Work Abroad — USA

NCLEX-RN from Nigeria

Credentials evaluation, choosing a state board, the NCLEX-RN exam, English requirements and the visa — explained in order.

To work as a registered nurse in the USA from Nigeria you generally: (1) get a credentials evaluation (commonly via CGFNS), (2) apply to a US state board of nursing for authorisation to test, (3) meet that board's English requirement, (4) pass the NCLEX-RN (now available at international test centres), and (5) secure a work visa. Pay is high, but immigration timelines vary by year and state.

Last reviewed: June 2026

Step 1 — Credentials evaluation (CGFNS)

US boards need proof your Nigerian education is comparable to a US nursing programme. This usually means a credentials evaluation — frequently a CGFNS CES report or CGFNS Certification. CGFNS asks the NMCN to verify your registration directly, so begin early.

Step 2 — Choose a state board

There is no single US nursing licence — you license in a specific state, and requirements differ. Some states are more international-applicant friendly (documentation, English rules, retrogression for visas). Pick your target state before paying for evaluations, because their rules drive everything downstream.

Step 3 — English language

Most boards require an English test (commonly IELTS or TOEFL) for internationally educated nurses, with state-specific minimums and exemptions. Confirm your chosen board's exact requirement.

Step 4 — The NCLEX-RN

The NCLEX-RN is the national licensing exam. It uses computer-adaptive testing, so length varies by performance. It can now be taken at international Pearson VUE test centres, including options accessible to candidates in the region. Once authorised to test by your board, you schedule and sit it.

NCLEX format, the test plan and pass logic are set by the NCSBN and updated periodically. Prep with current materials and confirm details at ncsbn.org.

Step 5 — Visa & employment

Passing the NCLEX makes you licensable; you still need the right to work. Routes vary (employer sponsorship, immigrant vs non-immigrant categories) and timelines can shift with visa availability. This is the most variable part — plan for it and take professional immigration advice.

Order of operations

  1. Pick a target US state board
  2. Start CGFNS evaluation + NMCN verification
  3. Sit required English test
  4. Get board authorisation to test (ATT)
  5. Pass the NCLEX-RN
  6. Obtain a work visa and license in-state

Frequently asked questions

Can I take the NCLEX in Nigeria?
The NCLEX is delivered at Pearson VUE international test centres. Availability in specific countries changes, so check the current list of international locations — many candidates in the region travel to a nearby centre if needed.
Do I need CGFNS to take the NCLEX?
It depends on your chosen state board. Many require a CGFNS credentials evaluation (CES) and/or certification for internationally educated nurses; some have different requirements. Check the specific board.
How is the NCLEX different from the UK CBT?
The NCLEX-RN is a single computer-adaptive US licensing exam; the UK route splits competence into an online CBT plus a practical OSCE in the UK. Different systems — pick the destination first, then the exam.
Which US state is best for Nigerian nurses?
It varies by documentation rules, English requirements and visa/retrogression. There's no universal best — research two or three boards against your situation before committing.
How long does the US route take from Nigeria?
Often longer than the UK route, mainly due to credential evaluation and visa timelines, which can run many months to longer depending on the year and category.

Related guides

All routes abroadCompare destinationsUK NMC registrationThe UK routeNMCN verificationNeeded by CGFNS
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