RPN vs RN in Canada, explained simply
It’s one of the most confusing parts of Canadian nursing — partly because the same letters mean different things depending on where you are. Let’s clear it up.
First, the title confusion
Here’s the part that trips everyone up. In Ontario, “RPN” means Registered Practical Nurse — which is roughly the equivalent of an LPN (Licensed Practical Nurse) in the United States and in the rest of Canada. But in most other provinces, especially in Western Canada, “RPN” means Registered Psychiatric Nurse — a completely separate profession with its own education and scope. Same three letters, two very different roles.
For this page, we’re talking about the Ontario meaning: RPN = Registered Practical Nurse compared with RN = Registered Nurse.
RPN vs RN: the practical differences
| RPN (Practical Nurse) | RN (Registered Nurse) | |
|---|---|---|
| Education | A practical nursing diploma (typically about two years) | A nursing degree (typically about four years) |
| Licensing exam | CPNRE or REx-PN | NCLEX-RN |
| Patients | Often more stable, predictable patients | Often more complex, less predictable patients |
| Scope | Full nursing scope within defined limits | Broader scope and more autonomy |
An important nuance: both are real nurses doing real nursing. The difference isn’t “less than” versus “more than” — it’s largely about the complexity and predictability of the patients each typically cares for, and the depth of education behind the role. On a stable floor, an RPN and RN may do very similar work; with a crashing, complex patient, the RN’s broader scope comes into play.
Thinking about bridging from RPN to RN?
Lots of practical nurses later “bridge” to become RNs through a bridging program that builds on their diploma. It’s a well-worn path, and your RPN experience is a real asset going in. The specifics — admission requirements, length, and credit transfer — vary by school and province, so check directly with the programs you’re considering.
Sorting out your exam? See the CPNRE, REx-PN, and NCLEX-in-Canada guides.
