Hospital CNA Jobs Near Me: Pay, Units, and How to Get Hired

Hospital CNA jobs typically pay $18 to $26 per hour, more than most skilled nursing facility or assisted living roles. Hospitals also offer shift differentials for nights and weekends, employer tuition assistance programs, and the clinical exposure that nursing school admissions committees tend to weight most heavily. The trade-off is a more demanding environment, faster patient turnover, and a hiring process that is more competitive than SNF or home health roles.
This guide covers what hospital CNAs actually do, how units differ from each other, where to find openings, and how to make a hospital hire more likely.
By Anna, Career Advisor at CNAJobPath.com
On this page
- What hospital CNAs do and how it differs from SNF work
- How hospital units differ from each other
- Hospital CNA pay vs other settings
- Top hospital employers hiring CNAs
- How to find hospital CNA jobs near you
- How to get hired at a hospital as a CNA
- How hospital CNA experience affects nursing school applications
- Hospital tuition assistance programs
What Hospital CNAs Do and How It Differs from SNF Work
In a hospital, CNAs work alongside registered nurses in assigned units. The core tasks are the same as in any care setting: vital signs, patient hygiene, mobility assistance, feeding, toileting, and documentation. What changes is the pace, the patient population, and the scope of team collaboration.
Hospital patients are acutely ill, often post-surgical, and moving through the facility quickly. A medical-surgical patient might arrive Monday, have surgery Tuesday, and discharge Thursday. That turnover means more admissions and discharges to manage, more hands-on transfers, and more patient introductions each shift.
In skilled nursing facilities, CNAs often have 8 to 10 residents on a shift. Hospital staffing ratios vary by unit but are typically lower — often 4 to 6 patients per CNA on medical-surgical floors. The tasks are more clinically intensive even when the headcount is smaller.
The relationship with nursing staff is also different. Hospital CNAs work more closely with RNs on acute care teams, which means more direct observation of clinical decision-making. That is part of what makes hospital CNA experience valuable for nursing school applicants.
How Hospital Units Differ from Each Other
Not all hospital CNA positions are equivalent. The unit you work on shapes the pace, the patient complexity, and the skills you develop. Here is what each major unit type looks like from a CNA’s position.
| Unit Type | Patient Population | CNA Workload Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Medical-Surgical (Med/Surg) | Post-surgical, general medicine, mixed diagnoses | High turnover, varied patients; most common entry point for CNAs |
| Telemetry / Step-Down | Cardiac monitoring, post-ICU patients stepping down | More clinical oversight, slightly more specialized; still accessible for new CNAs |
| Orthopedics | Joint replacement, fracture recovery, post-surgical mobility patients | High mobility assistance demand; physical workload is significant |
| Oncology | Cancer patients undergoing treatment or surgery | Emotionally demanding; longer patient relationships than med/surg |
| ICU / Critical Care | Critically ill, often sedated or ventilated patients | Not all ICUs hire CNAs; where they do, scope is limited but environment is intensive |
| Emergency Department | Varied, urgent, high-volume | Fast pace, frequent role changes; often uses PCT-trained staff rather than CNA-only |
| Labor and Delivery / Women’s Health | Obstetric and postpartum patients | Typically limited to experienced CNAs with unit-specific training |
| Behavioral Health | Psychiatric, mental health, detox patients | Different skill set from medical units; de-escalation experience valued |
For new CNA graduates, medical-surgical is the most common entry point. The patient variety is broad, the team structure is established, and the skills transferable. Telemetry and orthopedics are close behind in accessibility. ICU and ED tend to require either prior experience or a PCT credential with more advanced clinical training.
Hospital CNA Pay vs Other Settings
The pay advantage of hospital roles over SNF and assisted living is real. It varies by region, by hospital system, and by whether the facility is unionized, but the directional difference is consistent.
| Setting | Typical Hourly Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Hospital (acute care) | $18 to $26/hr | Night differential $1.50 to $3.00/hr; weekend differential common |
| Hospital (union, major metro) | $22 to $32/hr | Union contracts in California, New York, Illinois push rates significantly higher |
| Skilled Nursing Facility | $15 to $21/hr | Lower base; differentials less generous on average |
| Assisted Living | $14 to $20/hr | Typically below both hospital and SNF |
| Home Health | $15 to $22/hr | Effective rate lower after unpaid travel time |
Shift differentials matter more at hospitals than anywhere else. A hospital paying $20/hr base with a $2.50 overnight differential means $22.50 for night shifts. A 36-hour overnight week at that rate is $810 before taxes, compared to $720 at base. Over a year on nights, that differential alone adds roughly $4,680. Worth naming specifically when comparing offers.
Top Hospital Employers Hiring CNAs
The largest hospital systems in the country also hire the most CNAs. Each operates career portals where openings are listed before they appear on aggregator sites.
- HCA Healthcare – Operates 180+ hospitals across 20+ states. One of the largest CNA employers in the country. Career site: careers.hcahealthcare.com
- Ascension Health – Catholic health system with hospitals in 19 states and DC. Strong presence in the Midwest and South.
