By Triage Healthcare Staffing

March 16, 2026

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Medical Staffing Agency Green Flags

Choosing a medical staffing agency can shape your entire travel experience. The right partner makes assignments feel smooth, supported, and aligned with your goals. The wrong one can make the process feel confusing, stressful, and overly transactional. Which one sounds better to you?

When you’re searching for a new travel nurse agency, there are a few ways you can be sure that you’re choosing the right one. These green flags can make sure you’re partnering with an agency that values transparency, open communication, and long-term relationships.

Medical Staffing Agency Green Flags:

Green Flag: Transparent Pay and Clear Benefits

One of the biggest green flags is transparency around compensation. A reputable agency should clearly explain how your pay package works before you sign a contract. That includes breaking down your taxable hourly wage, stipends, overtime rate, and contract length.

You should feel confident in how your compensation is structured and never be surprised when your first paycheck arrives. If something doesn’t make sense, a good recruiter will walk you through the details and answer questions without hesitation.

Benefits should be just as clear. From health insurance and retirement plans to licensure reimbursement or referral bonuses, strong agencies outline these offerings early so you can make informed decisions.

Green Flag: Open Communication and Support

Consistent, responsive communication is another major green flag. Travel healthcare moves quickly, and having a recruiter who responds to calls, texts, or emails makes a huge difference. Good agencies keep you updated on job submissions, interviews, and next steps so you’re never left wondering where things stand. Good agencies also often have a heads up about jobs before they even open, making sure you can be one of the first people to apply. Fast applications often turn into early interviews, which often turn into an offer.

A strong agency also makes communication simple and accessible, not something you have to chase down. The best partners invest in tools that keep everything in one place, like a mobile app where you can access assignment details, upload documents, and submit timecards without digging through emails or waiting for a callback.

Support should also extend beyond the recruiter relationship. Benefits teams and payroll departments all play a role in making the travel process smoother. When agencies have clear systems and dedicated support staff, you know exactly where to go when questions come up.

Compliance is another area where strong support matters. Between background checks, licenses, immunizations, and onboarding paperwork, credentialing can be overwhelming. A well-organized agency provides clear checklists, reminders, and guidance so you don’t feel like you’re navigating the process alone.

Green Flag: Honest Conversations and Real Opportunities

Not every assignment is perfect, and transparent agencies acknowledge that. Look for honest conversations about things like patient ratios, scheduling expectations, floating policies, and unit culture. This kind of transparency helps you make informed decisions and avoid surprises after arriving at a facility.

A strong agency will also present multiple opportunities that align with your specialty, location preferences, and goals. However, great recruiters will often float assignments that may not meet your specific criteria. If your recruiter mentions a job that doesn’t seem to fit what you’re looking for, it’s likely because there’s a green flag behind the scenes. Maybe the job pays better than others. Or maybe your recruiter knows that the unit is an unexpected gem.

The best agencies think beyond one contract. They view travel healthcare as a long-term partnership and help healthcare pros plan what comes next, whether that’s another travel assignment, a new location or a different type of contract.

The Bottom Line

Traveling should expand your opportunities, not create unnecessary stress. Triage prioritizes transparency, communication, strong support systems, and long-term relationships to create your best experiences.

Taking the time to look for these green flags can help ensure your travel journey stays focused on what matters most: meaningful work, new experiences, and the flexibility that makes travel healthcare so rewarding. To work with Triage, check out our job board full of allied and travel nurse jobs.

Want to connect with trusted agencies? Browse travel nurse jobs on The Gypsy Nurse job board and find opportunities that fit your goals.

By Medical Solutions

March 11, 2026

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Changing Travel Nurse Specialties: A Step-by-Step Guide

Thinking about changing travel nurse specialties? You’re not the only one. A lot of travelers hit a point where they’re ready for a different pace, a new patient population, or just a fresh challenge. The tricky part is that hospitals usually hire travelers to step in fast, so switching travel nurse specialties takes a little strategy. Here’s what you need to know (and what to do next) to make the move without putting your travel career on hold.

