CRNA Salary in New York

Updated for 2026

Last updated:

Quick Answer

How much do CRNAs make in New York?

CRNA salary in New York: $256,160/year average (BLS, May 2023), or $123/hour. That ranks New York #4 of 44 states BLS reports a figure for. The national average is $214,200/year, so New York pays above the U.S. average. We also track 7 CRNA programs in New York for tuition and length.

BLS source: Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics, May 2023, SOC 29-1151 (Nurse Anesthetists). View the New York BLS table →

Some New York figures are BLS-topcoded: BLS reports wages at or above $115.00/hour ($239,200/year) as "(5)" rather than an exact number, to protect respondent confidentiality at the high end. Where that applies below, we show the topcode note instead of guessing a number.

CRNA Club Snapshot

New York CRNA Salary & Programs at a Glance

$256,160 BLS Mean Annual Wage
$123/hr BLS Mean Hourly Wage
7 CRNA Programs in New York
$136,946 Avg. Program Tuition

BLS wage data for New York

Metric New York National
Mean annual wage $256,160 $214,200
Mean hourly wage $123 $103
Median hourly wage $115.00+ (topcoded) $102
Reported employment 1,130 47,810
Location quotient 0.38 1.00

Location quotient is BLS's measure of how concentrated Nurse Anesthetist employment is in New York relative to the national average (1.00 = average concentration). Source: https://www.bls.gov/oes/2023/may/oes_ny.htm

How New York compares to nearby-ranked states

These are the states immediately above and below New York in BLS's May 2023 mean annual wage ranking — not geographic neighbors, but wage-rank neighbors.

Rank State Mean Annual Wage
2 Massachusetts $272,510
3 Montana $256,460
4 New York $256,160
5 Vermont $254,790
6 New Jersey $252,130

Not sure if you qualify for these programs?

Find out exactly where you stand and what gaps to focus on.

New York CRNA programs: cost vs. earnings

We track 7 CRNA programs in New York. Published in-state tuition ranges from $65,835 to $190,926, averaging $136,946. Program length runs 3 yr on average.

Simple tuition-payback math: average total tuition ($136,946) ÷ BLS mean annual wage ($256,160) ≈ 0.5 years of pre-tax salary. This is a single-variable comparison — it does not account for loan interest, taxes, cost of living, or the RN income you forgo while in school. For the full picture, see our CRNA school cost and financing guide.

See all 7 New York CRNA programs, tuition, and requirements →

Frequently Asked Questions

Click a question to see the answer.

How much do CRNAs make in New York?

CRNAs in New York earn a mean annual wage of $256,160, according to the BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (May 2023). That works out to $123 per hour on average. This is a mean across all reporting employers in the state — your actual offer will vary by practice setting, call schedule, and experience.

Is New York a high-paying state for CRNAs?

New York ranks #4 of 44 states with a published BLS figure for Nurse Anesthetists, at $256,160/year against a national average of $214,200. That puts New York above the national average, though cost of living, tax rates, and call pay all change what that salary is actually worth day to day.

How many CRNA programs are in New York?

We track 7 CRNA programs in New York, with an average published tuition of $136,946 and an average program length of 3 yr. See the full list, with tuition and admissions requirements, on our New York programs page.

Does a higher CRNA salary in New York offset the cost of school?

Using the average published tuition across New York CRNA programs ($136,946) against the state's BLS mean annual wage ($256,160), tuition equals roughly 0.5 years of pre-tax salary. That is a simple division, not a full return-on-investment model — it ignores loan interest, taxes, cost of living, and the years of RN income you give up while in school. Use it as a starting point, then run your own numbers with our CRNA school cost and financing guide.

Our Final Thoughts

Salary numbers are a starting point, not the whole decision. New York's BLS figure tells you what CRNAs there report earning on average — it doesn't tell you what a specific employer will offer you, what taxes and cost of living do to that number, or whether the program that gets you there is worth its tuition. Run your own numbers before you commit to a state or a program.

Salary data: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics, May 2023, SOC 29-1151 (Nurse Anesthetists). Program and tuition data from The CRNA Club's verified school database. Learn about our methodology →

Not sure if you're competitive enough?

Get personalized insights on your GPA, ICU experience, and credentials. See exactly what gaps to focus on to strengthen your application.

Browse All Programs