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 Medical Solutions

August 17, 2023

4787 Views

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How Much Experience Do You Need for Travel Nursing?

Medical Solutions provided this article.

Embarking on a career as a travel nurse is an exciting journey, but many aspiring nurses wonder about the experience required to venture into this thrilling field. Whether you’re a seasoned RN or a fresh graduate, understanding the experience requirements can help you chart your course and step confidently into the world of travel nursing.

How Much Experience

What Is the Requirement to be a Travel Nurse?

While there’s no industry-wide time requirement, the current industry standard is that travel nurses should have at least 1-2 years of experience in a hospital or healthcare facility to be hired as travel nurses. However, it really comes down to the travel agency, specialty, and facilities and/or units, as they may require more experience, but such enhanced experience requirements are usually specified on a job posting. Your recruiter would also share this information with you before you apply for a travel healthcare job.

Why Do I Need Prior Experience to be a Travel Nurse?

When travel nurses start an assignment, they’re expected to hit the ground running. Orientations are often short, and there’s a lot to learn to get adjusted, like learning hospital protocol, navigating a new charting system, and simply finding your way around in a new space. In order to provide great patient care while navigating a new place, your clinical skills must be solid.

how much experience

Plus, prior experience requirements help protect a travel nurse’s license, strengthen their resume, and facilitate a successful travel nursing experience. For hospitals, experience helps reassure them that their travelers will provide care from day one of an assignment and are reliable.

Where Do I Start to Become a Travel Nurse?

If you’re starting out on your nursing/travel nursing journey, you may still be thinking, “How do I become a travel nurse?” It might be helpful to look at the whole picture when you’re starting out, and we’ve outlined the basic steps to becoming a travel nurse:

  1. Earn your nursing degree, either an Associate of Science degree in Nursing (ASN/AND) or a Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN).
  2. Once you’ve earned your degree, you need to get your RN or LPN license by passing the National Council Licensure Examination (NCLEX-RN).
  3. Get at least one year of permanent nursing experience at a hospital or other type of healthcare facility—this is when you can/should determine the specialty that interests you the most.
  4. Find a travel nursing agency that offers the benefits you want, access to plenty of jobs to choose from, and a recruiter you can trust.

The experience needed to become a travel nurse varies depending on the agency, specialty, and assignment. Whether you’re new to traveling or a seasoned specialist, travel nursing offers a wealth of opportunities to learn, grow, and explore while making a difference in patients’ lives across the nation.

Curious about what jobs are available for you? Search jobs at Medical Solutions today!

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 Fastaff Travel Nursing

June 1, 2022

3447 Views

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The Journey from Grad to Traveler – and How to Make the Most of That Two Years’ Experience Requirement

Fastaff provided this article.

Every journey starts somewhere, and for future travel nurses, the path can be less linear to rewarding, high-paying travel assignments than to many staff jobs. The minute you walk off that graduation stage with your BSN or ADN in nursing is the moment your career really starts. With travel nursing in your sights, it’s bound to take off running at a quick pace, just like you will when you hit the ground running for patients in need as a travel nurse.

Many new grads are anxious to leave their home base to start traveling

Travel nursing has become a highly sought-after career thanks in large part to social media, the pandemic, and the national nursing shortage – the promise of new experiences, challenging assignments, airline miles, and paid travels around the U.S. draw in many new RNs to this lucrative, high-paying career. Although the drive and motivation is strong to hit the road, many travel hopefuls encounter their first big roadblock right off the bat: the two-year requirement.

Most agencies like Fastaff require two years of experience before you can start traveling, which is a necessary step to ensure your career readiness. Why does this requirement exist in the first place? The two-year requirement is there to help you, as tedious as it may seem. During these two years, you’ll gain something that cannot be adequately taught in nursing school. You’ll learn your nursing style, how to work with a variety of real people with real, complex problems. You’ll learn to soothe and sympathize with grieving families and assert your knowledge and confidence as you learn skills to be a better nurse. With experience comes knowledge, and this is the time to soak up new experiences closer to home that’ll shape you into a well-rounded, experienced, and confident RN who can handle the rigors of facility demands to travelers.

Insight into the 2-year requirement

We asked our VP of Clinical Services, Michelle B., on her insight into the two-year requirement. Depending on specialty, nurses typically have three months of orientation with a ‘preceptor.’ This could be up to six months if in a specialty like critical care, L&D, ER, etc. Since this time will pass rather quickly, Michelle encourages future travelers to enjoy the time in their first hospital setting. “You’ll want to stay in a job long enough so you can be mentored and free to ask all the questions you need to in a more comfortable setting without pressure about what you ‘should know.’ When you start traveling, you’re expected to know!”

