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Oregon RN License Guide 2026 — OSBN Application Steps, Fees & Endorsement

AH
Ava Health Editorial
··9 min read

Is Oregon an NLC compact state?

No. Oregon has not joined the Nurse Licensure Compact (NLC). Oregon RNs hold a single-state license valid only in Oregon. If you practice in other states, you must obtain separate licenses in each. Travel nurses with compact licenses cannot use those licenses in Oregon — an Oregon-specific license is required before working here.

Oregon State Board of Nursing (OSBN) at a glance

DetailInformation
Board nameOregon State Board of Nursing (OSBN)
Websiteoregon.gov/osbn
Phone(971) 673-0685
Application portalOnline via oregon.gov/osbn portal
Compact statusNon-compact — single-state license only
License renewal cycleBiennial (every 2 years)

OSBN fee schedule

TransactionApproximate Fee
Initial RN license (new graduate or endorsement)~$140–175
Biennial renewal~$155–175
Background checkVaries — separate, paid to Oregon State Police

Oregon OSBN updates its fee schedule periodically. Always confirm current fees on the official OSBN website before submitting your application.

Step-by-step: New graduate RN license in Oregon

Step 1 — Confirm eligibility and gather documents

You must have graduated from an OSBN-approved nursing program, have a valid Social Security number or ITIN, and meet Oregon's character and fitness standards. Gather your nursing school transcript, photo ID, and any criminal history documentation.

Step 2 — Create your OSBN online account

Navigate to oregon.gov/osbn and register for the online licensing portal. Oregon processes all applications electronically — paper submissions are no longer standard practice.

Step 3 — Submit the application and pay the fee

Select "Registered Nurse — Initial by Examination" and complete all required sections. Pay the application fee by credit card. Verify current fee amounts on the OSBN website before applying, as fees are periodically revised.

Step 4 — Complete the Oregon background check

Oregon requires a fingerprint-based criminal background check through the Oregon State Police via ORIJIN. After submitting your application, OSBN provides fingerprint submission instructions. Background check results go directly to OSBN. There is a separate fee paid to Oregon State Police.

Step 5 — Official transcripts to OSBN

Your nursing program must send sealed official transcripts directly to OSBN. Electronic transcripts from Parchment or National Student Clearinghouse are accepted. International graduates must submit a CGFNS International or equivalent credential evaluation.

Step 6 — Authorization to Test and NCLEX-RN

After OSBN approves your application and receives all required items, Pearson VUE sends your Authorization to Test (ATT). Schedule your NCLEX-RN at any Pearson VUE test center. OSBN receives results directly from Pearson VUE — Oregon does not accept the Pearson VUE Quick Results feature as authorization to practice. Wait for OSBN portal confirmation before beginning work.

Step 7 — Track your application and receive your license

Monitor status in the OSBN online portal. Oregon's typical processing time is 6–10 weeks from the date all items are received. Incomplete files are paused; OSBN sends a deficiency notice, and the processing clock restarts when missing items arrive.

Endorsement into Oregon from another state

  1. Submit the "Registered Nurse — Endorsement" application and pay the applicable fee.
  2. OSBN uses Nursys to verify licenses from participating states. Log into nursys.com, purchase primary source verification for Oregon, and designate OSBN as the recipient. States not on Nursys: request a verification letter directly from your current Board of Nursing, addressed to OSBN.
  3. Complete Oregon's fingerprint-based background check (same process as new graduates).
  4. Endorsement processing typically runs 4–8 weeks from complete application.

Oregon's unique CE policy — no mandatory contact hours for RNs

Oregon is one of only a handful of states that does not require RNs to complete a set number of continuing education contact hours for license renewal. Oregon's Nurse Practice Act requires nurses to maintain "continued competency," but no specific hour count is mandated for the base RN license.

This is a genuine distinction — most states require 15–30 CE hours per renewal cycle. Oregon APRNs (NPs, CRNAs, CNS, CNMs) do have CE requirements tied to their national certification maintenance, but for the standard RN license the absence of an hour mandate is notable and appeals to many experienced nurses moving to Oregon.

Processing times

Application typeEstimated timeline
New graduate (all items received)6–10 weeks
Endorsement (Nursys state)4–8 weeks
Endorsement (non-Nursys / paper verification)6–12 weeks
Renewal (online)1–5 business days

Travel nurse tips for Oregon

Oregon's non-compact status is the most important planning factor for travel nurses. You must hold an Oregon-specific license before working in the state — compact licenses do not cover Oregon.

  • Plan ahead: Apply at least 10–12 weeks before your Oregon contract start date to account for OSBN processing and background check timelines.
  • Nursys e-Notify: Enroll so OSBN and your staffing agency receive automatic license verification alerts — most Oregon hospitals require active enrollment for credentialing packets.
  • Major markets: Portland metro (OHSU Health, Providence Health & Services, Legacy Health, PeaceHealth), Salem, and Eugene account for the majority of travel contracts. Coastal Oregon has episodic but premium-pay demand.
  • No reciprocity: Oregon has no formal reciprocity agreements with any other state. Every nurse goes through the full endorsement process regardless of home state.

What we see at Ava Health

Oregon is a strong placement market despite the non-compact hurdle. Portland metro facilities run active travel contracts year-round in ICU, OR, and ED — often at above-national-average pay rates. We consistently advise Oregon-bound nurses to start licensing 10–12 weeks early. Nurses who have an active Oregon license on file are among our most-requested Pacific Northwest travelers, and we prioritize them in our matching pool for high-value Oregon contracts.

Related: Washington RN License Guide, California RN License Guide, Travel Nurse Salary Guide, Missouri RN License Guide.

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