Picking a nurse practitioner specialty feels like a fork in the road, and the adult gerontology lane is one of the busiest. Patients are getting older, hospitals are short on primary care, and the people who run wards keep asking for advanced clinicians who actually understand older adults. So if you have been reading job posts and seeing AGNP, AGPCNP, and AGACNP pop up, you are not imagining things.
The adult gerontology nurse practitioner, usually shortened to AGNP, treats adolescents, adults, and older adults across the lifespan, with extra training in geriatric syndromes, polypharmacy, and end-of-life care. The role splits into two main tracks: primary care (AGPCNP) and acute care (AGACNP). They share a population focus but practice in very different settings, and they sit different national certifying exams.
This guide walks through what AGNPs really do day to day, where they work, what they earn, how the two tracks compare to the family nurse practitioner route, and the full path from registered nurse to certified AGNP. We will also tackle the messy questions — AGNP vs FNP, which is better, can you switch later, and what the certification exams actually test.
An AGNP is an advanced practice registered nurse (APRN) who provides care to patients from adolescence through old age. The lower age cutoff is usually 13, though some programs say 12 or adolescence broadly. The upper end is, well, there isn’t one. AGNPs follow patients into their nineties and beyond, and a real chunk of the work happens with adults over 65.
Day to day, an AGNP takes histories, performs physical exams, orders and interprets labs and imaging, diagnoses conditions, prescribes medication, and manages chronic disease. In most states they do all of this with full or reduced practice authority. They also counsel patients on lifestyle, screen for cognitive decline, coordinate with specialists, and handle advance care planning when the time comes.
The gerontology layer is what sets them apart from a general adult NP. Older adults present differently. A UTI might show up as new confusion. A heart attack might be silent. Medications stack up, kidneys slow down, and a drug that was fine at 50 can be dangerous at 80. AGNPs train specifically to catch this — Beers Criteria, frailty assessment, falls prevention, dementia workups, and the awkward conversations about driving, independence, and goals of care.
Here is where people get tripped up. “Adult gerontology” describes the patient population. “Primary care” and “acute care” describe the setting and pace. You pick one when you apply to grad school, and switching later means more coursework and a second certification exam.
The AGPCNP works in clinics, physician offices, long-term care, retirement communities, and outpatient specialty practices. Focus: wellness, chronic disease management, preventive screening, and stable conditions over time. Think of the clinician who manages your hypertension, adjusts your diabetes meds, and catches the early signs of cognitive decline.
The AGACNP works in hospitals, ICUs, emergency departments, step-down units, and acute specialty practices like cardiology or pulmonology inpatient teams. Focus: unstable and complex patients — sepsis, post-surgical management, acute respiratory failure, complex cardiac cases. AGACNPs do procedures, manage ventilators in some settings, and round with intensivists.
Both are AGNPs. Both treat adolescents through older adults. But you cannot mix them. An AGPCNP working in an ICU is practicing outside their scope, and many hospital privileging boards will not credential them for inpatient roles. Pick the setting you actually want.
Setting: Clinics, long-term care, home visits, outpatient specialty.
Pace: Steady. Scheduled appointments, chronic disease, prevention.
Patient mix: Adolescents through elderly, stable to moderately complex.
Procedures: Minor — joint injections, skin lesion removal, suturing in some practices.
Certification: ANCC AGPCNP-BC or AANPCB AGNP-C.
Typical hours: Weekdays, occasional weekends, some on-call for established panels.
Pay range: $100K-$135K typical, higher for SNF leadership.
Setting: ICU, ED, step-down, hospitalist, acute specialty.
Pace: Fast. Unstable patients, rapid decisions, codes.
Patient mix: Adolescents through elderly, acutely ill or post-op.
Procedures: Central lines, intubation in some settings, chest tubes, paracentesis, arterial lines.
Certification: ANCC AGACNP-BC or AACN ACNPC-AG.
Typical hours: 12-hour shifts, nights, weekends, holidays standard.
Pay range: $125K-$165K typical, locum work clears $200K.
Post-master's certificate: 12-24 months extra, with additional clinical hours.
AGPCNP to AGACNP: Critical care coursework, 300-500 ICU hours, separate exam.
AGACNP to AGPCNP: Primary care management, outpatient clinical hours, separate exam.
Cost: $15K-$40K depending on program and length.
Worth it? Usually yes if you have a clear setting goal — the alternative is being stuck.
Most AGPCNPs end up in outpatient settings. Primary care clinics, geriatric specialty practices, home-based primary care, hospice and palliative care, skilled nursing facilities, and assisted living communities all hire heavily. Some move into urgent care, occupational health, or chronic disease clinics like diabetes management and heart failure clinics.
