By Ariel and Oscar - That Travel Nurse Couple

January 30, 2025

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Travel Nursing With a Partner: 3 Tips to Make it Work

This year marks our 2nd year of travel nursing together, and we have learned so much about ourselves and each other on this wild journey. We have been asked a lot of questions about travel nursing with a partner while we have been on the road, but no question has been asked more than, “How can you guys spend so much time together?” The answer is simple: it’s easy when it’s with the right person.

To be honest, I never thought that I would be the type of person who COULD spend so much time with my significant other, but I can wholeheartedly say that it has been the best way to travel nurse. Plus, it really is great getting to spend so much time with the person you love.

Jumping from city to city and hospital to hospital is daunting, to say the least. I applaud any and everyone who travel nurses alone because it is truly no small feat. However, if you decide you want to take on the world of travel nursing with a buddy or a significant other, here are a few tips to make the transition much easier!

partner

Communication.

We know this is the key to any long-lasting friendship or relationship, but I think we all could use a reminder every now and then. Before you set off on your assignment together, lay out what your expectations are. Expectations for the assignment, what your goals are (this is especially important if you are traveling as a couple), and what your expectations of each other are. This is important for friendships especially – what chores will you each do? How will you split the bills?

Communication throughout the assignment will be just as important as it was in the beginning as well. When you are in a new environment, it’s totally normal to cling to familiarity (each other, for example), but everyone deals with these changes differently. Make sure you are discussing these things with your travel partner to avoid any negative or hurt feelings.

Set up dates.

Or, if you are traveling with a friend, set up a time to hang out away from work if you want to, especially if you are working in the same unit. As a couple, it can be so easy to fall into a coworker/roommate sort of mentality when you not only live with your travel partner but work alongside them as well. You have to remember to prioritize your relationship aside from those things and make a conscious effort to set aside quality time for the two of you. This can happen in all relationships, but even more so when you spend so much time together.

The great news is, being in new places all the time, there is never a shortage of things to do or see. This means that you can always have great dates and you don’t even need to spend a lot of money! Check out local events and parks, and get creative when planning these dates. You can even take turns each week, so it doesn’t always fall on the same person.

Alone is not lonely.

As wonderful as it is traveling with your partner, sometimes you just want some time to yourself, and that’s okay! We all need different amounts of alone time, but that’s why communicating how much you need is so important. Needing alone time does not mean you are tired of your partner or need space. It just means you might want to read a book or watch a TV show for an hour or two. These are all very normal things and incredibly healthy for relationships in the long run. If you are the type of person who doesn’t necessarily care about alone time, make sure you are understanding of your partner who might need that alone time.

Some additional tips: Ensure that the person you choose to travel with is honest, trustworthy, levelheaded, and easy to communicate with, at the very least! Also, if you do happen to work on the same unit together, always keep it professional (especially if you are a couple!) and offer help to everyone on the unit (not just your partner).

These are just a few basic tips to help make your transition into travel nursing as a couple or as friends a little bit easier! Know that not every day will be perfect, and just like everything else, there will be good days and bad days. Make sure that when you are deciding who you would like to travel nurse with, you are taking these tips into account. Unfortunately, choosing the wrong travel partner can really turn what could be a great experience into a not-so-great one. Best of luck on your future travels!

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 RNnetwork

August 27, 2024

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10 Tips for Nurses Who Travel With a Partner

RNnetwork provided this article.

Travel nursing can be a dream job for two. When you and your companion are both passionate about travel and new experiences, traveling together can be a dream job and a dream lifestyle in one. Here are tips for travel nurses with partners on what it really takes to make traveling together work.

Tips for Travel Nurses with Partners:

travel nurses with partners

1. Get on the same page

Make sure you and your travel partner are clear on the places you’d like to travel to, for how long, for what assignments, and what you’d like to get out of being there. Do you want to spend every free day together, or does one of you need “me” time?

Neonatal nurse Brian Flake loves learning from different hospitals. While he and his wife Bethany consider the cost of living, they’re most concerned with answering the question, “Where would be the coolest place to live?”

Travel nursing is also great for restless empty nesters. Home healthcare nurse Audra Belden explains that for her and her husband Jim, “Part of the travel deal is we’re just sort of scoping out the country just to see if there’s a better place for retirement.”