Michelle also stresses the importance of getting to know yourself as a nurse during these two years. “It takes time to get enough experience with a variety of patients, especially the tough ones. In your home hospital, your patient assignments are going to be determined by what you’re capable of handling alone vs. still needing precepting/mentoring on. When traveling, you have you be able to take whatever comes at you.”

Your journey as a nurse will be an adventurous long trip, and whether you end up traveling or stick to something more permanent, ultimately, the only thing permanent is change – and the nursing field has quite a bit of change every day. Fastaff travelers are known for their ability to hit the ground running, for their experience and knowledge are unmatched. The best part of traveling with Fastaff is that with every new assignment you take, you become a better nurse with a vast repertoire of knowledge that you can use to go after those assignments with really large paychecks. We can’t wait to have you join the ranks of the elite Fastaff travelers once you are ready. Apply online, and we’ll send you a reminder message in 730 days to take an assignment.

experience

By Emily Bryant

April 22, 2020

3835 Views

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Travel Nurse’s COVID-19 Hospital Experience in Rhode Island

In the above video travel nurse, Emily Bryant went live on The Gypsy Nurse Facebook group to share her experience as an ER travel nurse at a Rhode Island COVID 19 hospital.

Treating everyone as positive

At the hospital Emily is currently working at they are treating every patient that comes into the ER as positive until they have reason to believe they’re not positive.

Updates to the hospital to accommodate COVID-19 cases

Emily talks about how the hospital has made policy and procedural changes almost daily as things change. They are reserving their negative pressure rooms for patients that will need to be intubated or code patients. She also mentioned that all rooms have been stripped of their supplies and equipment because if the patient is positive all of the items in that room would need to be thrown out.

All Admits Swabbed

Emily said that all patients are being swabbed for COVID-19 on admission unless they are very asymptomatic. They are using precautions with every patient.

Staff procedures

As far as changes for the hospital staff of the COVID 19 hospital, as with many if not all hospitals and facilities staff must take their temperature before each shift.

PPE

As far as PPE, Emily says that the staff wears N95 masks for rule out, otherwise they are to wear surgical masks all shift. It appears they have enough surgical masks as far as she can tell. Isolation gowns used at her hospital are reusable, so they are washed and reused. She said they use their N95 masks until they need to be replaced.

Community Outreach

Emily says that the community around the hospital has been great. They have provided many meals for the staff at the hospital. Catering companies bring in food, family members order in catering for staff and children are sending in ornaments to decorate their departments.

COVID-19 Resources

We hope that you have found this video from Emily helpful. If you would like to read more COVID-19 articles click here. If you would like to look for a position at a COVID 19 hospital click here.

Our hope is that by providing these videos from fellow travel nurses not only do you feel connected, but to also see that you are not alone in your positions now.

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 The Gypsy Nurse

August 28, 2018

24887 Views

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Why do I need 2 years Experience?

5 Reasons that you should get 2 years experience BEFORE Traveling as a healthcare professional

Why do I need 2 years Experience?

Certifications are important!

Give yourself the time you need to get all of the certs you can before traveling. Many hospitals will not let staff sign up for certifications until they have worked a year.

Maximize your organizational skills.

Ensure that you are comfortable managing a full (and sometimes heavy load) with little to no orientation. It’s not uncommon for the traveler to get the most difficult to manage patients. Organizational skills will be key to keeping your head above water.

Take time to build your confidence.

How confident are you to be able to jump in and do what needs to be done? Can you stand up to a physician to advocate for the patient? These skills sometimes take time to develop. As a new RN, there was no way that I could have stood up to a physician to advocate for my patient. After years of experience, I now feel no fear in doing this. Experience is the ONLY way to be confident that you can stand behind your decisions when advocating for your patients.

Maximize your experience.

Nursing school teaches you the ‘books,’ and your first two years working will teach you 10 times what’s in the books. Working in a small hospital vs. a teaching facility can be a huge difference in how you provide care. Make sure that you are experienced enough to provide safe patient care in any setting. Orientation may be minimal, and there isn’t a guarantee that the staff will have your back if you have a patient crashing.

Find Your Comfort Zone.

Two years gives you time to find your ‘comfort zone. The traveler needs to walk in with an air of confidence. You don’t want to give false confidence…give yourself time to have confidence in your skills genuinely.