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How to Get Your South Dakota Nursing License

Get licensed as a Nurse Practitioner, CRNA, CNS, or CNM in South Dakota.We coordinate application, national-certification verification, DEA, and state CSR end-to-end.

Concierge support for the South Dakota application — start to issued license.

The South Dakota Board of Nursing (SDBON) regulates Advanced Practice Registered Nurses in South Dakota.Until activation, every APRN practicing in South Dakota needs a single-state South Dakota APRN license issued by the South Dakota Board of Nursing (SDBON). APRN applicants must hold an active RN license, complete a graduate APRN program, and hold current national APRN certification in their role and population focus. For prescribing roles, federal DEA registration and (where applicable) state CSR/CDS filings are separate from the APRN license itself.

South Dakota Nursing License Requirements

Hold an active, unencumbered RN license issued by South Dakota Board of Nursing (SDBON) (or by another state, verified through Nursys for endorsement applicants).

Completion of a graduate or post-graduate APRN program (Master's, post-master's certificate, or DNP) accredited by CCNE, ACEN, or COA (for CRNAs) in one of the four APRN roles: Nurse Practitioner (NP), Clinical Nurse Specialist (CNS), Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetist (CRNA), or Certified Nurse Midwife (CNM).

Current national APRN certification in role and population focus from an NCSBN-accepted certifying body — typically ANCC or AANP (NPs), AACN (CNS / ACNPC-AG), NBCRNA (CRNAs), or AMCB (CNMs).

Submit the APRN application through the South Dakota Board of Nursing (SDBON) portal with the required documentation, including official graduate transcripts, national-certification verification, and payment.

State and federal fingerprint-based criminal background check, routed through the South Dakota Board of Nursing (SDBON)'s contracted vendor.

For prescribing APRN roles (NPs, most CNSs, some CRNAs and CNMs): federal DEA registration (DEA Form 224) and, where required, state Controlled Substance Registration (CSR / CDS) through the state pharmacy board.

Compliance with South Dakota APRN scope of practice, prescriptive authority rules, and (where applicable) collaborative practice agreement requirements. Specific rules vary by APRN role — verify with the South Dakota Board of Nursing (SDBON).

For applicants by endorsement: verification of any current or prior APRN licenses through Nursys, and proof of unencumbered status in every state of previous licensure.

How Much Does an South Dakota Nursing License Cost?

FeeAmountNotes
APRN application fee$0Application fees vary by APRN role and pathway in South Dakota. Verify the current schedule on the South Dakota Board of Nursing (SDBON) website before applying — fees are typically non-refundable.
National APRN certification (separate)$0National APRN certification (ANCC, AANP, AACN, NBCRNA, or AMCB depending on role) is purchased and renewed separately from the South Dakota APRN license. Initial certification typically runs $300-$525 and is required for the state APRN license to issue.
Federal DEA Registration (DEA Form 224)$888DEA registration fee for mid-level practitioners (current rate). Required for prescribing APRN roles; paid directly to the DEA, not to South Dakota Board of Nursing (SDBON). Triennial renewal.
South Dakota Controlled Substance Registration (CSR / CDS)$0State CSR/CDS requirements vary — many states require it in addition to federal DEA, others do not. Verify with the South Dakota state pharmacy board or controlled-substance authority.
Fingerprint / criminal background check$0Background-check vendor and fee vary by state. Verify with South Dakota Board of Nursing (SDBON) before scheduling — application typically must be on file before fingerprints are captured.

Fees above are paid to South Dakota and the FSMB. Our service fee is separate — see pricing.

We handle the South Dakota application end-to-end.

Eligibility screening, document prep, board follow-ups, and tracking — so you don't lose a Board meeting cycle to a missing form.

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How Long Does It Take to Get an South Dakota Nursing License?

Typical Processing

Most South Dakota APRN files clear in 6-12 weeks once all materials are received.

Recommended Lead Time

Submit at least 10-14 weeks before intended start of practice.

South Dakota Board of Nursing (SDBON) processing varies based on national-certification verification turnaround, fingerprint clearance, transcript receipt, and the South Dakota review queue. Applicants with criminal-history disclosures, foreign-school credentialing, or unusual program-accreditation status routinely run longer. Verify current targets directly with South Dakota Board of Nursing (SDBON).

Where South Dakota Applications Get Delayed

Wrong national certification body. Each APRN role and population focus is tied to specific certifying bodies (ANCC/AANP for FNP, NBCRNA for CRNA, AMCB for CNM, etc.). Submitting verification from a non-accepted certifier means the application sits in limbo until the correct verification arrives.

