MSN Programs in Vermont (2026)
Compare 84 accredited MSN programs available to Vermont registered nurses — including nurse practitioner, leadership, education, and informatics tracks, with online and hybrid delivery options.
84
MSN Programs Listed
49
Fully Online
18 mo
Fastest Option
$76K
Avg RN Salary
Compare 84 MSN Programs in Vermont
Why an MSN Is the Next Step for Vermont BSN Nurses
The Master of Science in Nursing (MSN) is the gateway credential for advanced-practice nursing roles. In Vermont, MSN-prepared nurses fill roles that BSN-only nurses cannot — nurse practitioner, clinical nurse specialist, nursing administration, nursing educator, and informatics positions — and earn meaningful salary premiums for doing so.
Vermont RNs earn an average of $76,120 per year. Nurse practitioners nationally earn an average of $124,000+; nursing directors and CNOs earn $130,000–$200,000+. Even non-clinical MSN tracks (education, informatics, leadership) typically command 15–30% premiums over the average BSN-RN salary in comparable settings.
MSN programs are typically structured around the working nurse — asynchronous online didactic content, weekend or evening live sessions, and clinical practicums arranged at the student's workplace or a partner facility. Most full-time RNs complete an MSN in 24–36 months while continuing to work.
Common MSN Specialty Tracks
Family Nurse Practitioner (FNP)
Primary care across the lifespan; the largest NP specialty by enrollment. Strong demand in both urban and rural settings.
Adult-Gerontology NP (AGNP)
Acute or primary care for adolescents, adults, and older adults. Splits into Acute Care (AGACNP) and Primary Care (AGPCNP) tracks.
Psychiatric Mental Health NP
Diagnose and prescribe for mental health conditions across the lifespan. One of the fastest-growing and best-compensated NP specialties.
Pediatric NP
Acute or primary care for infants through adolescents. Concentrated demand in urban metro areas with large pediatric populations.
Nurse Educator
Teach in nursing schools or hospital staff-development roles. Critical to addressing the nursing shortage by training future RNs.
Nursing Administration / Leadership
Prepares nurses for charge, manager, director, and CNO roles. Often combined with an MBA or MHA depending on career goals.
Nursing Informatics
Bridges clinical practice and health IT — EHR optimization, data analytics, decision support. Growing demand as hospitals expand digital infrastructure.
Clinical Nurse Specialist (CNS)
Expert clinician role focused on a specific population, setting, or disease. Less common than NP but valued in specialty units.
How to Choose an MSN Program in Vermont
Specialty Track Alignment
Decide on a specialty before choosing a program. NP tracks have specific accreditation and certification requirements; non-clinical tracks (education, informatics) have different prerequisite paths. Switching tracks mid-program adds time and cost.
Accreditation
Verify CCNE or ACEN accreditation. NP tracks must also meet criteria recognized by ANCC and AANP for board certification eligibility. Non-accredited programs will block Vermont licensure for advanced practice.
Clinical Placement Support
For NP and CNS tracks, ask whether the program guarantees clinical placement or makes you find your own preceptors. Vermont students choosing online programs from out-of-state schools should confirm placement support is available locally.
State Authorization & APRN Licensure
Confirm the program is authorized to enroll Vermont students and that its NP curriculum meets Vermont APRN licensure requirements. SARA covers most states for didactic content; APRN scope rules are state-specific.
Total Cost & Employer Support
MSN tuition varies dramatically — public in-state can be $20K total; private accelerated programs run $60K+. Many Vermont hospital systems offer tuition reimbursement for MSN coursework, especially in shortage specialties (PMHNP, FNP, educator).
Cohort Format & Schedule
Compare asynchronous online vs. cohort-paced vs. hybrid weekend formats. Working RNs benefit most from asynchronous coursework with predictable workloads; cohort formats build peer networks valuable for career-long mentorship.
Get Matched with MSN Programs in Vermont
MSN Programs Available in Vermont
84 accredited programs — 49 fully online, 2 hybrid.
Showing 51 of 84 programs. See all Vermont programs →
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How does Vermont regulate Nurse Practitioner practice?
Vermont Nursing License Information
RN Renewal Cycle
2 years
RN CE Hours Required
None specified
RN NLC Compact
Yes — multi-state license
APRN (NP, CNS) licensure is separate from RN licensure and not currently part of the NLC compact. Source: Vermont Board of Nursing
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