Minnesota Travel Nurse Pay Guide: Salaries, Mayo Clinic, Licensing & Taxes (2026)

Editorial note: Pay figures in this guide are sourced from active job listing data on Vivian Health (December 2025-March 2026) and cross-referenced with independent salary aggregators. Ranges reflect the full travel pay package including taxable wages and tax-free stipends. Tax information reflects 2025-2026 Minnesota state tax rules and is provided for general awareness — consult a tax professional for guidance specific to your situation. Last updated: April 2026.

Minnesota offers travel nurses something most states can’t match: genuinely world-class hospital systems — Mayo Clinic, M Health Fairview, Allina Health — combined with pay that runs consistently above the national average. The trade-offs are equally real. Minnesota is not a compact state, meaning every nurse coming from outside the state needs a dedicated Minnesota license before starting. And the state income tax, with a top rate of 9.85%, is among the highest in the country.

For nurses who plan ahead on licensing and run the full tax math, Minnesota is a strong market. For nurses who don’t, the friction can turn a good-looking package into a frustrating experience. This guide covers both sides honestly.

Minnesota Travel Nurse Pay at a Glance (2026)

Metric Figure
Average weekly pay (MN) $2,368/week
vs. national travel RN average +9% above average ($2,154 national baseline)
Top of market (MN) Up to $4,903/week
Active job listings (MN) 761 (Vivian Health, March 30, 2026)
NLC compact status No — Minnesota requires a standalone license
License endorsement cost $105 application + $33.25 background check
State income tax (top rate) Progressive, 5.35%-9.85% (4 brackets)

Source: Vivian Health active job data. Primary benchmark: $2,368/week based on 761 active MN listings (March 30, 2026). Secondary snapshot: $2,298/week based on 503 listings (December 27, 2025) — both consistent at approximately 6-9% above the concurrent national baseline.

Pay by Specialty in Minnesota

Minnesota’s pay premium over the national average holds across specialties, with surgical and maternal specialties running particularly strong. The state’s concentration of large health systems and academic medical centers drives demand for experienced specialty nurses and supports above-average packages across most categories.

Specialty Avg. Weekly Pay (MN) vs. US Average
OR / Surgical $2,668/week +11% (57 active jobs, March 20, 2026)
L&D / Labor & Delivery $2,602/week +9% (141 active jobs, March 7, 2026)
General RN (all specialties) $2,368/week +9% (761 active jobs, March 30, 2026)
Long Term Care $2,069/week +1% (151 active jobs, March 15, 2026)

OR and L&D are the strongest performing Minnesota specialties in current market data, both running about 9-11% above their respective national averages. The L&D figure is particularly notable — 141 active jobs is a solid sample size and reflects genuine statewide demand rather than a thin market snapshot. Use our free travel nurse pay calculator to compare what Minnesota packages look like after taxes and housing costs against your current or target market.

Minnesota Licensing: Not Compact — Plan Ahead

This is the most important operational detail for nurses targeting Minnesota. Minnesota does not participate in the Nurse Licensure Compact. Every nurse coming from another state — compact or not — must apply for a Minnesota license by endorsement before working there. There are no exceptions and no workarounds.

The endorsement process involves submitting an application to the Minnesota Board of Nursing, completing a criminal background check via fingerprinting, and verifying your current license through your home state’s board. The total cost breakdown:

Fee Amount
Endorsement application fee $105
Criminal background check ~$33.25
Temporary permit (optional) $30
Renewal (every 2 years) $85
Timing matters: The Minnesota Board of Nursing endorsement process typically takes four to eight weeks from application to active license. If you’re targeting a Minnesota assignment, start your application as soon as you have a recruiter conversation — not after you’ve accepted an offer. Most agencies will not submit your profile to a Minnesota facility without a verified active license or confirmed pending application. The optional $30 temporary permit allows you to work while your full application is being processed, subject to Board approval — ask your recruiter and the agency’s credentialing team about this option if your timeline is tight.

Minnesota does not mandate continuing education hours for RN license renewal — nurses must attest to maintaining clinical competency, but there is no specific CE credit requirement. This is simpler than many states and worth noting if CE compliance across multiple state licenses is a burden you’re managing.

Minnesota State Income Tax: High Rate, Honest Math

Minnesota’s top income tax rate of 9.85% is one of the highest in the country — ranking alongside California, New Jersey, and New York among states with the steepest personal income tax burdens. This is the number that makes nurses pause when evaluating Minnesota packages, and it deserves honest treatment.

