State salary hub

Labor and Delivery Nurse Salary in Texas 2026

Statewide pay overview, hourly rate, top cities, estimated take-home pay, and city-level links for labor and delivery nurse roles in TX.

Statewide annual estimate

$75,440

$36.27/hr, $1,451/wk, $6,287/mo

State pay snapshot

Hourly

$36.27

Weekly

$1,451

Monthly

$6,287

Annual

$75,440

This is 8% below the national baseline of $82,000 per year for labor and delivery nurse.

Top paying cities in TX

CityHourlyAnnual
Austin, TX$39.90$82,984
Dallas, TX$37.36$77,703
Houston, TX$36.27$75,440
Fort Worth, TX$35.18$73,177
San Antonio, TX$33.73$70,159

Estimated salary range

10th percentile

$54,317

$26.11/hr

25th percentile

$64,878

$31.19/hr

Median estimate

$75,440

$36.27/hr

75th percentile

$86,002

$41.35/hr

90th percentile

$99,581

$47.88/hr

Take-home pay and taxes

Estimated take-home pay for the statewide salary is about $58,843 per year, or $4,904 per month, using a simplified federal tax assumption and the stored Texas state income tax rate. Use a city page calculator to adjust the salary input for a specific offer.

How to increase pay

  • Compare offers across the highest-paying cities before accepting a role.
  • Ask about shift differential, weekend differential, overtime rules, and call pay.
  • Document specialty certifications, high-acuity experience, and unit leadership work.
  • Compare total compensation, not only hourly rate: benefits and retirement match matter.

FAQ

How much does a Labor and Delivery Nurse make in Texas?

The 2026 statewide estimate is $75,440 per year, or about $36.27 per hour, before taxes.

What are the top cities for Labor and Delivery Nurse salary in TX?

Among the cities in this model, Austin, Dallas, Houston currently show the highest local estimates for labor and delivery nurse pay.

Is Texas above or below the national average?

Texas is estimated to be 8% below the national baseline for labor and delivery nurse pay after the state cost-of-living adjustment.

Methodology

Last updated April 29, 2026. State estimates start with a national specialty salary baseline and apply the Texas cost-of-living multiplier. City pages add local market multipliers. Estimates are for planning and comparison only.