DEA + state CSR sequencing. DEA registration requires an active state APRN license at the practice address — but many APRNs assume the reverse, applying for DEA before the state license is issued. The DEA file must follow state APRN issuance, and any address change re-triggers state CSR/CDS filing in jurisdictions that require it.

Collaborative practice agreement (CPA) gaps. South Dakota's rules around physician collaboration and prescriptive authority vary by APRN role and (for NPs) by practice setting. APRNs who skip the CPA or use a generic template that doesn't meet South Dakota-specific elements have license-level (not just employer-level) exposure.

RN-license dependency. Every state APRN license requires an active underlying RN license in the same state. If the RN license lapses, the APRN credential does not authorize practice — including the prescriptive-authority components. Renewal cycles for RN and APRN do not always align.

Graduate program accreditation. Not every graduate nursing program is APRN-track or accredited for APRN licensure in every state. South Dakota Board of Nursing (SDBON) may reject applicants whose program is not on the accepted list or whose population-focus doesn't align with the requested APRN scope.

Fingerprint and background-check sequencing. Fingerprints typically must be captured after the application is on file with South Dakota Board of Nursing (SDBON); out-of-order submissions are not refunded and may not transfer.

Renewing Your South Dakota Nursing License

Renewal Cycle

South Dakota APRN renewal cycle varies by role; verify your specific renewal window with South Dakota Board of Nursing (SDBON). APRN renewal is typically tied to the underlying RN-license renewal cycle.

CE Requirement

Continuing education requirements differ by APRN role and population focus. Most South Dakota APRNs must show continuing education hours including a pharmacology component (often required for prescribing APRN roles). National certification renewal (ANCC, AANP, etc.) carries separate CE requirements that may overlap with state CE.

Late Grace Period

Grace periods and reinstatement processes vary by state. Practicing on a lapsed APRN credential is not legally authorized regardless of the underlying RN license status. Verify South Dakota-specific renewal deadlines and lapsed-license procedures with South Dakota Board of Nursing (SDBON).

How South Dakota Issues APRN Licenses

The South Dakota Board of Nursing (SDBON) licenses Advanced Practice Registered Nurses in South Dakota — Nurse Practitioners (NPs), Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetists (CRNAs), Clinical Nurse Specialists (CNS), and Certified Nurse Midwives (CNMs). The application is filed online through the board portal at https://www.sdbon.org/rn_lpn/, and applicants must provide official graduate transcripts, verification of current national APRN certification, proof of unencumbered RN licensure, and a fingerprint-based criminal background check.

National APRN Certification

South Dakota (like every state) requires current national APRN certification in your role and population focus before the state APRN license can issue. NPs typically certify through ANCC or AANP in family, adult-gerontology, pediatric, women's health, neonatal, or psychiatric-mental health focus. CNS applicants certify through ANCC or AACN. CRNAs certify through NBCRNA. CNMs certify through AMCB. National certification must be verified directly from the certifying body to South Dakota Board of Nursing (SDBON); an applicant-uploaded copy is not accepted.

Prescriptive Authority & DEA

NPs, most CNSs, and many CRNAs and CNMs prescribe medications, which requires both federal DEA registration (DEA Form 224) and any state-level Controlled Substance Registration (CSR or CDS) South Dakota requires. DEA registration costs $888 (current mid-level practitioner fee), is renewed triennially, and is tied to a specific practice address — relocation requires a Modification of Registration filing. The DEA license must follow the state APRN license: an active state APRN credential is a prerequisite for DEA issuance, so the sequence is state APRN → federal DEA → (if required) state CSR.

Collaborative Practice and Scope

South Dakota's APRN scope of practice and prescriptive authority rules vary by role and (for NPs) by setting. Some states grant Full Practice Authority (FPA) for NPs — independent diagnosis, treatment, and prescribing — while others require Reduced or Restricted practice with a physician collaborative practice agreement (CPA) or supervisory arrangement. CRNAs have separate rules around physician supervision that vary state-by-state. Verify the current South Dakota rules with South Dakota Board of Nursing (SDBON) before structuring any practice arrangement.

