When the National Council of State Boards of Nursing (NCSBN) released the 2023 NCLEX test plan, it launched a seismic shift in how new nurses are evaluated for licensure. Compared to that major overhaul, the 2026 NCLEX test plan is likely to generate a sigh of relief among educators.
Academic nursing programs will find little need for adjustments in teaching, testing or curriculum based on the 2026 plan. And for institutions that use ATI resources, leaders and faculty can rest easy knowing that all necessary learning content and assessment updates are well under way. 
“Programs shouldn’t worry — no curriculum changes are needed if you are already following the current test plan,” said Pamela Roland, PhDc, MBA, MSN, RN, an ATI content strategist who specializes in NCLEX preparation. “The changes in the new plan are minimal.”
Although the changes to the test plan are not significant, they are important for faculty to understand. The list below breaks down what’s changing, what’s staying the same, and how ATI is ensuring your students remain fully prepared for their NCLEX exam.
The Client Needs category percentages (e.g., 15% to 21% for Management of Care, etc.) remain the same as in the 2023 test plan.
This is welcome news for curriculum planners, who often depend on these percentages to balance instructional time, Roland said.
For RN exams, the following activity statements were added:
In practice, this means students should be prepared to recognize and respond to scenarios where implicit bias may affect care delivery. Most programs already cover this content in health equity modules.
For PN exams, NCSBN added the following four activity statements:
Beyond the additions listed above, NCSBN refined several existing activity statements to improve clarity and alignment.
On the RN test plan, NCSBN removed two activity statements under Physiologic Integrity but retained the activities by reassigning one to a different subcategory and rewording another.
On the PN test plan, NCSBN removed two activity statements but retained the activities by reassigning or rewording them.
On the PN test plan, one activity statement was removed.
Under Psychosocial Integrity, Influences on Health, NCSBN removed the activity statement “Respect client’s self-reported religious/spiritual beliefs.”
In the Client Needs categories for the PN and RN exams, the subcategory of Safety & Infection Control became Safety & Infection Prevention and Control. The definition of this category did not change.
NCLEX candidates will continue to receive:
The 2026 test plan makes no changes to computerized adaptive testing scoring or how exam questions are mapped to the NCSBN Clinical Judgment Measurement Model.
With these changes in mind, what should faculty do differently? The answer is reassuring: More of the same. The box in this section provides key guidance. Commenting on the overall impact of the test plan changes, Roland emphasized that the new activity statements align with best practices faculty already teach and that the 500+ activity statements continue to anchor preparation across the curriculum. 
She recommends that faculty continue to:
Programs that use ATI teaching and assessment resources will experience a seamless transition of material. “Everything ATI releases in 2026 or later will reflect the new test plan,” Roland said.
ATI adapts to each new NCLEX test plan by:
ATI teams are making the necessary, albeit minor, revisions to ensure that learning and assessment materials reflect the new test plan. These revised items will appear in the Comprehensive Predictor®️ in April 2026 and the Content Mastery Series®️ exams as each course-specific exam rotates for its scheduled release.
Compared to the substantive shift required by the 2023 test plan introducing the measurement of clinical judgment, the 2026 NCLEX test plan is a minor alignment. The new activity statements affirm essential values — equity, dignity and safety — that programs already integrate into teaching.
“Overall, the changes in the new test plan are minor,” Roland said. “Format and structure were retained, and NCSBN made minor edits for clarity. Core definitions did not change, and percentage ranges did not change. All activity statements are intact except the one removed from the PN exam.”
From a curriculum perspective, no changes are needed. “These added activity statements reflect things RNs and PNs already do,” Roland said. “Programs can feel confident that maintaining their focus on developing students’ nursing knowledge and clinical judgment skills will help them graduate nurses who are confident and practice ready.”