Other registered nursing professionals roles in the UK earn a median of £44,500 per year, equivalent to £23.05 per hour as of 2025. Pay increased 6.8% compared to the previous year. Regionally, pay ranges from £40,000 in North West to £48,000 in London. Pay has risen over the past 4 years. The ONS national median for this occupation is £42,300/yr (5% above our computed national average).
Median Annual Pay
£44,500
as of 2025
Modelled estimateMedian Hourly Pay
£23.05
per hour
Year-on-Year Change
+6.8%
vs 2024
Annual Pay Range
£44,500 – £45,000
25th – 75th percentile
UK Employment (2024)
~1,305,000
estimated employees
10 of 180 areas not disclosed by ONS
Employment Change
2021–2024
2021: ~1,226,000 → 2024: ~1,305,000
Market Signal
Specialist demandPay is rising while employment is falling — specialist skills are in high demand.
Employment figures from ONS Annual Population Survey (APS). Counts are estimates; suppressed cells (small samples) are excluded from totals.
Annual pay for Other registered nursing professionals across UK regions. The bar shows the typical pay range (25th–75th percentile); the diamond marks the median.
Source: ONS ASHE. Based on broad UK regions (NUTS1).
Annual pay grew by +6.8% from 2024 to 2025.
National average (NUTS1 actuals) based on ONS ASHE April snapshot. Shaded band shows 25th–75th percentile range.
Annual percentage change in median pay for Other registered nursing professionals.
Percentage change from the prior year's April figure.
For job seekers
Check your salary against official UK data for Other registered nursing professionals roles — broken down by region and seniority level. Free, instant, no sign-up required.
For employers & recruiters
Other registered nursing professionals provide general nursing care for the sick, injured and others in need of such care, assist medical doctors with their tasks and work with other healthcare professionals and within teams of healthcare workers in a variety of other professional nursing occupations not elsewhere classified in minor group 223: Nursing Professionals.
Qualification as a nurse is via a diploma or degree course, both of which are provided by universities, or through an apprenticeship. Courses comprise both theoretical and practical work, including placements in hospital and community settings. Full time diploma courses last three years; degree courses last three or four years. Accelerated programmes are available to graduates with a health-related degree.
Salary data is sourced from official UK pay datasets and updated periodically.