NCLEX-RN vs HESI vs ATI: What’s the Difference?


NCLEX-RN vs HESI vs ATI: What’s the Difference?

Understanding the NCLEX-RN, HESI Exit Exam, and ATI Comprehensive Predictor

Introduction

The NCLEX-RN (National Council Licensure Examination for Registered Nurses) is the standardized licensing exam that all nursing graduates must pass to practice as registered nurses in the United States and Canada. The HESI (Health Education Systems Inc., now part of Elsevier) and ATI (Assessment Technologies Institute) are not competing certifications — they are proprietary nursing education platforms that include readiness assessments designed to predict NCLEX-RN pass probability and help nursing programs evaluate student preparedness. Many nursing programs require students to pass a HESI or ATI exit exam as a graduation requirement. This comparison explains how these three assessments relate to each other and how they serve different purposes in a nursing student’s journey.

Comparison Table

Feature NCLEX-RN HESI Exit Exam ATI Comprehensive Predictor
Full Name National Council Licensure Examination for Registered Nurses HESI Exit Exam (E²) ATI Comprehensive Predictor (CP)
Administered By National Council of State Boards of Nursing (NCSBN) Elsevier (HESI) ATI Nursing Education
Purpose Licensure — required to practice as RN Program assessment & NCLEX readiness prediction Program assessment & NCLEX readiness prediction
Status Official licensing exam Proprietary school-based exam Proprietary school-based exam
Required? Yes, for all RN licensure Required by many (not all) nursing programs Required by many (not all) nursing programs
Format Computer Adaptive Test (CAT); 75–145 questions (minimum 85 as of 2023 Next Gen); 5 hours max ~150–160 questions; 3 hours ~180 questions; ~3 hours
Question Style Multiple-choice, multiple-response, fill-in-the-blank, hot spot, drag-and-drop, chart/exhibit, audio (Next Generation NCLEX added case studies and enhanced items) Multiple-choice primarily Multiple-choice primarily
Content Areas Safe and Effective Care Environment, Health Promotion and Maintenance, Psychosocial Integrity, Physiological Integrity (with subcategories) Fundamentals, Med-Surg, OB/Peds, Pharmacology, Psych, Leadership, Community Health Fundamentals, Med-Surg, OB/Peds, Pharmacology, Psych, Leadership, Community Health
Scoring Pass/Fail (logit-based, computer determines with 95% confidence) Percentage score; HESI scoring uses a “conversion score” (0–1500+ scale); schools set passing thresholds (often 850–900) Percentage and probability of passing NCLEX (reported as “Level 1–3”); schools set passing thresholds
NCLEX Predictability N/A HESI claims ~95–98% NCLEX pass rate for students scoring ≥900 on Exit Exam ATI claims ~95%+ NCLEX pass rate for students scoring “Level 2–3” on Comprehensive Predictor
Cost to Student $200 (2024) Included in nursing program tuition (varies); ~$50–100 per exam if paid separately Included in nursing program tuition (varies); ~$50–75 per individual exam if paid separately
Retake Policy Can retake after 45 days (up to 8 times/year, max 12 attempts in 3 years for most states) Program-dependent; often 1–2 retakes allowed Program-dependent; often 1–2 retakes allowed
Testing Centers Pearson VUE On-campus or remote (via school) On-campus or remote (via school)
Validity Required for licensure; no expiration for license itself (renewal required per state) Program-specific; not a credential Program-specific; not a credential
Adaptive? Yes (CAT algorithm) No (fixed-form or bank) No (fixed-form or bank)
Next Generation Items Yes (NGN launched April 2023) HESI has added NGN-style questions in recent editions ATI has added NGN-style questions in recent editions

Key Differences

Purpose and Stakes

  • NCLEX-RN is the single high-stakes licensing exam. Failure means you cannot practice as an RN.
  • HESI and ATI are low-to-moderate stakes program assessments. They predict NCLEX readiness and may be used for program accreditation, but they are not licensing exams. Some programs require a minimum HESI/ATI score to graduate.

Computer Adaptive Testing

  • NCLEX-RN uses a Computer Adaptive Test (CAT) algorithm that adjusts question difficulty based on your performance. The exam ends when it determines with 95% confidence whether you’ve passed or failed (or after max questions).
  • HESI and ATI use fixed-form or question-bank-based exams that do not adapt in real time.

Content Breadth

  • All three cover similar nursing content areas, but the NCLEX-RN follows the NCSBN test plan (updated regularly with a detailed blueprint).
  • HESI and ATI mirror NCLEX content areas but are designed by their respective companies with their own emphasis and item styles.

Predictive Validity

  • Both HESI and ATI claim high predictive validity for NCLEX-RN pass rates. Published research generally supports moderate-to-good predictive value, though exact accuracy varies by study.
  • HESI Exit Exam score ≥900 is widely cited as correlating with NCLEX-RN pass rates of 95%+.
  • ATI Level 2–3 on the Comprehensive Predictor is cited as correlating with ~95%+ NCLEX pass rates.

Student Cost

  • NCLEX-RN costs $200 to register, plus additional state licensing fees (varies by state; some states charge $50–200+).
  • HESI and ATI costs are typically bundled into nursing program tuition. Students rarely pay out-of-pocket unless taking retakes.

Program Choice

Students do not typically choose between HESI and ATI — their nursing program selects one platform. Some programs use HESI, others use ATI, and a few use both or neither. When evaluating nursing programs, it’s worth asking which platform is used, as preparation quality and study resources vary.

How They Work Together

The typical nursing student journey:

  1. Throughout nursing school: Take HESI or ATI specialty exams (fundamentals, med-surg, OB, peds, psych, etc.) after each course
  2. Final semester: Take the HESI Exit Exam or ATI Comprehensive Predictor
  3. After graduation: Register for and take the NCLEX-RN

The HESI/ATI exams serve as checkpoints along the way, while the NCLEX-RN is the final gate.

Which Is Right for You?

Since these are not competing credentials but rather sequential assessments:

For nursing students:

  • Focus on passing your program’s required HESI or ATI assessments
  • Use your HESI/ATI scores to identify weak areas and target NCLEX preparation
  • Dedicate 4–8 weeks of focused NCLEX preparation after graduation using NCLEX-specific review resources (UWorld, Archer, Mark Klimek, etc.)
  • Treat the HESI Exit Exam or ATI Comprehensive Predictor seriously — programs often won’t let you graduate without passing

For nursing program administrators:

  • Choose HESI or ATI based on faculty preference, accreditation alignment, and student outcomes data
  • Set reasonable passing thresholds that encourage preparation without creating unnecessary barriers

Sources

  • National Council of State Boards of Nursing (NCSBN) — ncsbn.org
  • NCSBN NCLEX-RN Test Plan — ncsbn.org/nclex
  • Elsevier HESI — hesievolve.com
  • ATI Nursing Education — atitesting.com
  • Spurlock, D. (2020). “The HESI Exit Exam: Predictive Validity.” Nurse Education Today.
  • Uitto, M. et al. (2022). “NCLEX Predictor Validity Studies.” Journal of Nursing Education.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the NCLEX-RN exam?

The NCLEX-RN is a professional certification exam. For a comprehensive study guide with practice questions and full-length exams, see our NCLEX-RN Study Guide.

How should I prepare for the NCLEX-RN?

Start with a structured study plan, use official exam blueprints, and practice with realistic exam questions. Our NCLEX-RN Study Guide covers the complete exam content with detailed rationales.

Where can I find NCLEX-RN practice questions?

Our NCLEX-RN Study Guide includes full-length practice exams with detailed answer rationales covering every content area on the actual exam.

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