Where Most South Dakota APRN Applications Get Stuck

  • Wrong national-certification body — applicants who submit verification from a non-accepted certifier wait while the correct verification is requested.
  • DEA + state CSR sequencing — DEA registration requires an active state APRN license at the practice address; applying for DEA first means re-doing the file.
  • Collaborative practice agreement gaps — generic CPA templates that don't meet South Dakota-specific elements create license-level exposure, not just employer issues.
  • RN-license dependency — every state APRN license requires an active underlying RN license in the same state. RN-license lapses suspend APRN authority.
  • Graduate program accreditation — not every graduate nursing program is APRN-track or accredited for South Dakota licensure.

What You'll Pay

South Dakota APRN application fees vary by role and pathway — verify the current schedule on the South Dakota Board of Nursing (SDBON) website. Federal DEA registration is $888 (current mid-level practitioner fee, triennial). State CSR/CDS fees vary by jurisdiction. National-certification examination fees ($300-$525 depending on certifier) are paid separately to the certifying body. Background-check vendor fees vary. Plan to budget for the application, the national certification, the DEA, the state CSR (if required), and the background check — many APRN applicants under-budget because they assume the state APRN license fee is the total cost.

Realistic Timeline

South Dakota APRN files typically clear in 6-12 weeks once all materials are received. Plan to submit at least 10-14 weeks before you need to practice. National-certification verification turnaround, fingerprint clearance, transcript receipt, and the South Dakota review queue can each extend the timeline. Files with criminal-history disclosures, foreign-school credentialing, or atypical program-accreditation routinely run longer.

Renewal and CE

South Dakota APRN renewal is typically tied to the underlying RN renewal cycle, but the specific cycle and CE expectations vary. Continuing education for APRNs differs from RN CE — most states require additional pharmacology hours for prescribing APRN roles, and national certification renewal carries its own CE requirements that may or may not overlap with state CE. Verify South Dakota-specific renewal windows and CE hours with South Dakota Board of Nursing (SDBON) before relying on RN-cycle assumptions.

How White Glove APRN Helps

We manage South Dakota APRN applications end-to-end with attention to the four parallel tracks that determine when your file actually clears — application, national-certification verification, fingerprint clearance, and transcript routing — plus the downstream DEA and state CSR filings prescribing APRNs need. We sequence DEA after state APRN issuance (never before), pre-screen CPA arrangements against South Dakota-specific requirements, and coordinate any address-change CSR filings when you relocate within South Dakota. For APRNs transitioning between states or holding licenses in multiple jurisdictions, we manage the renewal calendar across state APRN, RN, DEA, and state CSR cycles so nothing lapses.

South Dakota Nursing License FAQ

How do I get an APRN license in South Dakota?

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Apply through the South Dakota Board of Nursing (SDBON). You'll need an active RN license, a graduate APRN program completion (Master's, post-master's certificate, or DNP), current national APRN certification in your role and population focus, a fingerprint-based criminal background check, and — for prescribing roles — federal DEA registration plus any state CSR/CDS South Dakota requires.

How long does an South Dakota APRN application take?

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Most South Dakota APRN files clear in 6-12 weeks once all materials are received. Plan to submit at least 10-14 weeks before you need to practice. National-certification verification, fingerprint clearance, and transcript receipt are the most common delay points. Files with disclosures or foreign-school credentialing routinely run longer.

Do I need a DEA registration as a South Dakota APRN?

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Yes, for prescribing APRN roles — which includes most NPs and many CNSs, CRNAs, and CNMs. DEA registration ($888, triennial) is a separate federal credential from your South Dakota APRN license. It requires an active state APRN license at the practice address before it can issue. South Dakota may also require a state-level Controlled Substance Registration in addition to federal DEA — verify with the state pharmacy board.

Does South Dakota require a collaborative practice agreement (CPA)?

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South Dakota's rules around physician collaboration and prescriptive authority vary by APRN role and (for NPs) by practice setting. Some states grant Full Practice Authority — independent diagnosis, treatment, and prescribing — while others require Reduced or Restricted practice with a CPA. CRNAs have separate supervision rules. Verify current South Dakota requirements with South Dakota Board of Nursing (SDBON) before structuring any practice arrangement.

What is the difference between RN and APRN licensure?

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An RN license authorizes registered nursing practice; an APRN license is an additional credential layered on top that authorizes advanced practice in a specific role and population focus. Every APRN must hold an active RN license in the same state to practice. APRN licensure requires graduate education, national APRN certification, and (for prescribing roles) federal DEA — none of which RN licensure requires. The two credentials renew on potentially different cycles and have separate CE requirements.

What Working with Us Costs

Transparent, a la carte service fees. The state and FSMB fees listed above are paid directly to those agencies. Our concierge service is separate.

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