(LPN) Certified Practical Nurse Practice Test

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Why LPNs Advance to Become RNs

Licensed Practical Nurses (LPNs) who advance to Registered Nurse (RN) status significantly expand both their scope of practice and their earning potential. The median annual salary for RNs is approximately $81,000 โ€” roughly $25,000 more than the median LPN salary of around $56,000. Beyond the financial difference, RN licensure opens doors to a broader range of clinical settings, leadership roles, and nursing specialties that are not available to LPNs.

Intensive care units, emergency departments, surgical services, and most hospital-based nursing positions require RN credentials, making the transition a career-expanding move for LPNs who want to grow beyond long-term care, home health, and clinic settings where LPN roles are most common.

The LPN to RN pathway recognises that practicing LPNs already have clinical experience, medical knowledge, and professional nursing skills that distinguish them from candidates entering nursing with no healthcare background. Bridge programs are designed to build on this foundation rather than repeat it. Many LPN-to-RN programs give credit for existing LPN education and experience, allowing students to complete RN programs in 12-24 months rather than the 2-3 years required for someone starting from scratch. This efficiency makes the transition financially practical for working nurses who cannot take years away from employment to earn an RN degree.

The nursing shortage โ€” with an estimated shortfall of hundreds of thousands of RNs projected through the 2030s โ€” has created strong institutional incentives for hospitals and health systems to fund LPN-to-RN transitions. Many employers now offer tuition reimbursement, loan forgiveness programs, or flexible scheduling arrangements specifically to support LPN staff who pursue RN licensure. LPNs considering the transition should ask their employers about available educational benefits before assuming they must fund the transition entirely out of pocket.

Becoming an RN also expands professional autonomy. LPNs work under the supervision of RNs and physicians; RNs work more independently and can serve as the supervising clinician for LPN staff. This shift in professional role โ€” from supervised to supervisor โ€” appeals to many LPNs who have years of practical experience and want their licensure to reflect the full scope of their clinical judgment and capabilities.

Job market trends also favour the transition. The Bureau of Labor Statistics projects RN employment to grow faster than average through the early 2030s, driven by an aging population and rising demand for healthcare services. RN roles are consistently in the top tier of in-demand healthcare positions in virtually every U.S. region. LPNs who complete bridge programs enter a labour market that is actively seeking them, which translates into negotiating leverage on salary, scheduling, and specialty placement that newly licensed RNs without prior nursing experience cannot match.

  • Program types: LPN-to-ADN (2-year degree) or LPN-to-BSN (4-year degree); some programs offer LPN-to-RN certificates
  • Time to complete: 12-24 months for LPN-to-ADN bridge; 2-3 years for LPN-to-BSN; varies by program and enrollment status
  • Typical requirements: Current LPN license, minimum GPA, prerequisite courses (anatomy, microbiology, statistics), work experience (some programs), entrance exam
  • Final exam: NCLEX-RN โ€” the same national licensure exam taken by all new RN graduates regardless of educational pathway
  • Salary increase: Median $25,000 annual increase from LPN ($56k) to RN ($81k) โ€” varies significantly by specialty, setting, and location
  • Online options: Many programs offer hybrid or online formats; clinical hours must be completed in person at approved sites
  • Employer support: Many hospitals and health systems offer tuition reimbursement, loan forgiveness, or flexible scheduling for LPN-to-RN students

Steps to Advance from LPN to RN

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Gather your LPN program transcript and current nursing license information. Most bridge programs require an official transcript from your LPN school, proof of current licensure, and documentation of clinical hours. Programs vary in how much credit they award for prior LPN education โ€” some award significant credit for LPN coursework, reducing the total courses needed; others require completing the full ADN or BSN curriculum with LPN credit applied only to a few specific courses.

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Most LPN-to-RN programs require prerequisite coursework in anatomy and physiology, microbiology, chemistry, English composition, statistics, and sometimes psychology or sociology. If your LPN program covered some of these, your transcripts may satisfy prerequisites โ€” but verify this with each program individually, as requirements differ. Prerequisite courses can be completed at community colleges while you're still working as an LPN, reducing the total time needed once you formally enrol in the bridge program.

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Compare programs on: total length, cost, scheduling flexibility (day/evening/weekend/online options), clinical site locations, program reputation and NCLEX-RN first-time pass rates, and employer partnerships. Contact program advisors to discuss how your specific LPN education and experience will be evaluated. Submit applications well before deadlines โ€” competitive programs fill quickly, and nursing school admissions have long lead times.

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Bridge programs combine classroom nursing theory, lab simulation, and clinical rotations in hospital, community, and specialty settings. After completing all program requirements, apply for NCLEX-RN. The NCLEX-RN tests critical thinking and clinical decision-making across all major nursing content areas โ€” it is the same exam for all RN applicants regardless of educational pathway. LPNs who have been actively practising often find the clinical reasoning components of NCLEX-RN more intuitive than new graduates without working experience.

LPN-to-ADN vs LPN-to-BSN: Which Program Is Right for You?

The two main educational pathways for LPN-to-RN transition lead to different degrees with different long-term implications. The Associate Degree in Nursing (ADN) is a 2-year degree typically offered by community colleges โ€” it is the faster, less expensive path to RN licensure and is the most common entry route for LPNs transitioning to RN. ADN graduates take the same NCLEX-RN examination as BSN graduates and receive the same RN license; the immediate scope of practice is identical. Many hospitals hire ADN-prepared RNs, particularly in regions where nursing shortages are acute and facilities cannot be selective about educational preparation.

The Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN) is a 4-year degree that adds general education, nursing research, public health nursing, and nursing leadership courses to the clinical content covered in ADN programs. BSN-prepared nurses are increasingly preferred by Magnet-designated hospitals โ€” the highest quality designation in nursing โ€” and are required for most nurse management, clinical education, and hospital leadership roles.

Many hospitals have adopted policies that all RN hires hold a BSN, particularly in competitive urban markets. The BSN also positions nurses for graduate school (nurse practitioner, certified nurse anesthetist, nursing informatics, and other advanced roles all require a BSN foundation).

For LPNs who want to enter an RN role as quickly as possible with the lowest cost, the LPN-to-ADN bridge program is the practical first step. For LPNs with longer career horizons who want to keep specialty or leadership options fully open, the LPN-to-BSN bridge โ€” or the ADN followed by an online RN-to-BSN completion program โ€” achieves both speed and credential depth. Many LPNs choose to earn their ADN first, begin working as an RN, and then complete an online RN-to-BSN program over the following 1-2 years โ€” often with employer tuition reimbursement supporting the BSN phase.

LPN to RN Program Types Compared

๐Ÿ”ด LPN-to-ADN Bridge

Degree: Associate Degree in Nursing. Duration: 12-24 months (assuming prerequisites complete). Cost: $8,000-$25,000 total (community college programs). NCLEX-RN eligible: Yes โ€” same licensure exam as BSN graduates. Best for: LPNs who want the fastest, most affordable path to RN licensure. Setting: Community colleges, technical colleges. Limitation: Some Magnet hospitals prefer or require BSN; graduate school requires BSN.

๐ŸŸ  LPN-to-BSN Bridge

Degree: Bachelor of Science in Nursing. Duration: 2-3 years (assuming prerequisites complete). Cost: $25,000-$80,000+ (university programs). NCLEX-RN eligible: Yes. Best for: LPNs with longer career horizons, interest in hospital leadership, specialty nursing, or advanced practice. Setting: Universities, including many with online BSN completion options. Advantage: Opens all nursing career pathways including advanced practice and leadership.

๐ŸŸก ADN + RN-to-BSN Completion

A two-stage approach: earn ADN, begin working as RN, complete online BSN. Duration: ADN (12-24 months) + BSN completion (12-18 months). Cost: ADN ($8,000-$25,000) + BSN completion ($10,000-$25,000). Best for: LPNs who want fast RN licensure while planning to earn BSN with employer tuition reimbursement. Many hospitals reimburse $5,000-$15,000/year for continuing education, making this approach financially efficient.

๐ŸŸข LPN-to-RN Certificate Programs

Some states and programs offer LPN-to-RN certificate tracks that provide RN licensure eligibility without a full degree. These are less common than degree programs and may limit graduate school options. They can be appropriate for LPNs whose primary goal is expanded scope of practice and salary rather than academic credentials. Verify NCLEX-RN eligibility and state licensure requirements before enrolling in any certificate-only program.

NCLEX-RN: What LPNs Need to Know

๐Ÿ“‹ NCLEX-RN Format

The NCLEX-RN is the national licensing examination that all RN candidates must pass regardless of educational pathway. Current format (since 2023 Next Generation NCLEX):

  • Length: 85-145 questions; minimum 85, maximum 145, with the test ending when statistical confidence in pass/fail is achieved
  • Question types: Multiple-choice, select-all-that-apply, drag-and-drop ordering, hotspot, fill-in-the-blank, and new Next Gen items (matrix grids, extended multiple response, bow-tie clinical judgment items)
  • Time allowed: 5 hours total (4 hours 15 minutes testing time + 45-minute break allowance)
  • Content areas: Safe and effective care environment, health promotion and maintenance, psychosocial integrity, physiological integrity โ€” weighted toward physiological integrity (clinical nursing care)
  • Scoring: Pass/fail โ€” no numerical score reported; adaptive testing adjusts question difficulty based on your responses
  • Retake policy: Must wait 45 days before retaking; up to 8 attempts per year in most states

๐Ÿ“‹ NCLEX-RN Prep for LPNs

LPNs have a significant advantage entering NCLEX-RN preparation: clinical experience with real patients. The Next Generation NCLEX emphasises clinical judgment โ€” the kind of situational thinking that practicing nurses do every day. Strategies specific to the LPN-to-RN transition:

  • Refresh theoretical content: LPN-to-RN programs cover the advanced nursing theory content tested on NCLEX-RN; use your program's content as the study foundation
  • Focus on clinical reasoning, not just facts: NCLEX-RN questions test what you would do in a situation, not just what you know โ€” practice applying knowledge to patient scenarios
  • Use NCLEX-RN review books and question banks: ATI, HESI, and Kaplan offer LPN-to-RN specific prep materials and practice question banks that mirror NCLEX-RN format
  • LPN knowledge transfers: Med administration, physical assessment, patient monitoring, and documentation knowledge from LPN practice is directly relevant to NCLEX-RN content
  • First-time pass rate advantage: LPN-to-RN bridge graduates often have pass rates comparable to or above traditional nursing graduates because of their clinical foundation

Online LPN-to-RN Programs: What to Know

Online LPN-to-RN programs have expanded significantly, giving working LPNs more flexibility to pursue RN credentials without relocating or leaving employment. Fully online programs are not possible for nursing because RN education requires hands-on clinical rotations โ€” time spent directly caring for patients under licensed supervision in approved clinical settings. What online programs offer is the theoretical coursework portion of the curriculum delivered remotely, with clinical hours arranged at partner facilities near the student's location.

When evaluating online LPN-to-RN programs, the most important factors are accreditation status and NCLEX-RN first-time pass rates. Accreditation from the Accreditation Commission for Education in Nursing (ACEN) or the Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education (CCNE) is a baseline requirement for a legitimate nursing program โ€” unaccredited programs may not qualify students to sit for NCLEX-RN in all states, and their credentials may not be recognised by employers.

NCLEX-RN first-time pass rates are published by state boards of nursing and reflect how well program graduates are prepared for licensure โ€” programs with consistently low pass rates (below 80%) should be approached with caution.

Clinical placement arrangements for online programs vary. Some online programs have established agreements with hospital systems or clinical agencies near enrolled students; others require students to independently secure their own clinical placement agreements. Securing clinical sites in underserved areas can be challenging, and students who live in rural locations should verify that a program has workable clinical placement options before enrolling. The program's clinical coordinator should be able to explain exactly how clinical hours are arranged and what the student's responsibility is in the placement process.

Cost comparison between online and traditional campus programs is not straightforward. Online programs may have lower tuition but add technology fees, proctoring fees, and sometimes require travel to skills labs or orientation sessions. Traditional campus programs have set facility fees but may offer in-person support, campus resources, and employer partnerships that add value beyond the classroom instruction. Calculating the total cost of attendance โ€” including tuition, fees, textbooks, uniforms, clinical supplies, and lost income if hours are reduced โ€” gives a more accurate comparison than tuition alone.

LPN-to-RN Program Evaluation Checklist

Verify accreditation โ€” look for ACEN or CCNE accreditation; unaccredited programs may not qualify you to sit for NCLEX-RN or be recognised by employers
Check NCLEX-RN first-time pass rates โ€” available from your state board of nursing website; programs with rates below 80% warrant caution
Confirm your LPN credits and experience will be evaluated โ€” ask specifically how many credits or courses are waived based on your LPN education and what documentation is required
Clarify clinical placement responsibility โ€” will the program arrange your clinical sites or are you responsible for finding approved placement facilities near you?
Calculate total cost of attendance including fees, books, clinical supplies, uniform, licensing fees, and NCLEX-RN exam fee โ€” not just tuition
Ask about scheduling flexibility โ€” day, evening, weekend, or fully asynchronous online coursework options if you are working as an LPN during the program
Research employer partnerships โ€” some programs have agreements with hospital systems that include tuition assistance, guaranteed interviews, or priority hiring upon graduation

LPN to RN Transition: Pros and Cons

Pros

  • Significant salary increase: median RN salary ($81,000) is approximately $25,000 higher than median LPN salary ($56,000) โ€” the return on educational investment is typically 2-3 years of the salary differential
  • Broader scope of practice: RNs can independently assess patients, develop nursing care plans, administer IV medications, and supervise LPN and nursing assistant staff โ€” expanding clinical autonomy significantly
  • Wider employment settings: most hospital departments, intensive care units, emergency rooms, and surgical services require RN credentials; LPN roles are concentrated in long-term care, home health, and clinics
  • Career advancement pathway: RN licensure is the prerequisite for nurse practitioner, clinical nurse specialist, nurse educator, and nursing administration roles โ€” none of which are accessible with LPN licensure

Cons

  • Time commitment: even the fastest bridge programs require 12-24 months of coursework and clinical hours while many students continue working part-time โ€” balancing work, school, and personal life is demanding
  • Financial cost: LPN-to-RN programs range from $8,000-$80,000 depending on program type and institution; the investment requires careful planning, though employer tuition assistance and loan forgiveness programs can substantially reduce out-of-pocket costs

RN Specialties and Career Paths After the Transition

One of the most compelling reasons to advance from LPN to RN is the range of nursing specialties that become accessible. LPNs who have worked in long-term care facilities, physician offices, or home health settings gain RN credentials and can then pursue intensive care nursing, emergency nursing, perioperative nursing, labor and delivery, oncology, or paediatric nursing โ€” specialties that typically require RN credentials at minimum and often prefer experienced nurses who can demonstrate clinical judgment under pressure.

The practical clinical experience from LPN work provides a foundation that new RN graduates without prior nursing practice must develop from scratch, giving experienced bridge graduates a genuine advantage in specialty unit orientation and orientation timelines.

Specialty certification is another career development avenue open to RNs that is not available to LPNs. The American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC) and specialty nursing organisations offer certification examinations in areas including critical care (CCRN), oncology nursing (OCN), emergency nursing (CEN), cardiac care, and many others.

These certifications are earned after gaining experience in the specialty and passing an examination, and they carry both salary premium and professional recognition that further differentiate experienced RNs in competitive job markets. Many hospitals offer sign-on bonuses for nurses who arrive with active specialty certifications, and some organisations provide financial incentives for nurses who obtain certifications after hire.

