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Can someone tell me a realistic salary for psych np’s starting and mid career?
Thanks!
Thanks!
Thank you. Do you think saturation will hit this field? Is it fairly hard to make 200k with only one regular job? I imagine to make 200k plus one would need to work a part time job as well?It’s more straightforward to suggest a floor for wages as a PMHNP vs a ceiling. $125k-$150k for a new grad is a pretty typical. Mid career, you can edge up a bit. There are folks among the outliers that make quite a bit more. I’m my small cohort from school, most folks fanned out across the western US to start around $140k-$160k. My friend makes $230k gross, and doesn’t seem to have to work their guts out. I’m not very ambitious, so I work and go home, and make around $150 ish.
I'm graduating in less than a month and have talked to a couple recruiters. I ask for $120k-150k range, and one told me that $150 is a real stretch. I live in a high-cost area and right now nobody is hiring due to Covid.
Thank you. Do you think saturation will hit this field? Is it fairly hard to make 200k with only one regular job? I imagine to make 200k plus one would need to work a part time job as well?
You mentioned the elephant in the room, and yes, right now is going to be a really tough (or even impossible) time to find a job for literally everyone. And the market in the future is going to be in flux. The numbers I provided are pre COVID, and they were pretty accurate in a general sense outside of this crisis. I didn’t put them out there with the intention that someone about to enter the workforce would be able to look toward them as reference for a current job search. Nobody knows how this all plays out, and because of that, there really isn’t a lot that anyone can say about the new reality yet. So we wait.
The best advice I can give to someone looking to find work right now is take anything that you can get your hands on so you can get trained. If you do that, you’ll be ready to pounce on a new opportunity when things get better. So settle as much as you feel comfortable. You simply don’t have the options you would have had even a few months ago. And if you have something in hand, be ready in case you get let go. The fact is that at this point, there will be pain waiting for everyone even after things move towards a conclusion. It doesn’t matter your specialty. I know ED providers getting laid off. Mental health is doing OK, but things have slowed. Who knows if they will bounce back, or wane in the face of a recession where there is less service being sought out due to cost concerns.
Here are some pro tips: Recruiters aren’t going to be your best gauge of your earning potential anyway. This is true whether they are independent recruiters, or recruiters for the company you want to apply to. And if you are using a recruiter to find a job, you are already playing the game poorly. You want to network, and find jobs that way. That seems to yield the best jobs and the best results. You get a leg up on the folks who just throw an application into the mix.
Appreciate the advice. Recruiters are only part of the search strategy and only using that because I'm a soon-to-be new grad. Networking has never done much for me nor is it my preferred method. I've worked in a field that's much more competitive than PMHNP for over a decade and always had jobs at top-tier firms without networking; and I've always had jobs in psych without ever networking. My personal view is that it's overrated.