Nurse Practitioner Full Practice Authority by State

Nurse Practitioner Full Practice Authority by State

Full Practice Authority (FPA) is the legal ability of a nurse practitioner to evaluate patients, diagnose conditions, order and interpret tests, and initiate treatment, including prescribing medications, under the licensing authority of the state board of nursing, without a required collaborative or supervisory agreement with a physician. Whether an NP has full, reduced, or restricted authority is determined by the state in which they practice.

NP Practice Environment Map

Hover over any state to see its practice authority classification. CM&F covers NPs in all 50 states & DC across all practice categories.
Full Practice Authority
Reduced Practice
Restricted Practice

Practice environment classifications are based on state nursing board authorization and are updated as state laws evolve. Consult your state board of nursing for current NP scope of practice requirements in your state.

NP Practice Authority by State - Complete Reference

The table below reflects current NP practice environment classifications for all 50 states and the
District of Columbia (DC), based on AANP framework designations. Classifications are updated as
state laws change. (Last updated June 2026)
State
Practice Authority Category
Alabama
Restricted Practice
Alaska
Full Practice Authority
Arizona
Full Practice Authority
Arkansas
Reduced Practice
California
Full Practice Authority
Colorado
Full Practice Authority
Connecticut
Full Practice Authority
Delaware
Full Practice Authority
District of Columbia
Full Practice Authority
Florida
Reduced Practice
Georgia
Reduced Practice
Hawaii
Full Practice Authority
Idaho
Full Practice Authority
Illinois
Full Practice Authority
Indiana
Full Practice Authority
Iowa
Full Practice Authority
Kansas
Full Practice Authority
Kentucky
Reduced Practice
Louisiana
Reduced Practice
Maine
Full Practice Authority
Maryland
Full Practice Authority
Massachusetts
Full Practice Authority
Michigan
Reduced Practice
Minnesota
Full Practice Authority
Mississippi
Reduced Practice
Missouri
Reduced Practice
Montana
Full Practice Authority
Nebraska
Full Practice Authority
Nevada
Full Practice Authority
New Hampshire
Full Practice Authority
New Jersey
Reduced Practice
New Mexico
Full Practice Authority
New York
Full Practice Authority
North Carolina
Reduced Practice
North Dakota
Full Practice Authority
Ohio
Reduced Practice
Oklahoma
Restricted Practice
Oregon
Full Practice Authority
Pennsylvania
Reduced Practice
Rhode Island
Full Practice Authority
South Carolina
Reduced Practice
South Dakota
Full Practice Authority
Tennessee
Reduced Practice
Texas
Reduced Practice
Utah
Reduced Practice
Vermont
Full Practice Authority
Virginia
Reduced Practice
Washington
Full Practice Authority
West Virginia
Restricted Practice
Wisconsin
Reduced Practice
Wyoming
Full Practice Authority

The Three NP Practice Authority Categories

Every state assigns nurse practitioners to one of three practice environments, each defined by the degree of physician oversight required by law. Your category determines how independently you can practice and how directly you bear personal liability for your clinical decisions.

Practice environment classifications follow the framework established by the American Association of Nurse Practitioners (AANP). Classifications reflect current state nursing board authorization and are updated as state laws evolve. Consult your state board of nursing for requirements specific to your practice.

Why Practice Authority Matters for Your Malpractice Coverage

Your practice authority shapes your liability. In Full Practice Authority states, an NP who diagnoses and prescribes independently carries the professional responsibility for those decisions directly, which makes individual professional liability coverage that protects your personal assets and license especially important.

In Reduced and Restricted Practice states, a collaborating or supervising physician may share in certain decisions, but a claim can still name the NP individually. Employer-provided coverage is built to protect the organization, not you. A claim, a licensing board complaint, or a deposition can still reach you personally regardless of which practice category your state falls into.

CM&F provides occurrence-based professional liability coverage to nurse practitioners in all 50 states and DC, across every practice category. Your policy travels with you across employers, settings, and any state where you’re licensed and practicing within your scope of practice, so a change in your state’s practice authority won’t interrupt your coverage.

Full Practice Authority FAQs