- CommonSpirit Health – Operates in 21 states, formed by the merger of Dignity Health and Catholic Health Initiatives.
- Tenet Healthcare – 60+ hospitals primarily in the Sun Belt states. Active CNA hiring in Texas, Florida, and California.
- Kaiser Permanente – Integrated system operating primarily in California, Oregon, Washington, and Georgia. Known for competitive pay and benefits.
- Intermountain Health – Strong presence in Utah, Idaho, Nevada, and Colorado. Frequently appears in regional “best employer” lists.
- NYU Langone, Mass General Brigham, UCSF Health – Academic medical centers in major metros. Higher pay ranges, more competitive hiring, often prefer candidates with clinical experience.
Smaller regional hospitals and critical access hospitals often have less competitive hiring and are good entry points for new graduates. A year of experience at a smaller community hospital strengthens an application to a larger system.
How to Find Hospital CNA Jobs Near You
The most effective approach is going directly to health system career portals for every hospital within your commute range. Health systems post to their own portals first, often 24 to 48 hours before aggregators pick up the listing.
For broader searches, Indeed and LinkedIn Jobs both surface hospital CNA openings. Search “CNA” or “nursing assistant” plus “hospital” and filter by 15 to 25 miles of your zip code. Filtering by “full-time” and sorting by date posted keeps results current.
Hospital career fairs are worth attending in person. Health systems hold them regularly, and showing up demonstrates initiative in a way an online application does not. Large systems like HCA and Ascension post hiring event dates on their career sites.
How to Get Hired at a Hospital as a CNA
Hospital hiring is more selective than SNF or home health hiring. The credential requirements are the same, but hospitals typically receive more applications per open position and can afford to be choosier about setting-specific experience and availability.
The things that meaningfully improve your chances:
Clinical experience in an acute care environment. If you completed any clinical hours during CNA training at a hospital, mention it explicitly on your application. Any prior work at a hospital — even as a unit secretary, patient transport, or patient care tech — demonstrates facility familiarity that hiring managers notice.
Flexible shift availability. Hospital units with open CNA positions are often those with hard-to-fill shifts: overnight, weekend, and holiday. Candidates who genuinely offer that availability get moved forward faster. Saying “I am available for nights and weekends” in the first interview response is worth doing.
Active registry status and current CPR/BLS certification. Verify both before your application. Hospitals run background and registry checks as part of the hiring process, and problems discovered post-interview are disqualifying.
A specific unit preference and a reason for it. Generic applications get generic responses. If you want to work on an orthopedic unit because you have experience assisting patients with mobility limitations, say that. A unit manager reading through applications notices when a candidate has a real reason for wanting that unit.
The “already know this” trap is worth mentioning here. CNAs with prior facility experience sometimes walk into hospital interviews assuming their SNF background fully prepares them. It prepares them for some things and not others. Hospital interviewers want to know you understand the differences: faster turnover, more acute illness, more team-based clinical decision-making. Acknowledging what you will be learning is as important as stating what you already know.
How Hospital CNA Experience Affects Nursing School Applications
Most CNA job guides do not cover this, and it matters if nursing school is anywhere in your two-to-three year plan.
Hospital CNA experience is weighted more heavily by nursing program admissions committees than SNF or assisted living experience. The reasoning is consistent across programs: hospital CNAs work alongside RNs in acute care environments where the range of clinical observation is broader. Admissions reviewers see that as closer preparation for nursing school clinical rotations.
That does not mean other settings disqualify you. They do not. But if you are deciding between a hospital CNA role at $21/hr and a SNF role at $18/hr, and nursing school is a two-year target, the hospital role gives you more money now and a stronger application later.
Many hospital employers also offer tuition assistance programs that cover CNA-to-RN or CNA-to-LPN programs. Some require a service commitment after graduation. That is a separate calculation, but it is worth asking about explicitly during the hiring process, not after you are already employed.
Hospital Tuition Assistance Programs
Most large hospital systems offer some form of education assistance for CNA employees pursuing RN licensure. The amounts and terms vary significantly.
Common structures include:
- Annual tuition reimbursement up to $5,250 (the IRS limit for tax-free employer education assistance). Some systems offer more, with amounts above $5,250 taxed as income.
- Direct tuition payment to partnered nursing programs, bypassing the reimbursement process.
- Scholarship programs specific to certain career ladder tracks.
- Loan forgiveness for employees who remain with the system for 2 to 5 years after program completion.
Ask about tuition assistance during the interview, not after. The right question: “Does the system offer education assistance for CNAs pursuing nursing licensure, and what does the program require?” If the interviewer does not know the answer, it will be routed to HR and you will get a follow-up. That is fine. The question signals intent and demonstrates you are thinking about staying.
For the full picture on CNA career advancement, see the CNA to RN Bridge Programs guide and the CNA Career Path overview.
Hospital CNA work pays more, opens more career doors, and positions you better if nursing school is in your future. The hiring bar is slightly higher, but the gap is closeable with the right preparation and shift availability. For the full picture on CNA job settings, start with the CNA Jobs overview. For CNA training and licensing, see the CNA Training guide.
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