Metros in Georgia that are best for nurses

- Nurses in Valdosta are typically paid $29,970 more than the metro's median income.
- Median annual wage for nurses: $64,210

- Nurses in Hinesville are typically paid $33,190 more than the metro's median income.
- Median annual wage for nurses: $73,980

- Nurses in Augusta are typically paid $35,350 more than the metro's median income.
- Median annual wage for nurses: $74,780

- Nurses in Atlanta are typically paid $36,150 more than the metro's median income.
- Median annual wage for nurses: $82,850

- Nurses in Warner Robins are typically paid $36,260 more than the metro's median income.
- Median annual wage for nurses: $79,440

- Nurses in Columbus are typically paid $36,980 more than the metro's median income.
- Median annual wage for nurses: $73,990

- Nurses in Gainesville are typically paid $39,080 more than the metro's median income.
- Median annual wage for nurses: $77,310

- Nurses in Savannah are typically paid $39,610 more than the metro's median income.
- Median annual wage for nurses: $79,350

- Nurses in Macon are typically paid $39,790 more than the metro's median income.
- Median annual wage for nurses: $77,830

- Nurses in Brunswick are typically paid $39,840 more than the metro's median income.
- Median annual wage for nurses: $76,410

- Nurses in Albany are typically paid $39,940 more than the metro's median income.
- Median annual wage for nurses: $76,360

- Nurses in Dalton are typically paid $39,950 more than the metro's median income.
- Median annual wage for nurses: $77,540

- Nurses in Athens are typically paid $41,210 more than the metro's median income.
- Median annual wage for nurses: $80,900

- Nurses in Rome are typically paid $43,360 more than the metro's median income.
- Median annual wage for nurses: $81,320

In addition to salary considerations, young workers increasingly prioritize flexible schedules and support for their mental health while at work. Several nurses' unions in recent years went on strike to push for better working conditions, citing chronic understaffing at hospitals as a major issue.
With the field so mentally and emotionally taxing, and overtime hours that notoriously lead to burnout, roughly 100,000 RNs left the profession since 2020 and the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a report published in 2023 from the National Council of State Boards of Nursing. Another analysis from National Nurses United, the largest professional association of registered nurses, found that more than 1 million registered nurses with active licenses in 2022 were not actively employed as RNs. Nurses leaving hospitals due to burnout and looking for more regular schedules may turn to physicians' offices, home health care services, and nursing care facilities.
California has attracted new nursing talent with its first-in-the-nation law that sets minimum nurse staffing requirements: Lower patient-to-nurse ratios are associated with better patient outcomes and less burnout for nurses. Oregon will soon join the exclusive club, becoming the second state to mandate nurse-to-patient ratios.
This story features data reporting by Paxtyn Merten, writing by Cassidy Grom, and is part of a series utilizing data automation across 47 states.
