Nursing Programs With the Best Scholarships and Loan Forgiveness (2026)

nursing students in a hands on classroom setting
West Coast-based writer covering college selection, nursing and healthcare programs, scholarships, and financial planning for students at Grantford.
Joey founded College Prowler (now Niche.com) in his CMU dorm room, and has spent over two decades at the intersection of college access, education technology, and digital growth.
The NHSC Scholarship pays full tuition plus a stipend for nurses who serve in shortage areas. Nurse Corps repays up to 85% of existing debt. Here are the nursing programs best positioned for both — ranked by financial aid outcomes, not just prestige

Quick answer

The NHSC Scholarship pays full tuition plus $1,503/month for nursing students who serve in health shortage areas — worth approximately $158,000 over four years. The Nurse Corps Loan Repayment Program eliminates up to 85% of existing nursing debt in two to three years. PSLF forgives remaining balances for nurses at nonprofit hospitals after 10 years. The best nursing programs for financial outcomes are those with strong shortage-area clinical networks: Penn, Duke, Johns Hopkins, Case Western, Ohio State, Michigan, Wisconsin, and Wyoming.

Choosing a nursing program based on US News rankings is the wrong framework for most students. Rankings measure research output, faculty credentials, and peer reputation — none of which determines how much debt you'll carry after graduation, or whether your employer will qualify for federal loan forgiveness.

The right framework: which programs produce graduates best positioned to eliminate their nursing school debt through federal programs, and which have the lowest net cost after scholarships and institutional aid are applied.

That's what this guide covers.

Federal Programs That Actually Make a Difference for Nursing Students

Before the school list, understand the programs that make the financial comparison meaningful. These are the three federal programs every nursing student should know before choosing a school.

NHSC Scholarship Program: the most valuable scholarship in nursing

The National Health Service Corps Scholarship pays full tuition plus a monthly living stipend for nursing students who commit to serving at an NHSC-approved health shortage area site after graduation.

The 2025 stipend is $1,503 per month — roughly $18,000 per year in addition to full tuition coverage. For a four-year BSN program with average tuition of $35,000/year, the combined value is approximately $158,000 in tuition plus stipend support over four years.

The service commitment is two years minimum at an NHSC-approved site — which includes a growing range of hospitals, clinics, community health centers, and maternity care shortage areas. Applications open annually and are competitive. The programs most likely to have NHSC-designated clinical partners are those with strong community health focuses and established rural or underserved placement networks.

Apply at nhsc.hrsa.gov/scholarships.

Nurse Corps Loan Repayment Program: for graduates with existing debt

For nurses already in repayment, the Nurse Corps Loan Repayment Program covers 60% of qualifying student loan balance after a two-year service commitment at a Critical Shortage Facility — with an optional third year adding another 25%, for a total of 85% of qualifying debt eliminated in three years.

This is significantly faster relief than PSLF and doesn't require 10 years of payments. The facilities that qualify as Critical Shortage Facilities overlap substantially with NHSC-approved sites.

Apply at bhw.hrsa.gov/funding/apply-scholarship/nurse-corps.

Public Service Loan Forgiveness: the long-term path

Nurses employed full-time at qualifying nonprofit hospital systems — which describes the majority of US hospital employment — qualify for PSLF after 120 qualifying payments under an income-driven repayment plan. For nurses with graduate-level debt (NP, DNP), PSLF is often the most financially significant program available.

Verify any employer's eligibility at the PSLF Employer Search before accepting a position.

Other Strategies to Fund a Nursing Degree

With generous federal aid programs and loan forgiveness options, getting a nursing degree can be a surprisingly cost effective option for students looking to pursue a meaningful career with a strong job outlook. However if these programs aren't enough to put a career in nursing within your reach, don't forget to check out our guide to nursing scholarships as well for more opportunities tailored to the field.

Federal programs for nursing students and graduates — 2026

Program What it covers Service commitment Best for Apply
NHSC Scholarship Full tuition + $1,503/mo stipend
~$158K over 4 yrs at $35K/yr tuition
2–4 yrs at NHSC-approved shortage site Current students — prevents debt entirely Apply →
Nurse Corps Loan Repayment 60–85% of existing loan balance
60% at 2 yrs + 25% optional 3rd yr
2–3 yrs at Critical Shortage Facility Graduates with existing debt Apply →
PSLF Remaining balance forgiven
After 120 qualifying payments
10 yrs full-time at qualifying nonprofit employer + IDR plan Nurses at nonprofit hospital systems Learn →
State nursing programs Varies — tuition aid, loan repayment, or stipends Typically rural or underserved service in home state Nurses willing to serve in-state shortage areas Find →

Nursing programs best positioned for scholarship and loan forgiveness outcomes

The programs below were selected based on: documented NHSC clinical placement networks, research output relevant to underserved community health, NCLEX first-attempt pass rates, and availability of institutional financial aid.

