employed nationwide (2024)
Source: BLS Employment Projections 2024-2034 (September 2025)
Nursing Career Ladder+179% salary growth potential
You are here
Nurse Practitioner
$123,220
MSN or DNP + national certification
State-approved training program (4-12 weeks)
$44,190
Practical nursing program (12-18 months) + NCLEX-PN
$60,820
ADN or BSN degree + NCLEX-RN
$78,260
You are here
Nurse Practitioner
MSN or DNP + national certification
$123,220
Salary data from BLS OEWS May 2024 for this state. Career paths represent common advancement routes — actual progression may vary. Bureau of Labor Statistics — Occupational Outlook Handbook
Government fees and exam costs to obtain your initial license
Note: These are government licensing fees only. Education/training program costs (tuition, books, etc.) are not included as they vary widely by institution.
Estimated total: 112–234 weeks
Timeline estimated from licensing requirements on this page.
Source: North Dakota Board of Nursing — Licensing Requirements
4–12 weeks
Estimated processing time
Source: North Dakota Board of Nursing — Licensing Requirements
Study guides for the AANP and ANCC certification exams.
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Updated January 2026
Accessed 2026-03-20
Accessed 2026-03-20
Accessed 2026-03-20
North Dakota grants Full Practice Authority practice authority to nurse practitioners. NPs in North Dakota can practice independently without physician supervision. All licensing is managed through the North Dakota Board of Nursing.
Requirements vary by state. Always verify current requirements with your state licensing authority.