Nevada Registered Nurse (RN) Continuing Education Requirements
Requirements Overview
The Nevada State Board of Nursing requires 30 contact hours of continuing education per biennial renewal cycle. Every renewal must include 4 hours of cultural competency training. Additionally, all nurses must complete a one-time 4-hour bioterrorism course — retain the certificate indefinitely as proof.
Nevada also requires 2 hours of HIV/stigma training under certain conditions. New graduates are exempt from the 30-hour general requirement for their first biennial period, but they must still complete the bioterrorism and cultural competency courses.
College coursework converts to CE credit: 1 semester credit equals 15 contact hours, and 1 quarter credit equals 10 contact hours. Preceptorship of 120 hours can earn up to 10 CEUs per cycle. Nevada is a Nurse Licensure Compact (NLC) state.
Mandatory Topics
| Topic | Hours | Frequency | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cultural Competency | 4 | Every renewal | |
| Bioterrorism | 4 | One-time | |
| HIV/Stigma Training | 2 | Conditional |
First Renewal vs. Standard Renewal
Exemptions
- Exemption — New graduates are exempt from the 30-hour CE requirement for the first biennial period after graduation, but must still complete bioterrorism and cultural competency requirements.
How You Can Complete Your CE
Provider Requirements
CE must be from academic institutions, state boards, or approved organizations including the American Nurse Credentialing Center Commission (ANCC) and National League for Nursing (NLN).
Tips for Nevada RNs
- Complete your one-time bioterrorism course early and keep the certificate permanently. Nevada requires indefinite retention of this documentation.
- Budget 4 hours for cultural competency every cycle — it's mandatory each renewal, not a one-time requirement.
- If you precept nursing students or employees, document your hours. 120 hours of preceptorship equals up to 10 CEUs, covering a third of your requirement.
- Nevada uses 60-minute contact hours. Verify your course certificates reflect full 60-minute hours, not the 50-minute format used by some providers.