AGACNPs cluster in hospitals. ICUs, hospitalist services, cardiac and surgical step-down units, emergency departments, and specialty inpatient teams — cardiology, pulmonology, oncology, transplant — all want AGACNPs. Trauma services and rapid response teams hire them too. A growing number work in post-acute care doing transitional care, bridging the gap between hospital discharge and home.
Telehealth has changed the landscape for both tracks. Primary care AGNPs run virtual chronic disease panels, and some acute care AGNPs cover tele-ICU shifts overnight, supporting smaller rural hospitals.
Earn a Bachelor of Science in Nursing or complete an ADN plus an RN-to-BSN bridge. Four years total for direct entry, or two plus a bridge.
Pass the NCLEX-RN and get licensed. Most AGNP programs want one to two years of bedside experience in adult medical-surgical, ICU, or primary care.
Enroll in an accredited adult gerontology track — primary or acute care. MSN runs 2-3 years, DNP runs 3-4. Includes 500-1,000 clinical hours.
Sit the ANCC or AANPCB exam for AGPCNP, or the AACN or ANCC exam for AGACNP. Pass rates run 75-85% on first attempt.
Apply for advanced practice licensure in your state, get a DEA number, and start credentialing with employers and payers.
Five years in: complete 1,000 practice hours plus 75 CE hours including 25 in pharmacology. Plan CE early to avoid the last-minute scramble.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics lumps all nurse practitioners together, so there is no single AGNP number, but the patterns across surveys and job boards are pretty consistent. Median NP pay sits around $126,000, with a wide spread depending on setting, geography, and experience.
AGPCNPs in outpatient primary care typically land in the $100,000 to $125,000 range. Geriatric specialty, palliative care, or house-call practices climb higher. Skilled nursing facility coverage — especially as a medical director or regional lead — can push past $150,000 because the work is demanding and staffing is thin.
AGACNPs in hospitals usually earn more. ICU and surgical step-down roles often start at $125,000 and reach $160,000 or higher with night differentials, weekend pay, and procedural bonuses. Locum AGACNPs can clear $200,000 in some markets, though that comes with travel and unstable schedules. For broader context, the nurse practitioner salary page tracks state-level numbers and trends.
Accreditation is non-negotiable. The program must be accredited by CCNE or ACEN, and the specialty track must align with the certification exam you plan to sit. Some programs offer both AGPCNP and AGACNP — most pick one. A few offer dual tracks like AGPCNP plus psychiatric mental health, which adds another year but doubles your scope.
If you already hold an associate degree and an RN license, an online nurse practitioner degree or RN-to-MSN bridge can save a step. These programs roll BSN coursework and graduate work into one path. They run longer than a straight MSN — usually three to four years — but you skip the separate BSN tuition.
Clinical hours matter more than coursework rigor. Look for at least 600 supervised hours, with placements in the populations you want to treat. If you plan to work in long-term care, you want geriatric placements baked in. AGACNP students should look for ICU, step-down, and emergency hours, not just hospital floor work.
This is the search query that probably brought half the readers here. AGNP versus FNP, which is better, which earns more, which is harder. Honest answer: it depends on who you want to treat.
The family nurse practitioner sees everyone from newborns up. Pediatrics, women’s health, prenatal in some practices, adolescents, adults, and older adults all fit. FNPs are generalists — broad and shallow. The AGNP starts at adolescence and goes deep on adult and geriatric care. No babies, no obstetrics.
If you want flexibility and rural or family practice work, the FNP is the safer bet. Smaller towns often have one clinic that needs someone to see everyone. If you want hospital, ICU, or hospitalist work, the FNP cannot get hired — those roles want AGACNPs. If you want geriatric specialty, SNF leadership, or palliative care, the AGNP is the right credential.
Salary differences between FNP and AGNP are small in outpatient settings. AGACNPs out-earn FNPs in hospital settings because hospitals will not credential FNPs for acute care roles in most states. The family nurse practitioner salary comparison has fuller numbers.
AGNP if you want depth in adult and geriatric care. FNP if you want breadth across the whole lifespan. AGACNP if you want hospital work. AGPCNP if you want clinic work. None of these are wrong choices — they are different doors into the same profession, with different patient mixes and different hours.
The certification exam is the gate between graduation and practice. Two main boards handle AGPCNP — the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC) and the American Association of Nurse Practitioners Certification Board (AANPCB). For AGACNP, the choice is ANCC or the American Association of Critical-Care Nurses (AACN).