Why Travel Nurses Want to Change Specialties

Most specialty switches come down to a few common themes:

  • You’re ready for a change in pace or stress level. Maybe you love your unit, but you want something more sustainable.
  • You found a specialty that actually fits you. Travel exposes you to different workflows and teams, so sometimes you discover a unit you wish you’d tried sooner.
  • You want more options and better match opportunities. Adding a specialty can expand the types of travel nurse jobs you qualify for.
  • You’re thinking long-term. Some travelers pivot toward future goals, such as advanced practice plans, leadership, outpatient schedules, or a specialty they want to “settle into” later.

The Biggest Obstacle When Changing Travel Nurse Specialties

Many facilities want travelers who can safely function with minimal ramp-up, so recent specialty experience is often a hard requirement. It’s common to see job posts asking for 1–2 years of experience in the specialty and sometimes specifically within the last year.

That doesn’t mean you can’t switch. It means you’ll likely need to build a bridge so your experience looks like a confident yes instead of a risky maybe.

How to Change Travel Nurse Specialties

If you’re aiming for a new specialty, the fastest path is a plan that builds experience in the right order. These steps will help you choose bridge opportunities, meet common requirements, and make your resume reflect your readiness.

1) Start with a Skills Overlap Checklist

Before you chase a completely new lane, identify what already transfers. Make a quick list of:

  • Patient acuity you’re used to
  • Procedures/skills you can do confidently
  • Common medications and equipment you know well
  • Experience floating, taking admissions/discharges, precepting, charge support, etc.

Then compare that to your target specialty. The more overlap you can clearly explain, the easier the switch tends to be.

2) Consider Roles that Bridge the Gap

This is where most successful specialty switches happen. Instead of jumping from Point A to Point Z, aim for Point B first. For example, med-surg to tele/stepdown if you already manage complex patients, or ICU to PACU, as they both often align with strong critical thinking and fast pace. You can also build experience through local PRN/per diem, internal cross-training, or floating opportunities on your current assignment.

3) Get the Right Certifications

Certifications don’t replace experience, but they can make you more competitive and show you’re serious.

While certifications vary by facility and assignment, some include:

  • ACLS (often expected for ICU/tele/stepdown, sometimes ED/PACU)
  • PALS (peds settings and some ED roles)
  • NRP (newborn/NICU/L&D environments)
  • TNCC (often valued for ED/trauma)

Focus on what your target specialty actually expects, not what looks impressive on paper.

4) Find Someone Who Could Mentor You

A quick conversation with the right person can save you months of guessing. Ask a nurse in your target specialty:

  • What experience do facilities really want to see?
  • What felt hardest in the first 2–4 weeks?
  • What skills should you practice before you apply?

Even one mentor can help you pick smarter bridge steps.

5) Update Your Resume to Show You’re Ready

Hiring teams move fast. Help them connect the dots by highlighting:

  • Unit types and acuity
  • Ratios and core responsibilities
  • Transferable skills (drips, vents, lines, wound care, triage, procedural support, etc.)
  • Floating experience and how quickly you onboard
  • Certifications
  • Recent, relevant experience first

Your Next Chapter in Travel Nursing

Changing travel nurse specialties can feel like starting over, but it’s really just building a new lane. Put a simple plan behind your goal, rack up recent experience, and you’ll be surprised how quickly “maybe someday” turns into your next contract. And don’t do it solo: a good travel nursing agency and recruiter can help you map out bridge assignments, target the right facilities, and position your resume so you’re competitive for travel nurse jobs in your new specialty.

Ready for your next step? Explore travel nurse jobs on The Gypsy Nurse job board and find assignments that match your growing skill set.

By TNAA- Travel Nurse Across America

November 21, 2022

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Want to Start 2023 as a Travel Nurse? Now Is the Time to Prepare

TNAA Healthcare provided this article.

2023 is weeks away, and a new year brings new opportunities. Many nurses use the fresh start of a new year as the perfect time to leap into a travel nursing career. If you’re considering starting 2023 as a travel nurse, the time to prepare is, well, now.