2. Figure out your living situation

You and your companion can easily seek out and find tried-and-true housing — like a short-term lease on an apartment, an Airbnb, or a hotel close to your facility. Or, you can rethink housing entirely. Audra and Jim Belden carry their home on their back “like a turtle,” living and moving in a 5th-wheel trailer, which Audra says makes it nicer to “come home after work.” Another travel nurse, Julie Stoddard, also uses a camper and finds it homier and less stressful for her and her kids than renting a stranger’s home. And Brian and Bethany Flake? They tow a custom-built tiny home to each assignment.

3. Make sure your recruiter is on the same page, too

travel nurses with partners

Let your recruiter know what really matters to you — location, professional goals, shift preferences, etc. They’re there to get a contract that works best for you. This is especially true if both you and your partner are nurses.

“When we started traveling, we explained to our recruiter that we only want to go to places that need at least two nurses,” explains William Cantwell, who does travel nursing alongside his wife, April. “Everywhere we’ve gone was with the understanding that it’s a package deal. You don’t get me without her, and you don’t get her without me.”

4. Make yourselves easy to interview

While you may come together as a set, you and your companion are different nurses, so you need to make sure your recruiter can tell hospitals when and where they can reliably reach you both for interviews. The sooner you both lock down great interviews, the sooner you get to hit the road to new horizons.

5. Let your recruiter know who to contact

Be honest: which of you is better at returning emails? Maybe that person should be the point person for both of you — or maybe you’ll keep your contracts separate. Either way, let your recruiter know what communication lines to use so you can get your contracts moving forward.

6. Stay flexible

Make sure your schedule is flexible so that you can get the assignments that make life in your temporary home livable — for both of you. If you both get on the right schedule, you can spend your downtime taking road trips, enjoying the local outdoors, and getting to know the community around you.

7. Consider one stay, two facilities

travel nurses with partners

One hospital in an area may not have the need for you and your companion, so opening yourselves up to working at different hospitals in the same city or area can help you find more work opportunities. Compromise in this area and see if it doesn’t land you and your travel companion in your number-one wish list city.

8. Share your commuting plans

It’s also important to let your recruiter know how you plan to get to work. If you’re sharing a car with your companion, it can make it hard to split you up between hospitals. For your recruiter to fill in the gaps, they need to know the details — like if you’re in a camper trailer!

9. Don’t forget that your contract is your own

Just because you’re traveling as a pair doesn’t mean you’re working as a pair — if something happens that forces your companion to cut their contract short, you’re still responsible for completing it. Create a backup plan for an emergency, such as if someone has to take the car you share to handle a personal situation.

10. Teamwork makes the dream work!

Be an accountability buddy and help each other meet your credentialing requirements. The sooner you both complete it, the sooner you can hit the road!

We hope you found these 10 tips for travel nurses with partners helpful. Have you traveled with a partner? Do you have any tips for travel nurses with partners you think we missed? Comment them below.

Rnnetwork can help you with your next travel nursing adventure! Call 800.866.0407 or view our open travel nursing jobs to find an opportunity that’s right for you.

Find Your Next Travel Nurse Assignment with Our Job Board!

Are you on the hunt for your next travel nurse gig? Look no further than our job board! Click here to explore all our current opportunities.

Discover the Perfect Housing for Your Next Assignment

Need somewhere to stay on your next travel nurse assignment? We’ve got you covered. Check out our housing page to find your ideal home away from home. Click here to start your search.

By Advantis Medical Staffing

July 11, 2022

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Enjoy Travel Assignments Solo, in Pairs, and in Families

Advantis Medical Staffing provided this article.

After money, adventure is one of the most sought-after benefits of being a travel nurse. The chance to explore new destinations for long enough to experience them fully is highly appealing and hard to do for most professionals. Along with remote staff, travel nurses and allied health workers have some of the best jobs for explorers. But unlike remote workers, travel clinicians get the added benefits of being active participants in a new community. And that makes travel assignments more fulfilling in three main ways:

  1. Social interaction is good for your mental health.
  2. You can learn about the locals’ favorite things to do and places to go, and what tourist traps to avoid.
  3. The friendships you form can last way longer than 13 weeks.

Let’s look at ways to engage with locals while on travel assignment for singles, pairs, and families.

job board

Solo Travel Without Feeling Alone

Independence can be wonderful. With no one to answer to, you can explore freely without a care for scheduling or the whims of others. It’s exciting, empowering, and lets you feel like the star of your own movie. Until you get lonely. Or just want some company or conversation. Here are some ways to share space, make new friends, and even learn a thing or two.

