---
title: "Become an RN in Michigan: FAQs at our Campus"
url: "https://arizonacollege.edu/southfield-michigan-nursing-school/faq/"
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date_published: 2025-10-10
date_modified: 2026-07-02
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---

# Become an RN in Michigan: FAQs at our Campus

![BSN at a Nursing College](https://arizonacollege.edu/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/b61c5a24960a0017cc817c3aaad2f22b.webp)

Southfield

![Arizona College hero bars graphic](https://arizonacollege.edu/wp-content/themes/arizona-college/assets/svg/hero-bars.svg)

# Become an RN in Michigan: FAQs at Our Detroit Area Campus

Arizona College of Nursing – Southfield offers a BSN program designed for future
registered nurses pursuing a career as an RN in Michigan. Find answers to the
questions they ask our campus faculty and staff most.

[EXplore Program Details ](https://arizonacollege.edu/southfield-michigan-nursing-school/)

Classes begin August 31st

![RN Bachelor Degree from Best Nursing Schools](https://arizonacollege.edu/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/icon-health_metrics.svg?w=1024)

[Campus Overview](https://arizonacollege.edu/southfield-michigan-nursing-school/)

![Icon for a Nursing Program Near Me](https://arizonacollege.edu/wp-content/themes/arizona-college/dist/svg/icon-shield-user.svg?w=1024)

[Campus Life](https://arizonacollege.edu/southfield-michigan-nursing-school/location/)

![Icon for Nursing School Scholarships Near Me](https://arizonacollege.edu/wp-content/themes/arizona-college/dist/svg/icon-hat.svg?w=1024)

[Admissions](https://arizonacollege.edu/admissions/)

[
![Michigan Nursing Program Student Learning How to Become a Pediatric Nurse With a Young Patient](https://arizonacollege.edu/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/Pediatrician-with-young-patient.webp?w=1000)![Michigan Nursing Program Student Learning How to Become a Pediatric Nurse With a Young Patient](https://arizonacollege.edu/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/Pediatrician-with-young-patient.webp?w=1000)
[

[Nursing Careers FAQs ](https://arizonacollege.edu/southfield-michigan-nursing-school/faq/#salary)

[
![Southfield Nursing program for you](https://arizonacollege.edu/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Nursing-program-For-You.webp?w=1024)![Southfield Nursing program for you](https://arizonacollege.edu/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Nursing-program-For-You.webp?w=1024)
[

[Nursing Program FAQs ](https://arizonacollege.edu/southfield-michigan-nursing-school/faq/#npfaq)

[
![How to become a registered nurse in Michigan](https://arizonacollege.edu/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Forensic-Nurse.webp?w=1024)![How to become a registered nurse in Michigan](https://arizonacollege.edu/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Forensic-Nurse.webp?w=1024)
[

[General Nursing College FAQs ](https://arizonacollege.edu/southfield-michigan-nursing-school/faq/#gnursing)

## Where to Begin Your RN Journey in Michigan

Choosing an RN program means weighing a lot at once, from admission requirements
and transfer credits to job outlook and financial aid. Our BSN program offers a
direct route to becoming an RN in Michigan, and we’ve grouped the answers below
by topic so you can decide with confidence.

Have questions about your own situation? Reach out to our Southfield campus
directly, and we’ll be glad to help.

##  Common Nursing Career Questions

How long it takes to become a nurse depends on the role you choose and the
education each one requires. Your first step is deciding which type of nurse you
want to be, since a licensed practical nurse (LPN), a registered nurse (RN), and
a nurse practitioner (NP) each carry their own education and licensing path. An
LPN program, sometimes called an LVN program in certain states, can take about
one to two years and prepares you for a more limited set of nursing duties than
an RN handles.

Becoming an RN takes more time because of the degree and licensing involved, and
it opens a wider scope of practice. For the RN route, you complete an accredited
nursing program and then pass the NCLEX-RN exam to earn licensure, with a
Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN) being one of the most common ways to get
there.

A traditional BSN often takes about four years, but at Arizona College of
Nursing – Southfield you can earn yours in as few as three years. If you already
have college credit or a degree in another field, you may finish even sooner,
since qualifying transfer credits can count toward your BSN. To learn what your
timeline could look like in Detroit, contact an admissions representative at our
Southfield campus.