Before taking your first assignment, you’ll need to:

1.   Find a Stand-out Travel Nurse Agency & Recruiter

There are hundreds of agencies and thousands of recruiters. What’s the best way to narrow down this pool of possibilities? Look for what makes an agency or recruiter stand out from the crowd.

Want to Start 2023 as a Travel Nurse? Now Is the Time to Prepare

Pick a Travel Nurse Agency

A quick way to make a top-five list is to consult reputable review sites, such as The Gypsy Nurse, to see which agencies travelers voted as the best of the best. Narrow that down to the agencies that have certification by The Joint Commission, which requires agencies to undergo an extensive evaluation process every few years and demonstrate the ability to offer high-quality and competent nursing services.

With that list, it’s time to explore each agency’s benefits, support, and perks. You’ll want an agency that steps forward to support you on the road with traveler-focused benefits, like day-one insurance and paid sick leave, mental wellness resources that meet you wherever you are, and a 401(k) plan to invest in your future.

Additionally, you’ll want to be able to rely on an agency’s well-structured, experienced support teams. Look for agencies with a QA team that ensures you’re meeting all compliance requirements, a housing team helping you find the best accommodations within your budget, and a clinical support team available to coach you when you need it.

Last but not least, you’ll want the agency you work with to have various travel nurse jobs available so it’s easier for you to get your first assignment to start your travel nursing career.

Pick a Travel Nurse Recruiter

Once your top few agencies are sorted out, you’ll want to connect with a great recruiter. Use social media networks, like The Gypsy Nurse’s Facebook group, to ask other experienced travelers which recruiters they recommend. Your recruiter should know what the agency offers and the current state of the travel nurse market, listen to your career goals and put you on a path to reaching them. You should feel like a priority to your recruiter, not just another traveler on their list.

2.   Prep Your Travel Nurse File & Submit Your Application

Your recruiter is responsible for submitting your travel nurse profile to a job; you’ll work with them to get it prepped. Your travel nurse profile will consist of your resume, licenses & certifications, immunizations & titer records, references, and more. If you need to update specific certifications or obtain another state’s license, now is the time to get it done!

Meanwhile, your recruiter is hunting for a few contracts that match your requirements – whether you want to work specific shifts, go for a particular pay, or try for a certain state.

When you and your recruiter have found a few that meet your needs, and your profile is ready, it’s time to apply! You’ll begin applying to open jobs about three to four weeks before the start of the assignment. (Tip: One essential thing to consider before applying for any job is the housing market in the area. You don’t want to accept a job only to discover that you can’t find reasonable housing nearby.)

3.   Interview and Land a Job

Once your application is submitted, this next step could move quickly. It takes approximately 72 hours to hear from hospitals about profile submissions. Suppose a hospital wants you for an assignment. You could have a phone interview with a nurse manager, a voice-automated interview, or an auto-offer without a formal interview. Once you agree to a contract, you can put in a two-week notice at your staff job.

4.   Compliance and Housing

Congrats, you’ve secured your first travel nurse job! Now, you’ll have to think about assignment compliance and housing. If your agency has a QA department, they’ll contact you to ensure you get all assignment compliance items out of the way. Your agency might even be able to set up any appointments you need and pay for it all. At the same time, you’ll want to find accommodations near your assignment. If your agency has a housing department, they can relieve stress by finding a safe, affordable place for you to stay.

5.   Now, The Fun Begins

You’re officially ready to take off for your first assignment! The good news is a lot of the hard part is over. You’ve picked a great agency, established a relationship with a recruiter who is getting to know you and your lifestyle needs, and you’ve got everything together for your travel nurse profile. With all this work behind you and one assignment on your resume, it will likely be much easier to apply for your next travel nurse position or to start your travel nursing career!

Our job board is a great place to search for your next travel nurse assignment. We have you covered with our housing page if housing is an issue. You can search for what you are looking for.

If you are a new travel nurse or looking into becoming a travel nurse:

Travel Nurse Guide: Step-by-Step (now offered in a PDF Downloadable version!)

