Mental health nurse

Your role is to promote and support a person’s recovery, helping them live independent and fulfilling lives. 

Why choose mental health nursing

There are many reasons why you should consider a career as a mental health nurse. It offers you the chance to make a difference, a high degree of flexibility and a career with excellent employment prospects. 

GET STARTED

Join our nursing team

Get practical advice and everything you need to know in your inbox.

Sign up

Working life 

Your role is to build effective relationships with people who use mental health services, and also with their relatives and carers. You might help one person to take their medication correctly while advising another about relevant therapies or social activities. 

Success comes from being able to establish trusting relationships quickly and to help individuals understand their situation and get the best possible outcome. You'll be trained about the legal context of your work and also be able to identify whether and when someone may be at risk of harming themselves or someone else.

You'll usually based in hospitals, for example on a psychiatric ward or specialist unit, or in the community where you could work in a community health centre or in someone's home. If you work in a residential setting, you may do shifts and provide 24-hour care.

You'll work as part of a team which includes GPs, psychologists, social workers, psychiatrists, occupational therapists, arts therapists and healthcare assistants.

Cherie Lawrence

Mental health nurse and clinical team leader
I also love that I have a guaranteed job for life, which I enjoy – a lot of my friends are jealous!

Entry requirements

To become a mental health nurse the main route is through a degree course at university. Entry requirements for these courses can vary depending on where and how you’d like to study so it's important to check with universities. You can find a mental health nursing courses at the bottom of this page. 

Typically you'll need a minimum of five GCSEs at grade 4/C or above, possibly in English language or literature and a science subject, plus two A levels or equivalent level 3 qualifications, such as a T level or BTEC for an undergraduate degree. Some universities may ask for three A levels or equivalent. If you already have a degree, you might be able to study for a postgraduate qualification. 

There are other routes into mental health nursing such as nurse degree apprenticeships and nursing associate apprenticeships.

Annual payments 

If you're eligible, you'll receive at least £6,000 a year towards your studies while at university. Your personal circumstances may mean you could receive more. And the good news? You'll never have to pay it back. Find out more. 

Other routes into mental health nursing

Nursing degree apprenticeships are available with some employers and numbers are expected to continue to grow. Increasing opportunities to apply for nursing associate apprenticeships are also expected. This can lead to nursing degrees or nurse degree apprenticeships. 

Must have skills 

Don’t forget - academic qualifications aren’t everything. Communication and interpersonal skills are crucial, as well as strong judgement, be able to teach advise and manage people. 

If you're applying for a role either directly in the NHS or a university course, you'll be asked to show how you think the values of the NHS Constitution apply in your everyday work. 

Training and career development 

Once you have qualified as a mental health nurse, there are a wide range of opportunities. You could specialise in working with children and adolescents, as a primary mental health worker; or women or in a field such as transcultural psychiatry, looking at how mental disorders and their treatment can be influenced by cultural and ethnic factors. You may want to work or move into management, teaching or clinical research. 

Pay and benefits 

Your standard working week will be around 37.5 hours on shift pattern which can include nights, early starts, evenings, weekends and bank holidays.  As a mental health nurse, you’ll be paid on the Agenda for Change (AFC) pay system, typically starting at band 5.

You’ll also have access to our generous pension scheme and health service discounts, as well as 27 days of annual leave plus bank holidays.

  • Displaying 131 - 135 of 184 matches

    Nursing Practice (Mental Health) - Stafford Campus

    Staffordshire University

    View course Opens in a new window
    • Qualification
      Bachelor of Science (with Honours) - BSc (Hons)
      Study mode
      Full-time
      Duration of the course
      3 Years
      Leading to a career in
      Nursing (Mental Health)
    • Contact details
      [email protected]
    • Region
      West Midlands
      Admissions address
      Beaconside
      Stafford
      ST18 0AD
      United Kingdom

    Accelerated Nursing (Mental Health)

    University of Salford

    View course Opens in a new window
    • Qualification
      Bachelor of Science (with Honours) - BSc (Hons)
      Study mode
      Full-time
      Duration of the course
      18 months
      Leading to a career in
      Nursing (Mental Health)
    • Contact details
      [email protected]
      0161 295 4545
    • Region
      North West
      Admissions address
      The Crescent
      Salford
      M5 4WT
      United Kingdom

    Mental Health Nursing with Foundation Year

    University of Wolverhampton

    View course Opens in a new window
    • Qualification
      Bachelor of Nursing (with Honours) - BNurs (H)
      Study mode
      Full-time
      Duration of the course
      4 Years
      Leading to a career in
      Nursing (Mental Health)
    • Contact details
      [email protected]
      0800 953 3222
    • Region
      West Midlands
      Admissions address
      Telford Innovation Centre
      Shifnal Road
      Priorslee
      Telford
      TF2 9NN
      United Kingdom

    Nursing (Mental Health - Honours)

    University of Stirling

    View course Opens in a new window
    • Qualification
      Bachelor of Science (with Honours) - BSc (Hons)
      Study mode
      Full-time
      Duration of the course
      4 Years
      Leading to a career in
      Nursing (Mental Health)
    • Contact details
      [email protected]
      01786 467044
    • Region
      Scotland
      Admissions address
      Grange Road
      Stirling
      FK9 4LA
      United Kingdom

    Nursing (Mental Health)

    University of Stirling

    View course Opens in a new window
    • Qualification
      Bachelor of Science - BSc
      Study mode
      Full-time
      Duration of the course
      3 Years
      Leading to a career in
      Nursing (Mental Health)
    • Contact details
      [email protected]
      01786 467044
    • Region
      Scotland
      Admissions address
      Grange Road
      Stirling
      FK9 4LA
      United Kingdom
  • If you can't find a vacancy in your area, visit NHS Jobs where you can find a more detailed search. 

    Find a vacancy

Other roles that may interest you

Make a comment or report a problem with this page

Help us improve

This form is for you to tell us about something that could be improved about the website or if there's anything wrong, incorrect or inaccurate with what you see. 

If you have a query about a career in the NHS, please visit our contact us page and call or email us.