Registered nurses in the Detroit-Warren-Dearborn area of Michigan, which
includes Southfield, earn a median nursing salary of $97,280 per year. As
someone entering the workforce, you would likely start below that median and see
your pay grow as you gain experience.

Looking at the state as a whole, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that RN
salaries across Michigan run from a low of $77,260 per year to as much as
$116,710 per year.

Updated 07/2026. Source:
[https://www.onetonline.org/link/localwages/29-1141.00?zip=48033](https://www.onetonline.org/link/localwages/29-1141.00?zip=48033)

For a fuller picture of pay and demand, see our
[Michigan nursing market outlook](https://arizonacollege.edu/southfield-michigan-nursing-school/job-outlook-for-nurses-in-michigan/)
.

Working as an RN opens the door to a wide range of work environments, which is
one of the things that draws people to the profession. Registered nurses held
about 3.4 million nursing jobs as of 2024, spread across many different
healthcare settings.

The largest employers of registered nurses were as follows:

Hospitals (59%)

Ambulatory healthcare services (19%)

Nursing and residential care facilities (6%)

Government (5%)

Educational services; state, local, and private (3%)

Updated 2026. Source:
[https://www.bls.gov/ooh/healthcare/registered-nurses.htm#tab-3](https://www.bls.gov/ooh/healthcare/registered-nurses.htm#tab-3)

Demand for registered nurses in Michigan is steady. As of 2022, 104,150 RNs were
employed across the state, and registered nurse jobs in Michigan are projected
to grow 3% between 2022 and 2032.

The national outlook is similar. RN employment in the United States is projected
to grow 5% from 2024 to 2034, creating 189,100 projected annual new nursing
jobs.

Updated 08/2025: Data Source:
[https://www.onetonline.org/link/localtrends/29-1141.00?st=MI](https://www.onetonline.org/link/localtrends/29-1141.00?st=MI)

Yes. Once you graduate and are licensed, you can practice in other states,
though the steps depend on where you’re licensed and where you want to work.
Some states belong to the Nurse Licensure Compact (NLC), which lets registered
nurses practice across member states without a separate license. States outside
the compact require licensure by endorsement, meaning you submit documentation
and fees to that state’s board of nursing.

Good preparation comes first. A CCNE-accredited BSN program like the one at
Arizona College of Nursing – Southfield prepares you to apply for the NCLEX-RN,
the national licensing exam. You’ll take it in the state where you live, and you
still need to pass it before you can practice. Once you do, you can pursue your
nursing career wherever you choose. If you plan to relocate, our admissions team
can explain how Michigan licensure carries over.

##  RN Program Questions for AZCN’s Southfield Campus

Qualifying gen ed transfer credits can help you move through our BSN program in
three years or less, often graduating in less time and at a lower cost.

Have credits you’d like reviewed, including any tied to college-level credit
test scores? Our transfer of credit team will review your transcripts and
explain how your transfer credits might apply toward a BSN degree. To get
started, visit our
[Campus Locations](https://arizonacollege.edu/campus-locations/) page for
details on contacting your local campus.

Read more about
[Arizona College of Nursing’s credit transfer requirements](https://arizonacollege.edu/admissions/credit-transfer-info/)

Financial aid is available to students at Arizona College of Nursing –
Southfield who qualify, no matter their age or background. Depending on
eligibility, you may have access to a range of aid programs and payment options,
including:

- Federal student loans
- Federal PELL and SEOG grants
- Eligible State-based grant programs
- Private educational loans
- Military veteran educational benefits (ex: Post-9/11 G.I. Bill®)

Beyond financial aid, Arizona College of Nursing also offers scholarship
opportunities for those who qualify. For more on financial aid and scholarships,
visit our
[financial aid page](https://arizonacollege.edu/admissions/financial-aid/).

Yes. You’ll begin your studies at Arizona College of Nursing – Southfield with
evening general education courses, though your exact schedule depends on your
prior academic experience. Some of those gen ed courses also come in a hybrid
format that blends on-campus and online learning.

We hold general education in the evening because starting nursing school rarely
means you can immediately put life on pause. Scheduling around the life you
already lead makes the transition easier.

When you reach your Core Nursing courses, your classes move to daytime hours.

