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Short-Term vs. Long-Term Travel Nursing Assignments: What You Need to Know

You’re perched at the edge of a crowded airport, suitcase in hand, scrolling through two job offers on your phone. One is a 13-week tour of a sun-splashed coastal hospital; the other is a half-year contract with a tight network in a rural enclave. 

Both come with adventure, expansion and the opportunity to affect change. But which route suits your career ambitions, lifestyle, and wallet? This is the daily life of travel nurses — a career path characterized by flexibility, but also one of choices.

As someone who has spent years talking with nurses at every level of their careers, I’ve learned how the choice you make between short-term (usually 4–13 weeks) and long-term (6–12+ months) assignments can determine not only what’s on your resume but also how you live your life. Let’s get into the nitty gritty of each:

The Allure of Short-Term Travel Nursing Assignments

Think of short-term contracts as the espresso shots of travel nursing—short, strong, and energizing. These assignments, typically 8–13 weeks long, are for nurses who thrive on change. 

Picture fall foliage in a New England hospital and, by winter, a ski town in Colorado. The variety isn’t only scenic; it’s professional. You’ll work with different patient populations, adjust to different EHRs, and work with different teams.

Pros

  • Flexibility

Want to take a month between gigs to hike the Appalachian Trail? It allows you to control your time by working on short-term assignments.

  • Skill Diversification

In a 2023 survey conducted by Travel Nursing Central, 68% of the traveling nurses in short-term roles claimed they were able to build skills at a faster pace, thanks to the exposure to different clinical environments.

  • Hourly Pay

Due to their lower length of employment, short-term contracts usually come with a higher base rate. These are not unheard of rates, and you’ll often see 10–15% above that for longer roles, particularly in more in-demand specialties like critical care or emergency medicine.

Cons

  • Instability

Breaks between assignments can lead to an unpredictable pay schedule. Without a financial cushion, this can feel stressful.

  • Relentless Transitions

You don’t know how your boss will approach the first day of September or February — whether there will be a new regime and new policies. People don’t always thrive when fast-pivoting in and out of roles, onboarding across teams, and learning new protocols every couple of months. “It’s like the first day of school, but then over and over,” one nurse told me.

  • Limited Benefits

Certain agencies provide less comprehensive benefits (such as retirement contributions) to short-term nurses, with those signing on to extended terms getting priority.

Long-Term Travel Nursing Assignments

Long-term assignments (6–12+ months) are the slow-brewed pour-over coffee of the travel nursing world—rich, steady, and layered. 

These positions attract nurses who desire more meaningful connections, both on a professional and personal level. Imagine you’re not just passing through a city; you’re learning its rhythms, mentoring new staff, and joining a community.

Pros

  • Less Moving

You don’t have to keep moving around. A 9-month contract allows you to unpack, decorate your Airbnb, and even adopt a pet (yes, I’ve seen this happen!).

  • Stronger Bonds

Gaining trust with a team is a gradual process. They get opportunities to be in charge, such as training new hires or leading projects.

  • Improved Benefits

Many agencies sweeten the deal for longer commitments. Things like sign-on bonuses, relocation reimbursements, or guaranteed hours.

Cons

  • Less Flexibility

The commitment is all yours to stick to, and if you decide to bail early, you’ll risk burning bridges or incurring penalties.

  • Potential Stagnation

6 months can feel like an eternity if the assignment seems a poor fit. One ER nurse admitted, “By month 4, I memorized the cafeteria menu—and not in a good way.”

  • Lower Hourly Rates

Total earnings may average out (due to bonus opportunities), but base pay can be 5–10% lower than in short-term work.

Breaking Down Pay Structures

Let’s talk numbers. Hourly rates make news, but the devil is in the details.

  • Short-term pay

Huge per-hour pay (imagine 50–75+/hr) dominates, though housing stipends may be taxable if contracts repeat by region. Staple your pro tip: IRS “tax home” rules can be the difference between take-home and no-home pay. Always consult a tax pro!

  • Pay: Over Time

Base rates could fall to 45–65/hr, for example, agencies routinely add retention bonuses (5k–10k for fulfilling a contract) or loyalty rewards. And over a year, these perks can help bridge the gap.

Short-term nurses who accept consecutive assignments can make about 12% more over the course of a year than those in long-term positions, according to the National Library of Medicine—but only if they keep gaps between contracts to a minimum.

Lifestyle Considerations: It is Not Just a Career

Travel nursing is not a career choice—it’s a lifestyle. Here’s how each option affects you day to day:

For Wanderlust Souls

Short-term assignments allow you to have an adventurous itch scratched. One nurse I spoke with traveled on eight-week contracts to work in all 50 states (yes, all of them). But constant motion is hard on relationships. As a mother of two put it: “FaceTime calls only go so far when your kid learns how to ride a bike without you.”

For Stability Seekers

Long-term roles mean making friends, getting to know a region inside and out, or even becoming permanent staff. In particular, there are unique rewards that come with rural assignments. At StaffDNA, we’ve witnessed a 30% increase in nurses renewing contracts in rural areas, motivated by more affordable living costs and close-knit communities.

Deciding: Questions You Could Ask Yourself

Making a decision between short-term and long-term work isn’t simply a question of contracts — it’s an issue of aligning the trajectory of your career with the course of your life. Begin by asking yourself: 

What stage am I at in my career now? 

For new grads, short-term jobs can be a “sampler platter,” giving you a chance to try out different specialties without a long-term obligation. One nurse I spoke with jumped from pediatric oncology to travel ER placements in her first two years working, using both gigs to hone each thing she was excited to do. 

On the other hand, experienced nurses who don’t mind longer assignments tend to take the opportunity to take on leadership — training new hires or supervising units — preparing themselves for administrative work.

Next, be candid about your priorities. If you’re aggressively saving for a house or trying to pay off credit cards, short-term assignments’ higher hourly rates might be just the boost you need. 

But if your priority is paying down student loans, don’t discount the potential of long-term retention bonuses. I’ve watched nurses bank years of debt at a time by stacking these incentives across contracts back-to-back.

Finally, consider your relationship with change. Do you thrive on change, or does constant upheaval wear you out? One travel nurse characterized short-term assignments as “professional wanderlust,” with a new city, every time, a blank slate. 

However, another admitted that after six months of hopping from Airbnb to Airbnb, she finally missed the routine of knowing where the grocery store was without GPS. There’s no right or wrong here — it’s about crafting a career that energizes instead of depletes you.

There’s No “Right” Answer—Just What’s Right for You

Whether it is the dynamism of short-term gigs or the steadiness of long-term roles that appeal, success is about self-awareness. Review your goals every 6–12 months. This year, perhaps, it’s pursuing heftier paychecks and fresh passport stamps. Next year, it’s putting down temporary roots closer to family.

And keep in mind, you’re not the only one going through this. Our job Find Job feature allows you to sort assignments by length of time, geography, and specialty — putting you in the driver’s seat.

So, what’s it going to be: the espresso or the pour-over? Whichever you choose, adventure is calling.

 

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