By The Gypsy Nurse

July 6, 2016

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Ask A Travel Nurse: Tax Home

Gypsy,

I am a travel nurse and am wondering if you have any advice about establishing a tax home? I won’t be keeping my apartment here, so will that mean everything I make will be taxed? I know my hourly wage will be, but the per diem wage the travel company gives you will be taxed? I have thought about asking a friend to let me use their address, but I don’t want to get screwed at tax time! Any advice?

Thanks!
Tiff

Thank you for reading The Gypsy Nurse. You have taken the first step on your journey to becoming a travel nurse.

tax home

If you do not have a legal tax home, everything you are given should be taxed as income, including any per diem or housing. Many travel nurses will scoot around this by keeping an address with a friend or family member; however, there are HUGE risks with this. Suppose you are audited and cannot PROVE that you have paid ‘market value’ for a room/apartment/etc. Then, you will be back-taxed with penalties and fees. For me, the risk is too great, so I have always had a true tax home. At times, this was a full apartment of my own, and at other times, it was a rented room.

I HIGHLY recommend that you speak to a tax prep professional. I recommend that you contact a travel tax expert for your tax-related questions.  I use Joe Smith @ TravelTax.  Joe is well-versed and up to date with traveler taxes. His wife also writes tax advice for The Gypsy Nurse.  I have used Travel Tax for my tax questions and needs for the entire time I’ve been a travel nurse, and I trust his advice.  If you have more questions regarding tax home, subscribe to The Gypsy Nurse.  I have upcoming articles on housing and an upcoming article from Travel Tax in October that will discuss Tax Home status in more detail.

I love hearing the opinions of my readers.  Your opinion could be the perfect solution for someone.  Please share your thoughts below in the comments. Check out the TOP 10 Questions for Travel Nurses on Taxes.

 

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 Katy

December 3, 2013

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Ask A Travel Nurse: RV Living RoundTable (TravCon14)

The discussions at the RV Living RoundTable this year at the conference was varied and informative.

The round table discussions were attended by gypsies who have never lived in an RV, dreamers planning for their first assignment, gypsies who live in their RV’s now who just want more information, and gypsies who have a lot of experience with RV living and were willing to share it. The Round Table was formatted as a question answer and discussion format so anyone with a question could get help.

As winter is approaching, the main questions were related to living in an RV during the cold weather season.

My first experience with winter weather happened about a week after moving into the 5th wheel. We had bought a four season RV and thought that as long as we had the heaters on and the underbelly was heated we were fine. Then we woke up and the water line (from the faucet to the RV) was frozen, the sewer line (from the RV to the sewer) was frozen and our fresh water tank was empty. We learned several lessons from this experience.

  • You must have a heated water hose going into the RV. You can make your own using heat tape but we chose to buy a heated water hose. We bought the Pirit brand.
  • Keep the grey and black water sewer lines closed during freezing weather. Remember when you empty, empty the black water first, then the grey water to flush the line.

Another question was how to most economically heat the RV in the winter time?

At most parks, electric is included, but most RVs heat with propane. The answer that most of us came up with was to heat with electric space heaters unless the temperature is below freezing. You must use the propane to heat when the temperature drops close to freezing so that your underbelly will be heated and your waterlines will not freeze. Some RV’s have heat pumps that work on electric and a furnace that works on propane.

Where to park your RV on assignment was also addressed.

The most important thing I can say to this is to stay where you feel safe. For some people this would be a traditional RV park. Others, like me, are comfortable staying at alternate places such as a mobile home park that accepts RV’s or a place on private property that has RV spaces. The more open you are the more diverse the rates will be.

I have a blog that tells of some of my experiences with RV living and the road to that first assignment. You can find it at http://rnrvfulltime.blogspot.com I would love to answer any other questions that you have. There are several RV forums on the internet that will also help answer your questions.