You qualify for our three-year BSN program at Arizona College of Nursing –
Southfield by meeting two requirements. You need a cumulative GPA of 2.75 from
your high school or college coursework, along with a qualifying score on the
HESI A2 entrance exam. Your HESI A2 score may also factor into whether a GPA
waiver applies to your application.

Our admissions team can help you with questions about transcripts and entrance
testing. For anything tied to paying for school, our finance team can help you
understand the aid you may qualify for. You can see all the requirements on our
[admissions page](https://arizonacollege.edu/admissions/).

Start dates vary at Arizona College of Nursing – Southfield, so you may be able
to begin sooner than you expect. We welcome new students each semester as
enrollment capacity allows, which gives you several points throughout the year
to step into your studies.

When you apply early, you give yourself the best chance to begin right when you
are ready. Our admissions team would love to help you find a start date that
fits your life, and you can learn more on our
[admissions page](https://arizonacollege.edu/admissions/).

Our three-year BSN program at Arizona College of Nursing – Southfield covers the
core areas of nursing practice, including clinical thinking, community health,
critical care, gerontology, leadership, surgical care, obstetrics, pediatrics,
and psychiatric care. Together these courses prepare you to care for patients
across different settings and stages of life.

Arizona College of Nursing – Southfield does not offer an LPN to BSN or LPN to
RN bridge program. Even without a bridge track, you can enroll in our program
and complete a BSN degree in as few as three years.

Skills you developed as an LPN come with you into the classroom, and they may
make your coursework feel more familiar. That same background can prove
especially valuable once you reach the clinical training portion of our program.

When you reach out to our admissions team, let them know about your background
as an LPN. They can explain how that experience may fit into your studies and
support you as you earn your BSN degree.

You do not need nursing assistant experience to begin our three-year BSN program
at Arizona College of Nursing – Southfield. Many students start their nursing
education without any prior healthcare background and go on to succeed.

Our BSN program gives you the foundational knowledge and clinical training that
becoming a registered nurse requires. Some students do choose to work as a
nursing assistant before or during their studies, but it is never a prerequisite
for admission. What carries the most weight is your commitment to caring for
others and your dedication to learning.

Arizona College of Nursing – Southfield blends in-person, online, and blended
classes rather than running fully online, so you get flexibility alongside
hands-on training. Like most of our campuses, Southfield builds its schedule
around both convenience and the clinical practice that nursing calls for.

Many non-clinical courses run asynchronously and online, so you can complete
them around your other responsibilities. Courses with a clinical component meet
in person, where you practice the skills that patient care depends on.

Our general education courses also use a blended approach, with evening and
virtual options that add flexibility. To learn more about course formats at our
Southfield campus, reach out to our admissions team, who can explain how you
might earn your BSN degree in as few as three years.

Comparing your options can feel like a lot at first, but a few key factors make
the decision clearer. Start with program length and format, since a schedule
that fits your work and family life keeps you on track to finish.

Look closely at how each school handles admissions, because a clear process or a
long waitlist can mean the difference between starting soon and waiting months.
Ask about clinical partnerships and hands-on training too, since the experience
you gain in real clinical settings shapes your confidence and your readiness for
the job.

Support matters just as much, from academic resources to help with financial
aid. At Arizona College of Nursing in Southfield, you can earn your BSN degree
in three years with flexible scheduling, a streamlined admissions process, and
clinical rotations alongside healthcare partners across Michigan. When you are
weighing your options in Detroit, our admissions team is glad to answer your
questions and help you move forward.

##  General Nursing and RN FAQs

Choosing between a Licensed Practical Nurse (LPN) program and a Bachelor of
Science in Nursing (BSN) program is an important part of planning your nursing
path. An LPN program, also called an LVN program in some states, prepares you to
provide basic patient care under the supervision of registered nurses (RNs) and
physicians. A BSN program prepares you to become an RN, the role with a wider
scope of practice.

Program length is one of the clearest differences. An LPN program usually takes
about one to two years and readies you for entry-level nursing roles, while a
BSN typically takes three to four years and gives you a comprehensive nursing
education you can apply across many settings.

To work as an RN, you need either an Associate Degree in Nursing (ADN) or a BSN.
RNs carry broader responsibilities than LPNs, including patient care planning
and diagnostic testing, and they generally see more room for advancement and
higher earning potential over time. If your goal is a career as an RN, a BSN is
the more direct route.

