Healthcare wages, especially compensation among travel nurses, remain among the most talked-about topics in the medical field. During the COVID-19 pandemic and amid staffing shortages that worsened as the coronavirus spread, mutated, and spread again and again, travel nurses’ pay doubled, sometimes tripled. As the pandemic begins to wind down, for now at least, travel nurses and other traveling healthcare workers who’ve pitched in wherever facilities needed them nationwide are feeling the pinch of declining wages.
In early May, news outlets, including NBC News, began reporting that the tide was turning regarding skyrocketing healthcare travel pay rates. As states declared the Covid pandemic emergency over, state-level Covid relief funds disappeared, and hospitals lost funding for travel nurses even if they still needed them.
Some hospitals have canceled travel nursing contracts because Covid admissions had leveled out and/or they’d successfully hired additional full-time, permanent staff. Others continue to use travel nurses but have negotiated lower rates with the agencies supplying them. Some healthcare travel wages have dropped as much as 50% or more. Although travel rates primarily continue to fall in most states, healthcare wages for traveling nurses and other medical staff remain higher than before the pandemic.
States With Wage Increases
Only five states had high enough increases in healthcare travel wages to warrant inclusion on the list of wage increases in May. However, this was still an improvement over April healthcare wages, when only Minnesota reported a slight increase of 1.3%. It’s also a vast improvement over March wage trends when all 50 states reported a drop in pay. Two more states also saw slight increases in healthcare wages in May, but these increases were less than 1%, so they were considered unchanged. The current trend in healthcare wages rebounding to a certain degree could point to fluctuating Covid admissions in some states, as nationwide averages show several spikes in cases throughout the month of May.
State |
Avg Weekly Pay April |
Avg Weekly Pay May |
% Increase |
Massachusetts |
$2,633 |
$2,717 |
3.1% |
Oklahoma |
$2,051 |
$2,113 |
3.0% |
South Dakota |
$2,708 |
$2,765 |
2.0% |
Missouri |
$1,936 |
$1,967 |
1.6% |
Wisconsin |
$2,225 |
$2,255 |
1.4% |
States With Wage Decreases
Although 36 states recorded decreases in healthcare wages in May, these declines were smaller. Not only were there fewer states with decreases in May but also the percentage amounts of these decreases were less compared to previous months. Only four states reported double-digit wage drops, while April had 13 states in the double digits and March had 29.
The three other states with double-digit drops in healthcare wages were Delaware, Maine, and Texas. Unlike Maryland, these three states had single-digit drops in April, and only Maine had a double-digit decrease in March.
State |
Avg Weekly Pay April |
Avg Weekly Pay May |
% Increase |
Maryland |
$2,584 |
$2,298 |
-12.4% |
Delaware |
$2,277 |
$2,048 |
-11.2% |
Maine |
$2,687 |
$2,428 |
-10.7% |
Texas |
$2,353 |
$2,127 |
-10.6% |
New Hampshire |
$2,389 |
$2,223 |
-7.4% |
Connecticut |
$2,400 |
$2,244 |
-6.9% |
Nebraska |
$2,628 |
$2,463 |
-6.7% |
Alaska |
$2,841 |
$2,664 |
-6.6% |
Nevada |
$2,858 |
$2,693 |
-6.1% |
Mississippi |
$2,382 |
$2,253 |
-5.7% |
Indiana |
$2,637 |
$2,496 |
-5.6% |
North Dakota |
$2,798 |
$2,660 |
-5.2% |
New York |
$2,753 |
$2,618 |
-5.1% |
Rhode Island |
$2,653 |
$2,525 |
-5.1% |
Colorado |
$2,545 |
$2,431 |
-4.7% |
Minnesota |
$2,795 |
$2,674 |
-4.5% |
Iowa |
$2,625 |
$2,518 |
-4.2% |
Tennessee |
$2,367 |
$2,285 |
-3.6% |
Arkansas |
$2,546 |
$2,458 |
-3.6% |
Washington |
$2,848 |
$2,753 |
-3.4% |
Idaho |
$2,380 |
$2,306 |
-3.2% |
North Carolina |
$2,448 |
$2,375 |
-3.1% |
Arizona |
$2,725 |
$2,646 |
-3.0% |
Ohio |
$2,759 |
$2,679 |
-3.0% |
Kentucky |
$2,627 |
$2,567 |
-2.3% |
California |
$2,978 |
$2,912 |
-2.2% |
New Mexico |
$2,488 |
$2,434 |
-2.2% |
Utah |
$2,400 |
$2,349 |
-2.2% |
Virginia |
$2,465 |
$2,418 |
-1.9% |
Montana |
$2,553 |
$2,505 |
-1.9% |
Louisiana |
$2,525 |
$2,478 |
-1.9% |
West Virginia |
$2,690 |
$2,647 |
-1.6% |
Georgia |
$2,260 |
$2,224 |
-1.6% |
Wyoming |
$2,630 |
$2,591 |
-1.5% |
Hawaii |
$2,584 |
$2,545 |
-1.5% |
South Carolina |
$2,298 |
$2,268 |
-1.4% |
States That Stayed the Same
Nine states reported fluctuations in healthcare wages of less than 1%, making them relatively unchanged for the month of May. New Jersey literally had no change, beginning and ending the month with an average weekly healthcare pay rate of $2,642. Florida had the highest “unchanged” increase at 0.6%, while Oregon had the largest “unchanged” decrease at 0.9%.
State |
Avg Weekly Pay April |
Avg Weekly Pay May |
% Increase |
Florida |
$2,290 |
$2,303 |
0.6% |
Alabama |
$2,077 |
$2,085 |
0.4% |
New Jersey |
$2,642 |
$2,642 |
0.0% |
Vermont |
$2,573 |
$2,567 |
-0.2% |
Michigan |
$2,462 |
$2,453 |
-0.3% |
Kansas |
$2,276 |
$2,266 |
-0.5% |
Illinois |
$2,617 |
$2,605 |
-0.5% |
Pennsylvania |
$2,571 |
$2,554 |
-0.7% |
Oregon |
$2,869 |
$2,842 |
-0.9% |
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