For RNs with ambitions beyond direct patient care, nursing leadership, nursing education, and advanced practice represent the highest tiers of the nursing career ladder. Hospital charge nurse and nurse manager roles are RN positions; director of nursing, chief nursing officer, and vice president of patient care services positions require RN licensure and typically BSN plus graduate degrees.

Nurse educator roles in hospitals, community colleges, and universities that prepare future nurses require RN experience plus graduate credentials. Advanced practice roles โ€” nurse practitioner, certified nurse-midwife, clinical nurse specialist, certified registered nurse anesthetist โ€” require RN licensure, a BSN, and graduate-level advanced practice nursing education. Each of these directions starts with the same foundational step: the LPN-to-RN bridge that this article describes.

Practice LPN Exam Questions

LPN to RN: Key Numbers

$25,000
Median annual salary increase from LPN ($56k) to RN ($81k) โ€” varies by specialty, location, and years of experience
12-24 mo
Typical LPN-to-ADN bridge program length after prerequisites โ€” the fastest RN pathway for working LPNs
NCLEX-RN
National licensing exam all RN graduates must pass โ€” same exam for LPN bridge graduates and traditional nursing students
ACEN/CCNE
Accreditation bodies for nursing programs โ€” always verify a program holds one of these accreditations before enrolling
85-145
NCLEX-RN question range โ€” adaptive test ends when statistical confidence in pass or fail is achieved
$5-15k/yr
Typical employer tuition reimbursement range โ€” many hospitals fund LPN-to-RN transitions to address nursing shortages

Financial Planning for the LPN-to-RN Transition

Financing an LPN-to-RN bridge program requires careful planning, but more funding options exist than many LPNs realise. Federal financial aid โ€” including Pell Grants, subsidised and unsubsidised federal student loans, and federal work-study โ€” is available to students enrolled in accredited nursing programs at eligible institutions. Completing the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) before each academic year is the first step in accessing federal aid; the application opens October 1 for the following academic year, and some aid is distributed on a first-come basis.

Employer tuition reimbursement is one of the most valuable funding sources for working LPNs. Many hospitals, long-term care chains, and health systems offer $3,000-$15,000 per year in tuition assistance for employees pursuing RN education. These benefits typically require maintaining employment with the organisation during school and for a defined period afterward โ€” usually 1-2 years โ€” in exchange for the educational support. LPNs who plan to remain with their employer after earning their RN license often find this the most cost-effective funding approach, particularly when combined with the salary increase that typically accompanies RN promotion within the same organisation.

The NURSE Corps Scholarship Program and the National Health Service Corps offer nursing scholarship and loan repayment programs for nurses who commit to working in shortage areas โ€” typically underserved rural or urban communities. These federal programs can cover significant portions of nursing education costs in exchange for service commitments, making them attractive for LPNs who are willing to work in high-need settings where nursing shortages are most acute.

State-specific nursing scholarship and loan forgiveness programs also exist in many states, particularly for nurses who commit to working in state-designated shortage facilities. Researching both federal and state options before borrowing private loans can substantially reduce the total cost of the LPN-to-RN transition.

Private scholarships from nursing foundations, hospital foundations, professional associations, and community organisations add another layer of potential funding. The American Association of Colleges of Nursing, the National Student Nurses' Association, and many state nursing associations offer scholarships specifically for nurses advancing their education. These awards are often smaller than federal programs but can meaningfully offset costs when combined with other aid sources. Applying to multiple smaller scholarships simultaneously is a practical strategy that many nursing students underutilise.

Making the Decision: Is the LPN-to-RN Transition Right for You?

Not every LPN needs to or should become an RN. LPN roles provide meaningful, skilled patient care in settings where LPN credentials fully support the required scope of practice โ€” long-term care, home health, physician offices, correctional facilities, and community clinics all value experienced LPNs who are committed to those practice settings.

Some LPNs work in settings where RN roles are not available or where the LPN-to-RN salary differential is smaller than in urban hospital markets. The decision to pursue RN credentials should be based on your own career goals, financial situation, and the role opportunities available in your geographic area, not on a generalised assumption that advancing is always better.