By TNAA- Travel Nurse Across America

February 25, 2022

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Have a Successful Travel Nurse Career in a Changing Industry

TNAA Healthcare provided this article.

The travel nurse industry is booming as pandemic burnout has pushed RNs to look for ways to enhance their careers and lives. Nursing school students have aspirations of traveling, no longer envisioning their career spent in one spot. Staff nurses have learned traveling is viable for many lifestyles and situations, and hospitals are advised to better fit travelers in their units, treating them as partners instead of seeing them as temporary staff.

How can you set yourself up for a successful travel nurse career if you’re interested in traveling? It comes down to three things: your agency, your recruiter, and you.

How Travel Nurse Agencies Can Help You Navigate the Industry

Some travel nurse agencies have been overwhelmed with the amount of nurses wanting to travel and don’t have the resources available to keep up with the growth. That’s one reason why you’ll want to be picky about the agency you partner with on your travel nurse journey.

Picking a Travel Nurse Agency With Industry Knowledge

There are dozens of travel nurse agencies out there, but you want an agency and recruiter that can serve as your trusted advisors to help you navigate the growing and changing industry. Your agency should have high credibility in the industry, and your recruiter should be highly knowledgeable about the healthcare facility you are interested in and the facility’s requirements.

Picking a Travel Nurse Agency That Values Relationships

Along with industry knowledge, you’ll want an agency and recruiter that focus on building their relationship with you. That starts with having a recruiter who is available to talk to you instead of leaving you abandoned with your questions. Your recruiter should listen to your personal and career goals, ask important questions to understand your goals better, and seek out the assignments that align with those goals. Your recruiter should also be transparent and honest about situations in the industry or at a certain facility. They should always be looking out for your best interests.

Picking a Travel Nurse Agency With Benefits That Matter

This one is really important. Not all agencies offer the same level of benefits and support that you had while you were a staff nurse or that you want when adapting to your new life as a traveler. We’re talking housing assistance, licensing assistance, mental health resources, insurance options, and more. Take the agencies you are interested in working with and research their benefits. Make sure they have the benefits that you want to fall back on when you take your life on the road.

How to Set Yourself Apart and Have the Best Travel Experience

If you’re a new travel nurse or even a seasoned traveler among the influx, here’s how you can set yourself apart from the crowd.

Engage With a Facility’s Core Staff

You may be at one hospital for a limited time, but you can still leave a lasting impression. Don’t settle for just being ‘the traveler’ on your unit – make yourself known to the director. Let them know you are here to be a partner in promoting excellent patient care and best practices. While getting to know people, find your core staff buddy and invite them out or over for dinner. It will make the travel life a little less lonely for you and give you friends across the nation.

Be the Best Guest

Be the best guest on the unit. You are there to fill a hospital’s needs. That doesn’t mean you should allow yourself to be disrespected, but it means you might be tasked with doing the less-than-glamorous duties from time to time. Being willing to help in this manner is actually to your benefit. In the event of a low census, you will have proven your worth and desire to be a teammate on the unit, meaning you’ll likely be the traveler they want to keep.

Know When and How to Share your Expertise

You’ve learned several techniques while supporting facilities across the nation. It makes sense that you would want to share your expertise, but do so tactfully. Avoid telling a staff nurse how they could do their job better. Instead, write a letter to the nurse manager or director about what you saw that worked best for you in a previous assignment. As you share your expertise, remember always to be willing to learn and try new techniques yourself.

Before the pandemic, travel nurses were hired when staff nurses took leave during busy seasons and to fill gaps as hospital managers worked to build their core staff. Now, it seems like a chapter as a travel nurse is almost expected in your career as an RN. So, if you see travel fitting in your life, follow these tips to give yourself a successful career as a travel nurse.

Are you looking for your next travel nurse assignment? Click here to view our job board. Do you need housing for an upcoming assignment? Click here to search our housing page.

If you are a new travel nurse or looking into becoming a travel nurse:

Travel Nurse Guide: Step-by-Step (now offered in a PDF Downloadable version!)