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Why New Graduate Nurses Are Struggling to Find Jobs in 2026

May 13, 2026 by Sarah Wells

By: Sarah K. Wells MSN RN CEN CNL

For years, nursing students were told that graduation would practically guarantee a job offer. While nursing staffing shortages still exist across the United States, many new graduate nurses in 2026 are discovering that landing a first nursing role is far more complicated than expected.

The stories are all over social.

I am a member of many new graduate nursing groups on social media. Every day, you can see dozens of posts by members expressing emotions ranging from frustration and anger to desperation and defeat while explaining their experiences applying to dozens to hundreds of job applications, sometimes without receiving an invitation for a single interview.

These posts are by new graduate nurses who are months, and sometimes a year or more, out from graduation. They have passed their NCLEX, have a license, and are fully qualified to start their nursing careers, yet they have received only rejection or worse, no response at all from potential employers as to why they are not interested in hiring them.

The Barriers

One major challenge is the growing mismatch between staffing needs and hiring preferences. Hospitals continue to report workforce shortages, but many organizations are prioritizing experienced nurses who require less onboarding and orientation support. Extended nurse residency programs, limited preceptor availability, and budget limitations have made some employers more selective when hiring brand-new graduates.

At the same time, competition has increased significantly in desirable specialties and locations. Acute care specialties like emergency departments, labor and delivery units, pediatrics, critical care, and large urban hospitals in preferred metro areas often receive hundreds to thousands of applications for only a handful of new graduate spots.

Many applicants are also competing against internal candidates such as new graduate nurses who have worked as nursing assistants, externs, or student workers and already have relationships and seniority within the organization.

Further, technology is creating additional barriers. Many healthcare systems now rely on applicant tracking system (ATS) software and AI-assisted screening tools to filter resumes before a recruiter ever lays eyes on them. Qualified candidates may be overlooked if their resumes are poorly formatted, missing keywords from the job description, or not optimized for automated systems.

Read that again.

Qualified new graduate nurses are not considered for jobs because their resume is not formatted to be compatible with ATS and AI-assisted screening tools.

Finally, new graduates are entering a healthcare environment shaped by ongoing burnout from unhealthy and unsafe workplaces, increasing financial concerns, and operational instability. Some hospitals have reduced hiring volumes or enacted complete hiring freezes, delayed residency cohorts, or shifted resources toward retaining current staff instead of expanding onboarding programs.

It is not you. It is the system.

Despite these challenges, new graduate nurses should not interpret a difficult job search as a reflection of their value or future potential.

It is not you.

It is a systems problem.

It is critical to take care of your mental health during this process. Constant rejection can feel personal when it’s not. Remember to care for yourself as you continue your job search journey.

Strategies for Success

There are strategies that support new graduate nurses in landing their first job:

  • Strategic networking

  • Flexible job searching

  • Resumes optimized for HR tech tools

  • Professional social media

  • Persistence

For many nurses, the first opportunity may not look exactly as expected, but it can still become the foundation for a long and successful nursing career.


Are you a new grad nurse applying for your first job?

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About the Author: Sarah K. Wells, MSN, RN, CEN, CNL is an experienced nurse career strategist dedicated to helping nurses and nurse practitioners of all experience levels and specialties achieve success in their nursing and NP journeys. Sarah founded New Thing Nurse and NTN Consults to help provide support and guidance to the nursing and healthcare community in a simple and direct format. Sarah’s vision is to foster a more supportive and fulfilled nursing world that spreads throughout healthcare and beyond.

Sarah is serving as a 2026 Advocacy Fellow with ANA-California, focusing on AI and equitable nurse staffing. Learn more about the 2026 ANA-California Advocacy Fellowships.


New Thing Nurse helps the nursing and NP community thrive in their careers! Join us on IG or Facebook @newthingnurse 🩺

May 13, 2026 /Sarah Wells
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