The ANCC AGPCNP-BC exam runs 175 questions, three and a half hours, computer-based at Prometric centers. The AANPCB AGNP-C exam runs 150 questions, three hours. Both cover assessment, diagnosis, planning, and evaluation across the adult-gerontology population. The ANCC has slightly more questions on professional issues and policy. The AANPCB focuses more on clinical decision-making.
The ANCC AGACNP-BC exam runs 175 questions across three and a half hours and weights heavily toward acute and critical care management. The AACN ACNPC-AG runs 175 questions and is widely regarded as the more clinically focused exam, with more case-based reasoning.
First-attempt pass rates sit between 75% and 85% depending on the exam and year. The exams are not easy, but they are passable with structured prep. The adult gerontology primary care exam practice page has subject-area drills aligned to the ANCC and AANPCB blueprints.
What an AGNP can actually do depends heavily on which state they practice in. Full practice authority states — like Arizona, Colorado, Oregon, Washington, and most New England states — let AGNPs evaluate, diagnose, order tests, and prescribe independently, including controlled substances. Reduced practice states require a collaborative agreement with a physician for certain functions. Restricted practice states require physician supervision or delegation.
The trend is toward full practice authority — most states have moved that way over the past decade. But the patchwork still affects where you can work, what you can prescribe, and whether you can open your own practice. If independent practice is the goal, check the state map before you pick a graduate program.
One thing worth saying out loud: AGNPs spend a lot of time with older adults, and that work is emotionally heavy. You will manage dementia, watch families struggle with caregiver burden, have honest conversations about prognosis, and walk patients through hospice referrals. You will be the one who notices the bruises that mean elder abuse, the missed doses that mean cognitive decline, and the depression that hides behind “I’m fine, dear.”
The reward is real — long therapeutic relationships, the chance to make a genuine difference in someone’s last decade of life, and a patient population that needs you badly. The Baby Boomer wave is just starting to crest. By 2034, Americans over 65 will outnumber children for the first time in US history. Geriatric expertise is not going out of style.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics projects 46% growth for nurse practitioners through 2033 — one of the fastest-growing roles in healthcare. AGNPs sit at the center of that demand. Primary care physician shortages, aging populations, and hospital staffing crises all push hiring upward.
Specific demand pockets worth knowing: skilled nursing facility coverage is desperate for AGPCNPs and pays accordingly. Hospitalist services in mid-size hospitals love AGACNPs because they can carry full patient loads with physician backup. Home-based primary care is booming — companies like Aledade, ChenMed, and Oak Street Health hire AGNPs in volume. Hospice and palliative care services consistently outpace supply.
The flip side: saturated metros like Atlanta, Phoenix, and parts of Texas have more NP graduates than openings in some specialties. Rural and small-city markets remain wide open. Geography matters more than people expect when comparing offers.
Beyond textbook clinical skills, the AGNPs who thrive share a few habits. They are calm in messy conversations — family meetings, code status discussions, dementia diagnoses. They know how to slow down with older patients without being condescending. They listen to caregivers, because caregivers see the patient between visits and notice things the chart never captures.
Technically, the strongest AGNPs run tight medication reviews on every visit. Polypharmacy harms more older adults than most diseases. Deprescribing — actively cutting unnecessary meds — is one of the highest-impact things an AGNP can do, and one of the most undertrained.
They also build referral networks. Geriatric care is team care. Knowing the local geriatric psychiatrist, the audiologist who handles cognitive assessment, the physical therapist who specializes in falls — these connections turn average care into excellent care.
Just to keep the map clear: AGNP is one of six NP population foci. The others are family (FNP), pediatric (PNP), neonatal (NNP), psychiatric mental health (PMHNP), and women’s health (WHNP). Each has its own certification exam and scope. Types of nurse practitioners covers all six in detail.
FNPs see the most patients across the lifespan and dominate primary care. AGNPs go deeper on adult and geriatric. PNPs handle peds. NNPs work in NICUs with the tiniest patients. PMHNPs run mental health practices and prescribe psychiatric meds. WHNPs focus on women’s reproductive and primary care.
You pick one and then add scope later if you want. The first choice matters because it sets your job market for the first few years out of school. Pick the population that genuinely interests you — you will spend a decade with them before any pivot becomes practical.
Adult gerontology nurse practitioner is a deep, well-paid, fast-growing specialty that fits clinicians who genuinely like adults and older adults. The work is varied, the demand is real, and the path — while long — is well-marked. Pick your track with care, pick a CCNE-accredited program with strong clinical placements, plan your certification exam early, and check state practice authority before you commit to a region.
Done right, the AGNP credential opens doors for the next thirty years of healthcare, and few specialties offer the same combination of stability, autonomy, and steady demand that comes with serving an aging population that needs experienced advanced clinicians more every single year that passes by.