Travel healthcare wages throughout the pandemic closely followed the rise and fall of COVID-19 surges nationwide. Travel nurses were in particularly high demand because they serve critical roles in delivering care to Covid and non-Covid patients. Now, they’re part of the decline in travel healthcare trends nationwide.
Uncertainty over Travel Healthcare Wages
Many hospitals are shifting from travel workers to focus on plumping their permanent, full-time healthcare workforce. Travel nurses experiencing pay cuts mid-contract or contract cancellations aren’t as eager to sign on the dotted line under so much uncertainty. Health systems that enthusiastically embraced travel nurses to fill staffing shortages have lost state and federal funding that helped them hire temporary staff. They’re also faced with the daunting task of replacing healthcare professionals who retired early or left the field entirely due to burnout, stress and fatigue brought on by a nearly non-stop battle with coronavirus infections for over two years.
With frequent wage and contract changes, it’s not surprising to see declining travel trends across the nation. Some travel workers are ready to come home. Others are contemplating returning to staff positions that offer more stability. However, some nurses and healthcare professionals aren’t ready to give up traveling. Travel nursing still pays more than staff positions, and healthcare travel wages remain higher than pre-pandemic wages in many areas of the country.
Covid Impacts on Healthcare Travel Pay
The nation suffered a particularly harsh start to 2022. Steadily climbing Covid cases caused by more contagious variants had most states reporting increased healthcare travel pay in January. However, cases and wages began falling in February and continued through March when all 50 states reported a drop in healthcare travel wages.
April saw Covid hospitalizations stabilize further and travel contracts that were once plentiful and lucrative began to dwindle. Only Minnesota saw healthcare wages increase in April. Covid cases remained steady throughout May, but healthcare travel pay rose in five states, potentially signaling a comeback. Despite recent falls in cases and pay, June travel wages continued to see positive jumps in several states. Healthcare travel pay remained relatively unchanged in several other states but plummeted in one.
States With Wage Increases
Overall, the nation saw daily average COVID-19 cases slightly rise again in June. The daily case average on June 1 was 101,571, rising to 114,000 by month-end. However, case numbers were likely higher as residents testing at home often fail to self-report positive results, and super mild cases that go unnoticed also go unreported.
On July 4, reported cases indicated a 10% increase nationwide over the past two weeks, covering a big chunk of the last part of June. Covid-related hospitalizations also increased by 12%, ICU cases were up 11%, and deaths rose by 25% over the past 14 days nationwide. Seven states reported increases in travel healthcare wages in June, two more than in May.
State |
Avg Weekly Pay May |
Avg Weekly Pay June |
% Increase |
Delaware |
$2,276 |
$2,360 |
3.6% |
Wyoming |
$2,732 |
$2,807 |
2.7% |
Minnesota |
$2,681 |
$2,736 |
2.0% |
Michigan |
$2,462 |
$2,509 |
1.9% |
Texas |
$2,029 |
$2,065 |
1.8% |
California |
$2,907 |
$2,952 |
1.5% |
West Virginia |
$2,722 |
$2,754 |
1.1% |
States With Wage Decreases
Following a drop in healthcare wages in all 50 states in March, all but two states reported another decrease in travel wages in April. Only 36 states recorded an additional decline in May, but four had double-digit drops. Of those four, most significant reduction at 12.4%. The state continued the trend by ranking first again in June with the only double-digit decrease for the month. Overall, 27 states saw travel healthcare pay go down in June.
State |
Avg Weekly Pay May |
Avg Weekly Pay June |
% Increase |
Maryland |
$2,102 |
$1,763 |
-19.2% |
New Hampshire |
$2,250 |
$2,076 |
-8.4% |
Rhode Island |
$2,638 |
$2,476 |
-6.6% |
Wisconsin |
$2,319 |
$2,192 |
-5.8% |
Vermont |
$2,585 |
$2,467 |
-4.8% |
Florida |
$2,142 |
$2,048 |
-4.6% |
Connecticut |
$2,255 |
$2,157 |
-4.5% |
Maine |
$2,447 |
$2,344 |
-4.4% |
South Carolina |
$2,325 |
$2,231 |
-4.2% |
Kentucky |
$2,549 |
$2,453 |
-3.9% |
Montana |
$2,543 |
$2,454 |
-3.7% |
Arkansas |
$2,436 |
$2,362 |
-3.2% |
Louisiana |
$2,440 |
$2,374 |
-2.8% |
South Dakota |
$2,809 |
$2,739 |
-2.6% |
Indiana |
$2,524 |
$2,471 |
-2.1% |
Iowa |
$2,466 |
$2,415 |
-2.1% |
North Dakota |
$2,626 |
$2,572 |
-2.1% |
New Mexico |
$2,547 |
$2,500 |
-1.9% |
Washington |
$2,761 |
$2,712 |
-1.8% |
Arizona |
$2,656 |
$2,610 |
-1.8% |
Idaho |
$2,378 |
$2,341 |
-1.6% |
Nebraska |
$2,558 |
$2,522 |
-1.4% |
Georgia |
$2,259 |
$2,229 |
-1.3% |
Oklahoma |
$2,176 |
$2,147 |
-1.3% |
Virginia |
$2,458 |
$2,427 |
-1.3% |
Oregon |
$2,865 |
$2,831 |
-1.2% |
Illinois |
$2,619 |
$2,587 |
-1.2% |
States That Stayed the Same
Relatively stabilized Covid cases seem to be having a similar stabilizing effect on travel healthcare wages. June had 16 states with healthcare wage fluctuations of less than 1%, placing them in the unchanged category. This marks the greatest number of states with relatively unchanged travel healthcare wages over the current 12-month period. Tennessee, North Carolina and Alabama actually recorded a 0% change in average weekly wages.
State |
Avg Weekly Pay May |
Avg Weekly Pay June |
% Increase |
Missouri |
$2,059 |
$2,072 |
0.6% |
New York |
$2,699 |
$2,711 |
0.5% |
Massachusetts |
$2,633 |
$2,638 |
0.2% |
Ohio |
$2,675 |
$2,678 |
0.1% |
Pennsylvania |
$2,583 |
$2,584 |
0.1% |
Mississippi |
$2,255 |
$2,256 |
0.1% |
Tennessee |
$2,332 |
$2,332 |
0.0% |
North Carolina |
$2,365 |
$2,364 |
0.0% |
Alabama |
$2,085 |
$2,084 |
0.0% |
Alaska |
$2,687 |
$2,678 |
-0.3% |
Colorado |
$2,442 |
$2,434 |
-0.3% |
Kansas |
$2,230 |
$2,219 |
-0.5% |
Nevada |
$2,713 |
$2,700 |
-0.5% |
Hawaii |
$2,532 |
$2,515 |
-0.6% |
Utah |
$2,287 |
$2,271 |
-0.7% |
New Jersey |
$2,674 |
$2,651 |
-0.9% |
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