That said, for LPNs who want more clinical autonomy, access to hospital-based nursing roles, higher earning potential, or a pathway to advanced practice, the LPN-to-RN transition is a well-established and achievable route. The existence of bridge programs specifically designed for working LPNs means the transition does not require starting over โ€” your existing education and clinical experience are recognised and credited in ways that make the process significantly shorter and more affordable than starting RN education from the beginning.

The best starting point is a conversation with a nursing program advisor at community colleges and universities in your area. Most advisors will review your LPN transcript and tell you specifically how your background applies to their bridge program requirements โ€” how many credits you can receive, which prerequisites you've already satisfied, and what a realistic timeline looks like for your situation. Many LPNs discover that the path to RN licensure is shorter and more affordable than they assumed, which makes the decision to pursue it considerably easier.

Talking to other nurses who have made the LPN-to-RN transition is another valuable preparation step. Nurses who have recently completed bridge programs can share realistic information about workload, scheduling challenges, and the aspects of the program that were harder or easier than expected. Professional nursing associations, hospital staff networks, and nursing school alumni groups are all good places to find mentors who have navigated the same transition you are considering. Peer insight supplements the information provided by program advisors and gives you a more complete picture of what the transition actually involves in day-to-day practical terms.

LPN Practice Test Questions

LPN to RN Questions and Answers

How long does it take to go from LPN to RN?

LPN-to-ADN bridge programs typically take 12-24 months to complete after prerequisites are satisfied. LPN-to-BSN programs take 2-3 years. Some LPNs choose a two-stage path: completing ADN in 12-24 months, beginning work as an RN, then completing an online RN-to-BSN program in 12-18 additional months โ€” often with employer tuition reimbursement. The total time depends on how many prerequisites are already complete, enrollment status (full-time vs part-time), and program format.

What is an LPN-to-RN bridge program?

An LPN-to-RN bridge program is an accelerated nursing education program designed for licensed practical nurses who want to advance to registered nurse status. Bridge programs recognise LPN education and experience and allow students to complete RN requirements in less time than traditional nursing school. Programs lead to either an Associate Degree in Nursing (ADN) or Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN), after which graduates must pass the NCLEX-RN to become licensed as RNs.

Do I need to retake all nursing courses to become an RN?

No โ€” most LPN-to-RN bridge programs award credit for your prior LPN education, reducing the number of courses you need to complete. How much credit is awarded varies by program; some give significant credit for LPN coursework and clinical hours, while others apply credit to only a few courses. You will typically need to complete advanced nursing theory, additional clinical rotations, and courses specific to the ADN or BSN curriculum. Contact individual programs to find out how your specific LPN education and experience will be evaluated.

Can I work as an LPN while completing an LPN-to-RN program?

Yes โ€” most LPN-to-RN programs are designed for working nurses and offer evening, weekend, or online coursework schedules. Most students reduce their LPN hours during the program, particularly during clinical rotation periods, but many maintain part-time LPN employment throughout. Employer tuition reimbursement programs sometimes require maintaining a minimum hours-per-week threshold, so check your employer's policy if reimbursement is part of your funding plan.

How much more do RNs make than LPNs?

The median annual salary for RNs is approximately $81,000 compared to approximately $56,000 for LPNs โ€” a difference of roughly $25,000 per year at median. Actual salary differences vary significantly by specialty, work setting, geographic location, and years of experience. Hospital-based RN roles, intensive care specialties, and urban markets have the highest RN salaries. The salary increase alone often covers the cost of the bridge program within 2-3 years of earning the RN license.

What exam do I take to become an RN?

All RN candidates must pass the NCLEX-RN (National Council Licensure Examination for Registered Nurses) regardless of educational pathway. LPN-to-RN bridge graduates take the same NCLEX-RN as traditional ADN and BSN graduates โ€” there is no special exam for bridge students. The NCLEX-RN tests clinical judgment and nursing knowledge across all major practice areas. After passing, you apply to your state board of nursing for RN licensure. LPNs who have been practising often find NCLEX-RN clinical reasoning questions more intuitive due to their hands-on patient care experience.
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