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Texas · TX

Hospice Nurse vs Home Health Nurse salary in Texas

In Texas, hospice nurses earn more — an estimated $92,710 a year versus $91,780 for home health nurses, a gap of about $930 (roughly 1% more). Both are estimates based on national pay for each role adjusted for Texas.

Hospice Nurse — Texas

Specialty estimate

Median annual pay

$92,710

-4% vs national

Hourly

$44.57/hr

Median $92,710
$65,520$130,650
Typical range
$76,350–$106,780
What most nurses earn
High end
$130,650
Top earners
Entry level
$65,520
Newer nurses

Home Health Nurse — Texas

Specialty estimate

Median annual pay

$91,780

-4% vs national

Hourly

$44.13/hr

Median $91,780
$64,860$129,330
Typical range
$75,570–$105,700
What most nurses earn
High end
$129,330
Top earners
Entry level
$64,860
Newer nurses

Why the gap in Texas

Hospice and home health nurses earn comparable pay, as both are community-based RN specialties drawing on the same registered nurse wage base. The practical differences are the setting and structure of the work: hospice centers on end-of-life comfort care while home health delivers skilled visits, with on-call expectations varying by employer. The Texas figures apply the same local pay adjustment to both roles, so the gap here mirrors the national picture, shifted for Texas's cost of labor. Actual pay varies with experience, specialty, shift, and employer — compare the national Hospice Nurse vs Home Health Nurse comparison or personalize the calculator.

Hospice Nurse vs Home Health Nurse in Texas — FAQ

Do hospice nurses or home health nurses earn more in Texas?
In Texas, hospice nurses earn more — an estimated $92,710 a year versus $91,780 for home health nurses, a gap of about $930 (roughly 1% more). Both are estimates based on national pay for each role adjusted for Texas's local pay level.
How much is the hospice nurse vs home health nurse pay gap in Texas?
The estimated gap in Texas is about $930 a year, or roughly 1% more for hospice nurses. Your actual pay depends on experience, specialty, shift, and employer — use the calculator to compare both for your situation.
Are these Texas figures exact?
No — they're modeled estimates, not verified Texas wages. They start from each role's national pay and adjust for Texas's cost of labor, and they update to verified numbers when official state data is loaded.
Why are some figures verified and others estimates?
National pay for the main nursing roles — registered nurses, LPNs/LVNs, nurse practitioners, CRNAs, nurse midwives, and nursing assistants — comes from verified public wage data. State, city, and specialty figures that aren't reported on their own start from that national pay and are labeled "Estimated" or "Specialty estimate." We never show an estimate as a verified figure.
Source & confidenceAn estimate for a specialty that public pay data does not list on its own. A ballpark to start from, not an exact figure.

Modeled estimate (BLS national × state wage index)

Texas figures are estimated by adjusting the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics OEWS national median for local pay levels (a state adjustment of 0.96×).

Source year 2025. Last reviewed July 3, 2026. Full methodology

Estimated figures for Texas. Last reviewed July 3, 2026.