Movie Night –

Exhausted from a long shift but not ready to turn in? Fathom Events shows the classics, advance screenings, and cinematic special events at theaters across the nation. And because you’re solo traveling, you don’t have to worry about anyone else’s opinions when choosing a movie screening! If sharing space is what you seek, Fathom or the latest blockbuster might be exactly what you need.

Burn-Off Stress –

If you like to work through emotions with a workout, consider the unconventional. Sure, if you have a gym membership that travels with you, that’s a great way to meet people who share your passion for fitness (or your willingness to work out to justify dessert – we don’t judge here!). But since you’re trying out a new locale, maybe try a new workout with a coworker or two, like Yoga in the Park. The main thing here is to ditch your app and get fit around other folks for a double dose of endorphins.

Get a Culture Fix –

You can learn about local culture by visiting museums or attending concerts. Adventuring solo lets you go at your own pace! Feeling lucky? Sites like Stubhub and Seatgeek often sell discounted tickets on the event day. This lets you be spontaneous and also gives you extra cash for concessions.

You Have Agency –

You probably chose to work with a top healthcare staffing agency to make your job search more expansive, efficient, and effective.  Capitalize on that! Many agencies host virtual and in-person events and communities that can make your travel career go from solo to in pairs or a group. Sign up and join in! This is a great way to share the fun with those who share your passion for healthcare. Pro tip: keep it fun. Try not to let shop talk seep into your off time.

Tour the Town as a Team

For many travel nurses and allied health professionals, traveling as a pair is the best of everything. You have a built-in plus one when you want and the option for alone time. And that holds true whether the duo you’re a part of is “pals” or “partners.”

  • Let Your Belly Lead the Way – Have you ever enjoyed a hot slice of Chicago-style pizza in the heart of the city? How about a heaping helping of Texas barbeque? Explore local cuisine! It’s the tastiest way to learn about your destination.
  • Have a Ball – Want thousands of new friends in an instant? Join the cheering crowd for a sporting event – team colors and face paint are optional!
  • Are You Game? – Lots of restaurants and bars have Game or Trivia Night. Hone up on obscure knowledge to win new friends AND a contest.

Family-Friendly Fun on the Road

Want to feel safe and not spend a lot of money? Check out the local library! Most libraries have free or nearly free events that are open to the public. Best of all, libraries tend to be centrally located and have tons of family-friendly activities:

  • Story Times for All Ages
  • Maker Spaces
  • Craft Nights
  • STEM Events
  • Book Talks

Another great virtual stop is your destination’s Convention and Visitors’ Bureau. If your location isn’t linked to this list, a quick Google search should have you covered. CVBs offer listings of permanent and pop-up events across the community, so they not only help you find a way to get out but also help you find your way into the most-hyped local happenings. 

Safety First When Travelling

Safety is key – especially for solo travelers. Follow these three tips every time:

  1. Make sure to use trustworthy sources and avoid unfamiliar or shady online options. If your gut tells you to pass, trust it.
  2. Keep it public. After all, you’re reading this blog to inspire socialization. Not only does a public-facing outing likely keep you safer, but being out and about is the point!
  3. Be prepared. The bear spray takes up little room in a pocket or purse and is a quick, easy way to defend when you’re solo. It’s also a good idea to let someone know where you’ll be and with whom once your plans are set.

This is YOUR Adventure

Travel clinicians are a special breed. Embracing challenges and broadening horizons comes naturally to you. Building and maintaining new friendships is a rewarding and healthy part of a successful travel career. Whatever your approach, we hope your experience is safe, fulfilling, and exactly what you hoped it would be.

We hope you found this article on enjoying travel assignments solo, in pairs, and in families helpful. Do you travel solo, in pairs, or with family for your travel assignments? Comment below.

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 Alidia Hannon

November 13, 2019

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Travel Nursing Pair- How We Started Travel Nursing Together

Hey y’all😆 Alidia & Ashley here! We are a Cardiac/PCU travel nursing pair (along with our 3 dogs). We have been traveling together since February 2018 and are currently finishing up our 3rd assignment in Kirkland Washington.

A Little Background for you Guys-

We were complete strangers until we met at our first job as permanent staff in Charlotte, NC. Alidia is from a small town not far outside Charlotte, and never even moved until she attended UNCC were she got her BSN and a minor in public health! Ashley is from New York, and after receiving her BSN she decided to move to Charlotte as well to pursue her first nursing job.