The structure is progressive across four brackets, ranging from 5.35% on the lowest taxable income to 9.85% at the top. Most travel nurses on standard taxable wages will land in the 6.80%-7.85% marginal range — not the 9.85% top bracket, which kicks in at higher income thresholds. The standard deduction is $14,950 for single filers and $29,900 for married filing jointly — reasonable amounts that reduce taxable income before the brackets apply.

MN Taxable Income (Single, approximate) Marginal Rate
$0 – ~$31,690 5.35%
~$31,691 – ~$104,090 6.80%
~$104,091 – ~$193,240 7.85%
Over ~$193,240 9.85%

Source: Minnesota Department of Revenue, 2026 tax year brackets (adjusted for inflation from 2025 brackets by 2.369% per MN Department of Revenue announcement). Bracket thresholds are approximate — verify current figures at revenue.state.mn.us before filing.

One tax advantage unique to Minnesota: Minnesota did not conform to the federal Tax Cuts and Jobs Act’s elimination of unreimbursed employee expense deductions. As of 2026, Minnesota still allows W-2 travel nurses to deduct qualifying unreimbursed employee expenses — including licensing fees, travel costs, and scrubs — on their Minnesota state return. This is a genuine benefit that partially offsets the high tax rate. Work with a CPA who understands travel nurse multi-state filing to capture this deduction properly. See our guide to travel nurse tax home rules for the broader tax picture.

Major Hospital Systems for Minnesota Travel Nurses

Minnesota’s hospital landscape is defined by several large integrated systems, with Mayo Clinic operating as the most internationally recognized anchor — though it’s worth understanding how Mayo fits into the travel nursing market specifically.

Health System Region Notes
Mayo Clinic Rochester World-renowned; selective travel program; highest prestige
M Health Fairview Twin Cities U of MN affiliation; academic medicine; strong specialty demand
Allina Health Twin Cities / Statewide United Hospital anchor; high L&D travel volume
HealthPartners Twin Cities Regions Hospital; Level I Trauma Center in St. Paul
Essentia Health Duluth / Northern MN Largest system in northern MN; rural premium market
Sanford Health Bemidji / Western MN Strong L&D travel volume; rural Minnesota markets
Saint Luke’s Hospital Duluth Highest travel job volume in MN per Vivian (44 jobs, March 2026)

A Note on Mayo Clinic

Mayo Clinic is the reason many nurses target Minnesota, and the reputation is deserved — it is consistently ranked as one of the top hospitals in the country across specialties. However, Mayo’s travel nursing program is more selective than most large health systems. They tend to prefer experienced specialty nurses with documented exposure to high-acuity patient populations and strong academic hospital backgrounds. Nurses targeting a Mayo assignment should have their specialty certifications current, their experience documented in detail, and should expect a more thorough vetting process than a standard travel contract.

That said, the largest travel nursing job volume in Minnesota per Vivian’s March 2026 data comes from Saint Luke’s Hospital in Duluth (44 jobs), not from Mayo or the Twin Cities systems. Duluth and outstate Minnesota markets consistently generate strong travel demand — often with better stipend-to-housing-cost ratios than the Twin Cities metro.

Twin Cities vs. Outstate Minnesota: Pay and Lifestyle Tradeoffs

Twin Cities (Minneapolis-Saint Paul metro) is where most of the large system headquarters and major academic medical centers are concentrated — M Health Fairview, Allina, HealthPartners, Hennepin Healthcare. Pay packages in the metro run at or slightly above the state average. Cost of living is moderate for a major metro — meaningfully lower than comparable assignments in Boston, Seattle, or the NYC area — which improves net take-home.

Rochester is Mayo Clinic’s home and a distinctive travel nursing market. The city is relatively small with a high concentration of medical infrastructure. Housing costs are reasonable, and the patient population at Mayo is complex and nationally drawn — a resume-building assignment for specialty nurses who can get placed there.

Duluth and outstate Minnesota consistently offer the best stipend-to-housing-cost ratio in the state. Saint Luke’s in Duluth is the highest-volume travel nursing facility in Minnesota right now. Rural markets along the Iron Range and in western Minnesota (Sanford Health territory) also generate strong packages driven by thin local nursing supply. For nurses who don’t need a major metro and want to maximize net take-home, outstate Minnesota is worth serious consideration.

