Connecticut Nursing Programs

Top Nursing Schools in
Connecticut — 2026

Compare the best BSN, MSN, ADN, and RN programs in Connecticut. Tuition costs, NCLEX pass rates, accreditation, and unique program highlights for prospective nursing students.

7 programs listed MSN · BSN · ADN · LPN Connecticut Board of Examiners for Nursing Nurse Licensure Compact member

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Nursing Programs in Connecticut

MSN · On-Campus
Yale University
MSN Entry-Level Program — New Haven

Yale School of Nursing is one of the most prestigious nursing schools in the world, accepting entry-level graduate students with non-nursing bachelor's degrees.

$32,000/yearAvg Cost
3 yearsLength
97%NCLEX Pass
BSN · On-Campus
University of Connecticut
BSN Program — Storrs

UConn's School of Nursing is the state's largest public nursing program, with clinical affiliations at Hartford HealthCare, Yale New Haven Health, and Nuvance Health.

$15,000/yearAvg Cost
4 yearsLength
92%NCLEX Pass
MSN · On-Campus
Yale School of Nursing
MSN Program — New Haven

Globally ranked Ivy League nursing school; advanced practice and research focus

$45,000/yrAvg Cost
2 yearsLength
N/ANCLEX Pass
BSN · On-Campus
University of Connecticut
BSN Program — Storrs

Flagship public university BSN with extensive Hartford-area clinical placements

$20,000/yrAvg Cost
4 yearsLength
92%NCLEX Pass
ADN · On-Campus
Capital Community College
ADN Program — Hartford

Affordable ADN in Hartford serving diverse urban student population

$8,200 totalAvg Cost
2 yearsLength
88%NCLEX Pass
ADN · On-Campus
Three Rivers Community College
ADN Program — Norwich

Eastern Connecticut ADN with partnerships with major regional hospitals

$7,800 totalAvg Cost
2 yearsLength
87%NCLEX Pass
LPN · Hybrid
Goodwin University
LPN to RN Transition — East Hartford

Bridge program for working LPNs; evening and weekend options available

$15,000 totalAvg Cost
18 monthsLength
86%NCLEX Pass

About Nursing Programs in Connecticut

Connecticut offers a high-wage nursing market shaped by its position between New York City and Boston, anchored by Yale New Haven Health — the state's largest system — and Hartford HealthCare. Strong demand spans academic medical centers, community hospitals, and a sizable long-term care sector serving an older population.

Students can pursue affordable community-college ADN programs, BSN degrees at public universities such as UConn and private institutions, accelerated second-degree options, and RN-to-BSN bridges plus MSN tracks for advanced practice and leadership. Many Connecticut nurses begin with a community-college ADN and complete a BSN later, often with hospital tuition support.

Licensure is handled by the Connecticut Board of Examiners for Nursing, under the Department of Public Health. Connecticut is a member of the Nurse Licensure Compact, so an RN or LPN license issued to a Connecticut resident is a multistate license valid across all compact states — though note that neighboring New York and Massachusetts are not yet active compact participants.

Licensing authority: Connecticut Board of Examiners for Nursing.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. Connecticut is a member of the Nurse Licensure Compact. If Connecticut is your primary state of residence, your RN or LPN license is a multistate license valid across all compact states.
Not on the compact alone. New York is not a compact state, and Massachusetts has not yet implemented the compact, so you would need a separate license by endorsement to work in either.
Complete an approved ADN or BSN program, pass the NCLEX-RN, and apply for licensure through the Connecticut Board of Examiners for Nursing under the Department of Public Health.
Both qualify you for the NCLEX-RN. A community-college ADN is an affordable entry point, while a BSN is preferred at Magnet and academic hospitals and for advancement.
About two years for an ADN and four for a BSN, with accelerated BSN options finishing in roughly 12 to 18 months for second-degree students.
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