If you’ve been paying attention to nursing Twitter, Reddit, or your classmates’ group chats, you’ve probably heard the panic: “NCLEX pass rates are dropping.” And it’s not a rumor — it’s real. The numbers are down, the conversation is heated, and nursing students everywhere are understandably anxious. Here’s what’s actually happening, why it matters, and what it means for you.
The Numbers: What the Data Actually Shows
According to the National Council of State Boards of Nursing (NCSBN), the overall NCLEX-RN pass rate in 2024 dropped to approximately 69.1% for all candidates — down from 73.3% the previous year. That’s a significant decline and the lowest overall pass rate in recent years.
But here’s the part that often gets lost in the headlines: first-time, U.S.-educated candidates still passed at a rate of roughly 87%. That’s lower than the pre-pandemic peak of 91% in 2019, but it’s still a strong number. The dramatic overall decline is driven largely by two groups: repeat test-takers (53.1% pass rate) and internationally educated candidates taking the exam for the first time (47% pass rate).
This distinction matters because it changes the narrative. The exam isn’t suddenly impossible — but the candidate pool has shifted significantly, and that shift is dragging down the overall numbers.
What Changed: The Next Generation NCLEX (NGN)
In April 2023, the NCSBN launched the Next Generation NCLEX, the biggest change to the exam in decades. The redesign introduced entirely new question types designed to assess clinical judgment — the kind of thinking nurses use at the bedside every day, not the kind you can memorize from a textbook.
The new NGN question types include:
- Extended multiple response: Select ALL answers that apply, but now with partial credit scoring — you get some credit for getting some right, even if you miss one.
- Matrix/grid questions: You match conditions, assessments, or interventions across a grid. These test your ability to organize and connect clinical information.
- Cloze (drop-down) questions: Fill in blanks by selecting from dropdown menus within a clinical scenario. Tests your ability to complete clinical reasoning in context.
- Enhanced hotspot: Select areas on a diagram or image — like identifying an ECG finding or marking an assessment area.
- Unfolding case studies: Multi-part questions that follow a single patient through an evolving clinical scenario. This is where clinical judgment really gets tested.
The big philosophical shift behind NGN is the NCSBN Clinical Judgment Measurement Model (NCJMM), which evaluates six cognitive skills: recognizing cues, analyzing cues, prioritizing hypotheses, generating solutions, taking action, and evaluating outcomes. It’s a more realistic reflection of actual nursing practice — but it’s also harder to study for using traditional methods.
Why the Pass Rate Is Declining — And Who’s Most Affected
Several factors are converging to push pass rates down:
The COVID cohort effect. Current nursing graduates are often those who began their programs during the pandemic. Many of them experienced virtual clinicals, simulation-only semesters, and reduced patient contact during the most formative stages of their education. That’s not their fault — but it shows up in clinical judgment scores on the NCLEX.
A changing candidate pool. The number of internationally educated nurses taking the NCLEX has surged in recent years, driven by global nursing shortages and active recruitment by U.S. healthcare systems. These candidates often face language barriers, differences in nursing education standards, and unfamiliarity with the U.S. healthcare system — all of which affect pass rates.
Repeat test-takers. As more candidates fail on their first attempt, the pool of repeat testers grows — and repeat candidates historically pass at significantly lower rates (53.1% for U.S.-educated, 30.3% for internationally educated). This creates a compounding effect on overall statistics.
Study method mismatch. Many students are still using memorization-heavy study strategies that worked for the pre-NGN exam. Flashcard-based approaches that focus on recalling isolated facts don’t prepare you for the clinical reasoning the NGN demands. Students who adapt their study methods to practice clinical judgment consistently outperform those who don’t.
What’s Coming: The April 2026 Test Plan Update
On April 1, 2026, a new NCLEX test plan goes into effect. While the NCSBN describes the changes as “minor updates to activity statements,” several shifts are worth noting. The updated plan increases emphasis on infection prevention and control, telehealth nursing, and mental health integration across settings — reflecting how modern nursing practice has evolved since the pandemic.
The passing standard itself remains at 0.00 logits for NCLEX-RN through March 31, 2026. The NCSBN reviews and potentially adjusts the passing standard on a three-year cycle. Any changes after the review will be announced publicly before implementation.
The Debate in the Nursing Community
This is where it gets interesting — and contentious. The declining pass rates have sparked a genuine debate within nursing education and practice:
One camp says the NGN is doing exactly what it should. The argument: the old NCLEX was too easy to game with memorization. The NGN better identifies nurses who can actually think critically at the bedside, and a lower pass rate means higher standards — which ultimately protects patients.
The other camp argues the system is failing students. Their position: nursing programs haven’t adequately updated their curricula to prepare students for NGN-style clinical judgment questions. The exam changed, but the education didn’t keep pace. Blaming students for a system-level problem is unfair.
A third perspective focuses on equity. Critics point out that the pass rate decline disproportionately affects internationally educated nurses and candidates from under-resourced programs. If the exam creates barriers for nurses the healthcare system desperately needs, is it serving its purpose — or gatekeeping?
There’s truth in all three positions, and the honest answer is that this is an ongoing conversation without easy resolution.
What This Means If You’re Taking the NCLEX Soon
Don’t panic — but do adapt. The 87% first-time pass rate for U.S.-educated candidates means the odds are still strongly in your favor. Here’s how to position yourself for success:
- Practice NGN-format questions specifically. UWorld and Kaplan have both updated their question banks to include case studies, matrix grids, and other NGN types. Don’t just practice content — practice the format.
- Focus on clinical judgment, not memorization. When you study a disease process, don’t just learn the symptoms. Ask: “If this patient walked in, what would I assess first? What’s the priority? What intervention matters most?”
- Use the NCJMM framework. Practice recognizing cues → analyzing them → prioritizing → generating solutions → acting → evaluating. This is literally the cognitive process the exam is testing.
- Don’t compare yourself to the overall pass rate. Your comparison group is first-time, U.S.-educated test-takers — and that group is still passing at 87%. The scary headlines include every retaker and international candidate in the denominator.
- Get your study timeline right. Four to eight weeks of focused, consistent preparation is the sweet spot. Start with content review, shift to heavy question practice, and taper in the final week.
The Bigger Picture
The NCLEX pass rate story is really a story about nursing’s growing pains. The profession is trying to raise standards while simultaneously facing catastrophic staffing shortages. It’s trying to recruit internationally while maintaining a U.S.-centric exam. It’s asking nursing programs to teach clinical judgment while cutting clinical hours due to site limitations.
These tensions won’t resolve quickly. But as a student or new grad, your job isn’t to solve them — it’s to prepare yourself as effectively as possible and walk into that testing center knowing you’ve done the work. The data says most of you will pass. The key is making sure your preparation matches what the exam actually asks of you.
Written by Dimas, RN — keeping it real about the numbers and what they mean for your career.
Leave a Reply