Net cost figures are approximate. For a more precise number, use each school's net price calculator for a personalized estimate.

1. Duke University School of Nursing (Durham, NC)

Students at Duke University School of Nursing, not only one of the best nursing schools in the country but one of the nursing schools with the best scholarships as well
With the help of state-of-the-art equipment, nursing students at Duke University can receive training that prepares them for when they begin practicing on patients. Image courtesy of Duke Today

Duke holds the distinction of being the first university to offer the Doctor of Nursing Practice degree and is consistently ranked among the top nursing programs nationally. Its simulation center is one of the most advanced in the country.

For NHSC and loan forgiveness purposes, Duke's nursing program is particularly strong in community and global health tracks, and its Durham location gives students access to a range of federally-designated shortage area clinical sites in both urban and rural North Carolina.

Financial snapshot: Duke is a private university with high sticker tuition but meets demonstrated financial need generously. Students pursuing community or primary care specialties are well-positioned for NHSC scholarship eligibility.

2. Johns Hopkins School of Nursing (Baltimore, MD)

Nursing student going over charts with er clinical supervisor at Johns Hopkins School of Nursing
With the ability to go through their nursing program online or attend part-time, John Hopkins University’s various teaching methods allow their student to succeed no matter their life circumstances. Image courtesy of John Hopkins School of Nursing

Johns Hopkins is consistently ranked in the top three nursing programs in the US and offers some of the most flexible program structures in the country — including part-time and online MSN and DNP options that suit working nurses returning for advanced credentials.

Baltimore's high proportion of federally-designated shortage areas makes Hopkins graduates in primary care tracks strong NHSC candidates. The school's DNP and PhD programs are particularly relevant for nurses pursuing PSLF through academic medical center employment.

Financial snapshot: Strong institutional aid for demonstrated need. MSN and DNP students may qualify for both institutional aid and NHSC Scholarship if entering primary care tracks.

3. University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing (Philadelphia, PA)

Penn Nursing has been ranked #1 in the US for multiple consecutive years and is particularly strong in community health nursing and public health nursing — both of which align directly with NHSC shortage area service requirements.

Penn's location in Philadelphia gives students access to extensive urban shortage area clinical placements, and the school has established relationships with federally qualified health centers in the region.

Financial snapshot: Penn is need-blind for domestic undergraduates and meets 100% of demonstrated need. This makes it genuinely accessible for students with significant financial need — often cheaper than state school alternatives after aid.

4. University of Michigan School of Nursing (Ann Arbor, MI)

Michigan combines strong academic credentials with in-state tuition for Michigan residents — one of the more favorable cost profiles of any top-10 nursing program. The program offers study abroad opportunities and over 400 hours of clinical experience, with placements in both urban Detroit-area facilities and rural Michigan shortage areas.

Financial snapshot: In-state tuition significantly reduces the cost base for Michigan residents. Michigan residents with financial need may qualify for both state grant aid and NHSC scholarship eligibility depending on clinical placement.

5. Case Western Reserve University (Cleveland, OH)

a group of nursing school students in blue scrubs walking a medical corridor
Image courtesy of Daily Nurse.

Case Western's distinctive feature is early clinical immersion — students begin clinical rotations in the first month of their first year. With over 1,300 total clinical hours across a small student body, the student-to-clinical-opportunity ratio is exceptional.

Cleveland's designation as a health professional shortage area for primary care makes Case Western graduates strong NHSC candidates. The school also offers merit scholarships up to $30,000 per year — relevant for students who don't qualify for need-based programs.

Financial snapshot: Case Western offers significant merit aid for strong applicants. Combined with NHSC scholarship eligibility, students entering primary care tracks can substantially reduce or eliminate net educational cost.

6. Ohio State University College of Nursing (Columbus, OH)

Ohio State's nursing program is notable for its healthcare innovation focus — unique among nursing programs, it offers an innovation and entrepreneurship fellowship, a healthcare innovation master's degree, and a dedicated studio for developing new care delivery approaches.

For loan forgiveness, Ohio State's size and clinical network give graduates broad access to NHSC-approved placement sites across urban and rural Ohio, and the university medical center itself is a qualifying PSLF employer.

Financial snapshot: Ohio State is a flagship public university with in-state tuition. Ohio residents benefit from state grant programs and the lowest base cost of any school on this list.

7. University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Nursing (Madison, WI)

Wisconsin's nursing program stands out for its breadth: urban and rural clinical placements, study abroad opportunities, and a distinctive early-career PhD program for BSN students interested in research careers. The PhD pipeline is particularly relevant for nurses pursuing academic medical center careers and long-term PSLF eligibility.

