CRNA Programs in Maine
Maine is home to 1 accredited nurse anesthesia program in Portland. This program awards the DNP doctoral degree. 1 of the 1 program carries confirmed COA accreditation review dates (shown on each card below).
Nationally, CRNAs earn an average of about $248,320 per year (BLS, May 2025), and the Bureau of Labor Statistics projects strong demand for nurse anesthetists over the coming decade. Every program below is accredited by the Council on Accreditation (COA), the recognized accrediting body for nurse anesthesia education. For the full national picture, see how to become a CRNA and our salary-by-state guide.
Accredited Maine CRNA Programs
Cost and acceptance figures are estimates for comparison; accreditation review dates are sourced from the COA list current as of March 6, 2026. Always verify current details with each program.
CRNA Salary in Maine
According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics, May 2025), nurse anesthetists in Maine earn an average of $259,370 per year — about $11,050 above the national average of $248,320. That places Maine 17th of the 44 states and territories for which BLS publishes a separate nurse-anesthetist wage. BLS estimates roughly 380 nurse anesthetists are employed across Maine.
That figure is a statewide mean across all experience levels and practice settings; new graduates typically start lower and earn more as they take call, move into higher-acuity settings, or specialize. Compare every state side by side in our CRNA salary by state guide.
Becoming a CRNA in Maine: Licensure & Practice
To practice in Maine, you'll hold an Advanced Practice Registered Nurse (APRN) license granted through the Maine State Board of Nursing. After you graduate from one of the COA-accredited programs above and pass the National Certification Examination (NCE), you apply to the board for authorization in the nurse anesthetist role and renew on the state's cycle.
Maine has not opted out of the federal Medicare physician-supervision requirement, so CRNAs here most often work within an anesthesia care team that involves physician supervision or collaboration. The exact scope depends on the facility and employer. Always confirm current scope and licensure steps directly with the Maine State Board of Nursing.
New to the field? Start with how to become a CRNA and our breakdown of CRNA vs. anesthesiologist roles.
How to Choose a CRNA Program in Maine
With 1 accredited program to weigh in Maine, cost and acceptance rate are the easy comparisons — but the factors that most affect your success take a little more digging. Weigh each program on:
- Accreditation status — every program here is COA-accredited; check the next review date shown on each card.
- NCE board pass rate — ask each program for its first-time National Certification Exam pass rate.
- Attrition rate — what share of admitted students complete the program (the national average is low, around 4%).
- Total cost vs. cost of living — a lower sticker price in an expensive city may cost more overall.
- Clinical sites — case variety and volume shape the quality of your training.
- Acceptance rate — build a balanced list of reach and realistic programs.
Use our side-by-side comparison tool to line up Maine programs against each other, and the GPA calculator to gauge your competitiveness.
Getting Into a Maine CRNA Program
Admission requirements are consistent nationwide: a BSN, an unrestricted RN license, a minimum 3.0 GPA (3.4+ to be competitive), and at least one year of critical-care (ICU) experience. Most programs also expect the CCRN and three professional letters of recommendation, and about half require the GRE.
Before applying, you'll need an active Maine RN license — contact the Maine State Board of Nursing for current licensure steps and timelines. Then work backward from each program's deadline using our resources:
Frequently Asked Questions
Maine has 1 accredited nurse anesthesia program in Portland. All are accredited by the Council on Accreditation (COA).
Tuition for Maine CRNA programs varies and is set by each institution. Contact the programs directly for current cost figures.
Maine programs award the DNP degree. Both the DNP and DNAP qualify graduates to sit for the National Certification Exam and are treated interchangeably by employers.
Like all U.S. programs, Maine schools require a BSN, an unrestricted RN license, a minimum 3.0 GPA (3.4+ competitive), and at least one year of ICU experience. Most also expect the CCRN and strong letters of recommendation. See our full CRNA school requirements guide for details.
Nurse anesthetists in Maine earn an average of $259,370 per year, according to BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (May 2025); the national average is $248,320. Pay rises with experience, call burden, and practice setting.
Maine has not opted out of the federal Medicare physician-supervision requirement, so CRNAs typically practice within an anesthesia care team that involves physician supervision or collaboration. Exact scope varies by facility; confirm current rules with the Maine State Board of Nursing.
CRNA Programs in Other States
Explore nurse anesthesia programs in other major markets: