Nursing school does not teach you how to negotiate a contract. Most NP programs don't either. The result is that thousands of new FNPs sign their first contracts with whatever the employer offered first, lose tens of thousands of dollars over the next few years, and find out only later that they could have asked for more.
I was one of them. I am writing this so you don't have to be.
Your first contract is not just about the salary. It is about the shape of your professional life for the next several years.
What Most New FNPs Get Wrong
The two biggest mistakes:
- Taking the first offer because you are grateful to be hired.
- Looking only at salary and ignoring everything else.
The contract has at least 8 to 10 negotiable elements. Treat the whole package, not just the number.
The Non-Salary Pieces That Matter
CME allowance
$1,000 to $3,000 per year is standard. CME days off (separate from PTO) are also negotiable.
Productivity model
Salary, RVU-based, or hybrid. Understand exactly how you'll be paid before signing. RVU contracts can be lucrative or punishing — get the multiplier and the threshold in writing.
Patient load expectations
How many patients per day? Are new patients longer slots? How is admin time built in? An "18 patients a day" job sounds reasonable until you realize it's actually 24 with double-bookings.
Charting time
Is admin time on the schedule? Or are you expected to chart from home on your own time? This is one of the biggest predictors of burnout. Push for protected charting time on the clock.
Call
Is there call? How often? Is it compensated separately or built into salary? Phone call vs. in-person? This question has destroyed contracts for me before — get specific.
Benefits
Health insurance, dental, vision, retirement match, disability insurance, life insurance. Calculate the real dollar value of each.
PTO
Vacation, sick, holidays. Is it accrued or front-loaded? Does it roll over? Many entry contracts offer 3 weeks; experienced providers can negotiate 4 to 6.
Malpractice
Is it claims-made or occurrence? If claims-made, who pays the "tail" if you leave? Tail coverage can cost $5,000 to $20,000. This is a real number.
Non-compete and restrictive covenants
Read these carefully. A 25-mile, 2-year non-compete can destroy your career if the job doesn't work out. Push back on radius and duration.
Termination
Without cause termination clauses — how much notice, by either side?
Sign-on bonus
Common in underserved areas. Usually has a retention clause — leave within 2 years, pay it back. Know the terms.
Student loan repayment assistance
Less common but increasingly offered, especially for federally qualified health centers.
Pearl: Always negotiate. The employer's first offer is rarely their best offer. Asking for more does not make them rescind the offer.
What to Research Before You Negotiate
- Salary ranges in your geographic area (AANP salary survey, MGMA data, online aggregators).
- What other NPs in the same practice make, if you can find out.
- The cost of malpractice tail coverage in your specialty.
- The going RVU multiplier for primary care NPs.
How to Ask
You do not need to be aggressive. You need to be specific and calm.
"Thank you for the offer. I'm really excited about this opportunity. I'd like to discuss a few elements before I sign. The salary you've offered is X. Based on my research, the range for a new FNP in this area is X to Y. Can we discuss moving toward the higher end? I'd also like to talk about the CME allowance and the non-compete radius."
Be specific. Be calm. Be ready to hear no, and to ask for something else if so.
What to Get in Writing
Everything. Verbal promises have no value in employment disputes. If your future supervisor says "we'll let you do 4 days a week after a year," that needs to be in the contract.
Get a Lawyer or Mentor to Review
For a few hundred dollars, an employment attorney who specializes in healthcare contracts will save you thousands. Or find an experienced NP to review with you. Do not sign your first contract alone.
Red Flags
- Pressure to sign quickly without time to review.
- Vague language around productivity or call expectations.
- Non-competes that are unreasonably broad.
- No defined process for raises or contract renegotiation.
- Employer reluctance to put verbal promises in writing.
- Tail coverage burden left to you with no compensation.
The Long Game
Your first contract sets your salary baseline. Future raises and future job offers will reference what you currently make. Negotiating $5,000 more in your first contract compounds over a career to $50,000 to $100,000.
This is not greed. It is professional self-respect. You earned this credential. You are bringing real value. Be paid like it.
To the New FNP Reading This
Your training prepared you to care for patients. It probably did not prepare you to advocate for yourself. That advocacy is part of your job too.
Read the contract. Ask the questions. Negotiate. Get help. Sign carefully.
You are worth the careful read.