Financial snapshot: In-state tuition for Wisconsin residents plus Wisconsin's state nursing scholarship programs make this one of the most cost-accessible programs on this list for Wisconsin residents.

8. University of Wyoming (Laramie, WY)

Wyoming deserves specific mention for two reasons: its accelerated nursing program for students who already hold a non-nursing bachelor's degree (the BRAND program), and the state's persistent designation as a healthcare shortage area — meaning Wyoming nursing graduates are well-positioned for both NHSC placement and Nurse Corps loan repayment.

For career changers entering nursing, Wyoming combines an accelerated path, a shortage-area practice environment, and the smallest sticker price of any program on this list.

Financial snapshot: Wyoming is one of the most affordable nursing programs in the country. For career changers qualifying for NHSC or Nurse Corps, the combination of low cost and strong shortage-area placement can produce near-zero net educational cost.

Nursing programs — approximate net cost and forgiveness potential

Net cost figures are approximations based on published data — use each school's net price calculator for a personalised estimate. Forgiveness potential assumes NHSC or Nurse Corps eligibility for primary care tracks. [VERIFY] all figures before applying.

School Approx. sticker/yr Avg. net cost/yr NHSC-aligned? Best funding path
University of Pennsylvania ~$86,000 ~$21,000 Strong ✓ Need-based aid + NHSC for community health tracks
Duke University ~$82,000 ~$30,000 Strong ✓ Need-based aid + NHSC for global/community tracks
Johns Hopkins ~$80,000 ~$28,000 Strong ✓ Need-based aid + NHSC + PSLF (Baltimore shortage areas)
Case Western Reserve ~$70,000 ~$32,000 Strong ✓ Merit aid up to $30K/yr + NHSC (Cleveland shortage areas)
University of Michigan ~$35,000 (in-state) ~$18,000 (in-state) Good ✓ In-state tuition + state aid + NHSC for rural Michigan placements
Ohio State University ~$30,000 (in-state) ~$14,000 (in-state) Good ✓ Lowest sticker of top programs + PSLF via OSU Medical Center
University of Wisconsin ~$28,000 (in-state) ~$13,000 (in-state) Good ✓ In-state tuition + WI nursing grants + NHSC rural placements
University of Wyoming ~$18,000 (in-state) ~$9,000 (in-state) Strongest ✓ Lowest cost + statewide shortage designation = best NHSC/Nurse Corps positioning

[VERIFY] net cost figures at each school's net price calculator at collegecost.ed.gov. NHSC alignment based on documented community health and shortage area clinical networks — confirm current NHSC-approved site availability with each school's financial aid office.

How to use these programs with federal funding

The schools above were selected partly because of their alignment with federal shortage-area programs. Here's the decision framework:

If you're a current student or incoming freshman: Apply for the NHSC Scholarship during your first or second year. Identify clinical placement sites at your school that are NHSC-approved. Talk to your financial aid office specifically about NHSC-designated sites in your clinical rotation network.

If you've already graduated with debt: The Nurse Corps Loan Repayment Program is your fastest path. Identify facilities in your area that qualify as Critical Shortage Facilities. Apply in the annual cycle at bhw.hrsa.gov.

If you're employed at a nonprofit hospital: Certify your employer for PSLF, enroll in an income-driven repayment plan, and make 120 qualifying payments. For nurses with significant graduate-level debt, PSLF is often the most valuable forgiveness program available.

If you're a career changer: Wyoming's BRAND program plus Nurse Corps eligibility is the most financially efficient path for students with a prior degree entering nursing.

Pro tip

Apply for the NHSC Scholarship in your first or second year of nursing school — not at the end. The scholarship covers the remaining years of your program, so applying in year one maximizes the tuition coverage and stipend you receive. Applications open in January each year. If you miss the first cycle, apply in year two. The earlier you apply, the more of your education the scholarship can cover. Contact your school's financial aid office to identify which clinical placement sites in your program's network are NHSC-approved before applying.

Important

NHSC Scholarship and Nurse Corps Loan Repayment are separate programs with different eligibility timelines. The NHSC Scholarship is for current students — it prevents debt from accumulating. The Nurse Corps Loan Repayment Program is for graduates who already have debt — it eliminates it. If you're still in school, pursue the NHSC Scholarship. If you've graduated with debt, pursue Nurse Corps. You cannot receive both simultaneously, but if you miss the NHSC Scholarship while in school, Nurse Corps is the most direct path to significant debt relief after graduation.

West Coast-based writer covering college selection, nursing and healthcare programs, scholarships, and financial planning for students at Grantford.
Joey founded College Prowler (now Niche.com) in his CMU dorm room, and has spent over two decades at the intersection of college access, education technology, and digital growth.
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