How Minnesota Compares to Neighboring States

State Avg. Weekly Pay NLC Compact Top State Tax Rate
Minnesota $2,368/week No 9.85%
Wisconsin Above average Yes 7.65%
Illinois ~$2,291/week Yes 4.95% (flat)
Iowa Below average Yes 6.0%
North Dakota Below average Yes 2.5%

Minnesota pays more than any of its immediate neighbors, but it’s also the only non-compact state in the group — and has the highest top income tax rate by a significant margin. Wisconsin offers compact licensing and lower taxes at a slightly lower pay rate, which may produce comparable net take-home for many nurses. Illinois sits close to Minnesota on gross pay with a much more favorable flat tax rate. Nurses building a Midwest travel rotation should run the full net comparison rather than ranking states by gross weekly figures alone.

Contract Red Flags for Minnesota Assignments

Licensing timeline underestimation. This is the most common mistake nurses make with Minnesota assignments. The endorsement process takes four to eight weeks — and some nurses discover this after accepting an offer, creating a start-date conflict. Start your Minnesota license application before you need it, not after.

Rural assignment scope. Minnesota has a significant number of critical access hospitals and small regional facilities in its outstate markets. Some rural assignments are excellent — strong pay, lower housing costs, rich quality of life. Others involve patient ratios, limited specialty backup, and equipment that differs significantly from what urban specialty nurses are accustomed to. Know the facility type before committing.

System float across large networks. Allina Health and M Health Fairview both operate multi-campus systems in the Twin Cities. System-wide contract language could involve travel between campuses. Confirm whether your contract is campus-specific. See our travel nurse contract red flags guide for the complete checklist before signing any Minnesota assignment.

Is your Minnesota package competitive?

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Bottom Line

Minnesota pays 9% above the national travel RN average and offers access to some of the most respected hospital systems in the country — with Mayo Clinic as the flagship and strong regional systems across the Twin Cities, Duluth, and outstate markets. The two things every nurse must understand before targeting Minnesota: it requires a standalone license that takes four to eight weeks to obtain, and the state income tax tops out at 9.85% with a meaningful effective rate for most travel nurses.

Neither of those is a dealbreaker — but both require planning. Nurses who get their Minnesota license ahead of time and run honest net take-home math against competing markets will find Minnesota competitive. Nurses who don’t plan for licensing timelines or assume the gross package is what they’ll keep often find the experience frustrating. Plan ahead and Minnesota delivers.

References

Pay Data
Vivian Health. Travel Nursing Jobs in Minnesota. Based on 761 active jobs. Last updated March 30, 2026.
Vivian Health. Average Travel Nurse Salary in Minnesota. Based on 503 active jobs. Last updated December 27, 2025.
Vivian Health. Travel OR Nurse jobs in Minnesota. Based on 57 active jobs. Last updated March 20, 2026.
Vivian Health. Travel Labor and Delivery Nurse jobs in Minnesota. Based on 141 active jobs. Last updated March 7, 2026.
Vivian Health. Travel Long Term Care Nurse jobs in Minnesota. Based on 151 active jobs. Last updated March 15, 2026.

Tax Information
Minnesota Department of Revenue. 2026 individual income tax brackets. Published December 16, 2025.
AARP. What to Know About Minnesota State Taxes in 2026. Accessed April 2026.
SmartAsset. Minnesota Income Tax Calculator — standard deduction amounts. Accessed April 2026.
Excursion Health. Travel Nurse Tax Deductions 2026 — Minnesota unreimbursed employee expense deduction. February 2026.

Licensing
Nomad Health. Minnesota Nursing License Guide. Published August 2025. (Source for endorsement costs: $105 application + $33.25 background check + $30 optional temp permit; $85 renewal.)
Minnesota Board of Nursing. Endorsement application process. Accessed April 2026.

Methodology
Weekly pay figures reflect total travel packages including taxable wages and tax-free stipends. Tax bracket thresholds are approximate, adjusted from 2025 brackets by Minnesota’s 2026 inflation factor of 2.369% as announced by the MN Department of Revenue. Verify current figures at revenue.state.mn.us. Consult a qualified CPA for tax advice specific to your situation. Last updated: April 2026.

Disclaimer: This guide is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, or tax advice. Pay figures reflect publicly available data as of early 2026 and will vary by specialty, facility, and agency. Tax information is provided for general awareness only — consult a qualified CPA for advice specific to your situation. travelhealthcarepay.com/ is independently operated and receives no compensation from any agency or hospital system referenced in this guide.

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