Labor and delivery (L&D) is one of the most romanticized specialties in nursing — and one of the most misunderstood. The reality is that L&D nurses work some of the most intense, emotionally textured shifts in the hospital. Every birth is a high-acuity event compressed into a few hours, and the stakes are always two patients at once.
If you are drawn to this work, here is what you need to know.
What Does an L&D Nurse Do?
L&D nurses care for women through labor, birth, and the immediate postpartum recovery period. Responsibilities include:
- Continuous fetal monitoring and interpretation
- Managing labor progression and pain
- Assisting with epidurals, vaginal births, and cesarean sections
- Resuscitating newborns until NICU or pediatric team arrives
- Managing obstetric emergencies (postpartum hemorrhage, eclampsia, shoulder dystocia, prolapsed cord)
- Supporting families through both joyful and devastating outcomes
Educational and Licensing Requirements
- Active RN license
- BSN preferred (most academic centers require it)
- BLS
- NRP (Neonatal Resuscitation Program) — required before independent practice
- STABLE certification for sick newborns (preferred)
- AWHONN Intermediate or Advanced Fetal Heart Monitoring course
- ACLS in some higher-acuity centers
Can You Start as a New Grad?
Yes, especially through formal L&D residency programs. These programs are competitive — apply early, often, and prepare to interview at multiple hospitals.
If you can't land L&D directly, postpartum, mother-baby, or antepartum units are excellent stepping stones that get you into the women's health track.
Skills to Build
- Fetal monitor strip interpretation (Category I, II, III — and what each requires)
- Recognition of labor progression and dysfunction
- Postpartum hemorrhage management (fundal massage, medications, blood products)
- Neonatal resuscitation
- Crisis communication with frightened families
- Trauma-informed care during birth
Certifications
- RNC-OB: Inpatient obstetric nursing certification, recognized nationally.
- C-EFM: Electronic fetal monitoring certification.
- RNC-MNN: Maternal-newborn nursing.
Salary Expectations
L&D RNs earn around $75,000 to $108,000 nationally in 2026, depending on region, shift, and certification. Charge nurses, clinical educators, and traveler L&D positions earn more.
What the Work Is Really Like
The myth: cuddly babies all day.
The reality: 12-hour shifts where you may attend 0 births or 8. Shifts that include miscarriage, stillbirth, neonatal demise, traumatic birth, and birth trauma alongside the joyful deliveries. Patients who come in unprepared, frightened, in pain, sometimes in crisis.
What the work asks of you:
- Two-patient brain (mom + baby always)
- Steadiness in unpredictable acuity
- Emotional regulation under intense joy and grief
- Strong family communication skills
- Trauma-informed practice — many laboring women have histories of sexual or medical trauma
What Surprises New L&D Nurses
- How much physical work is involved (positioning, holding legs, supporting bodies)
- How frequently birth doesn't go the way the patient planned
- How often you witness loss
- How tight the team becomes
- How much you grow to love the work despite the hardness
How to Get Hired
- Apply to new-grad residencies in OB at least 6 months ahead of graduation.
- Take NRP early if possible — it's required.
- Highlight any OB clinical rotations, doula work, or labor support experience.
- Be honest about why you want OB. "Babies are cute" won't get you hired. "I want to support women through one of the most vulnerable transitions of their lives" will.
- Be open to night shift — most L&D units start new grads on nights.
L&D will change how you understand birth, family, and resilience. If you are called to this work, it is one of the most meaningful careers in healthcare.