At Arizona College of Nursing in Southfield, our three-year BSN program is
designed to prepare you for a career as an RN in Michigan. To talk through which
path fits your goals, reach out to our admissions team.

For a closer comparison, see our page on
[the difference between an LPN and a BSN](https://arizonacollege.edu/answers/whats-the-difference-between-an-lpn-and-a-bsn/)
.

Michigan sets two main requirements for RN licensure. You must complete an
approved nursing certificate, an Associate Degree in Nursing (ADN), or a
Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN), and you must pass the NCLEX-RN exam. Each
of these education routes can qualify you to sit for the exam, though they
differ in length and in the career options they open later.

Source:
[nursejournal.org](https://nursejournal.org/state/michigan/#:~:text=To%20earn%20an%20RN%20license,health%20promotion%2C%20and%20care%20management.)

Becoming a nurse in Michigan starts with completing a state-approved nursing
program, and the cost depends on the route you take. Tuition for a Bachelor of
Science in Nursing (BSN) can range from $40,000 to over $100,000, so it helps to
plan for both your education and the licensing steps that follow.

Additional Fees in Michigan:

NCLEX-RN Exam

- $208.80 Application Fee
- $200 Exam Fee
- $62.75 Fingerprinting Fee

Source:
[https://nursinglicensemap.com/states/michigan-nursing-license/](https://nursinglicensemap.com/states/michigan-nursing-license/)

In Michigan, there is no limit on the amount of times you may sit for the
NCLEX-RN. You must pass the NCLEX-RN within 3 years of the date of your
graduation or after obtaining 1 of the required evaluations or certifications.

Source:
[https://www.michigan.gov/lara/-/media/Project/Websites/lara/bpl/Nursing/Licensing-Info-and-Forms/Nursing-Licensing-Guide-FAQ-12626.pdf](https://www.michigan.gov/lara/-/media/Project/Websites/lara/bpl/Nursing/Licensing-Info-and-Forms/Nursing-Licensing-Guide-FAQ-12626.pdf)

A Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN) is an undergraduate college degree that
prepares you for a career in nursing. The coursework combines general education
with advanced nursing studies, giving you both the academic foundation and the
nursing knowledge the field calls for.

A BSN is also one of the most widely recognized paths toward becoming a
registered nurse. Earning one may broaden your options when you look for a
position in the state and city where you want to work.

Both an Associate Degree in Nursing (ADN) and a Bachelor of Science in Nursing
(BSN) can start your nursing career, but they differ in how much education and
clinical training you gain along the way. A BSN takes you further on both
counts, building a wider academic foundation and more hands-on clinical
experience than an ADN provides.

That added depth carries weight after graduation. Many employers favor nurses
who hold a BSN, and the degree opens doors to job growth that an ADN may not,
including positions at Magnet-designated hospitals.

A Magnet designation comes from the American Nurses Credentialing Center (
[ANCC](https://www.nursingworld.org/organizational-programs/magnet/)), which
recognizes hospitals for excellence in nursing, patient care, and professional
development. These hospitals typically hire nurses who hold a Bachelor of
Science in Nursing (BSN) or higher, a standard tied to their commitment to
top-quality care and better patient outcomes.

To learn more about how these nursing degrees compare, visit our page
[What’s the Difference Between an ADN and a BSN?](https://arizonacollege.edu/answers/whats-the-difference-between-an-adn-and-a-bsn/)

A nurse manager is a registered nurse who steps into a leadership role after
building clinical experience on the job. The work spans many healthcare
settings, from hospitals and outpatient care centers to long-term care
facilities, skilled nursing facilities, and home health care services.

Reaching this role in Michigan starts with becoming a licensed registered nurse,
which means completing your nursing degree and passing the NCLEX-RN exam. A
Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN) is the minimum education most nurse manager
positions call for, so it is a strong foundation to aim for early.

From there, experience is what moves you toward management. You build it by
working as a registered nurse, and many healthcare facilities look for at least
five years on the job before considering you for a nurse manager role.

A nursing assistant handles the hands-on basics of patient care under the
direction of registered nurses and other healthcare professionals. A typical
shift involves supporting patients with daily activities, tracking vital signs,
and helping people move safely.

These positions turn up across Michigan in hospitals, nursing homes, clinics,
and other healthcare settings, which makes the role a common first step for
people new to nursing. Many nursing assistants go on to continue their education
and become registered nurses by earning a BSN.