We worked at a trauma 1 hospital on their Cardiothoracic/Vascular Surgery Step-Down unit. We were very fortunate to work on this unit as new grads (although we may not have felt like it at the time) because we gained so much knowledge and experience from working with such talented surgeons. After working just a few shifts together, we realized just how alike we were and became super close, super-fast! We both shared a dream and goal of travel nursing but weren’t sure if we were quite ready or how to even go about it…. we were both still fairly new nurses and really loved the group of people we worked with on our home unit.

To Travel or Not?

We went back and forth on whether or not we had enough experience and confidence to just up and leave what we knew as home. We were both single and not emotionally tied to Charlotte anymore, both burned out from under-staffing at our current hospital, and both itching to start travel nursing and experience new places. So, after a lot of research and encouragement from our support systems we decided to take a leap of faith and start traveling nursing together! We ended up in the hands of an amazing recruiter who found us the most perfect first travel nurse assignment together. We wanted to stay semi-local and test out the whole travel nurse thing before jumping full in and heading out of state.

Our First Contract

Our first travel nurse contract in High Point NC was such a wonderful experience for us. Although we were sad for it to come to an end, we were so ready to see what the future had in store for us as a travel nursing pair. Somehow, we decided that the opposite end of the country was our next move-so here we (still) are 6 months later in Washington state! We landed jobs about 20 minutes outside of Seattle in a cute town called Kirkland on a PCU unit.

While general PCU is not our true specialty, we decided to accept it because we were really set on the location and are always up for expanding our expertise! We locked in great housing (which can be a challenge for the 5 of us), which was a huge determining factor in our decision to extend. Finding your own housing can be a challenge, but especially when you have pets! This coupled with that fact that we would be able to head straight home and have time off with family for the holidays made our decision to extend for a full, second contract, pretty easy.

You are Never Alone

We feel so blessed to have chosen this career as we have already experienced more than some people do in a lifetime.  One of the coolest parts about being a travel nursing pair is that you’re never alone. Moving to a place where you are completely new can be intimidating and stressful-so we really enjoy the security of knowing we have one another! Although these don’t always have the same days off, it’s pretty easy to plan around our schedule so that we still get to explore and travel on our days off.

We have also met some pretty amazing people along our journey so far. The travel nurse community is much larger and stronger than we could have ever imagined, and it’s constantly growing. Other travelers have been SO easy to connect with and we are beyond thankful for that! Facebook and Instagram pages/groups make networking super easy. We really enjoy meeting new people and making real, lasting connections, and that’s what the travel community is all about!

Long story short, we are still new to this and learning…. BUT-we plan on sharing all aspects of the traveling experience, good & bad. Make sure to follow our Instagram to keep up with us and please never hesitate to reach out @thetravelqts

Looking for more information on traveling as a pair, read: Travel Nursing as a Travel Nurse Pair: Tips for Making it Work.

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 Paula Rouse

October 24, 2019

5347 Views

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Travel Nursing as a Travel Nurse Pair: Tips for Making it Work

Thinking about travel nursing but don’t want to do it alone? Or are you currently traveling solo and have met someone on assignment that shares your same interests that you could see yourself traveling with?

My travel nurse journey

Either way I can tell you first hand that traveling with someone can be a great experience. I have been travel nursing now for about 18 months currently finishing up my fourth travel contract.  When I began this gypsy life of travel nursing I knew I wanted to work in California. I am a southern girl and was coming all the way from Georgia so I knew it was a journey that I did not want to embark on alone.

Finding someone to travel with

I landed my first assignment with another nurse that I had been working with for almost three years. We had become close friends and we worked great together. Having someone from home that was also a first time travel nurse made my transition into travel nursing so much easier. I felt supported and it was great having to work through learning this lifestyle with someone.

Going Solo and its perks

Now for my second and third assignments I went solo. Not because my former travel partner and I had a falling out. We just wanted to go different places. Solo travel nursing is amazing. I learned so much about myself and grew so much as a nurse. But I will say it was easier to adapt because I had already gone through my first assignment with someone. 

Traveling as a pair again!

Currently I am traveling with my work bestie or work wife as we like to call one another. A long time friend and nurse I met in my nurse residency program. Who had left our home hospital to go pursue travel nursing. 

Tips for traveling as a travel nurse pair

Now lets talk about what you need to know. Traveling as a pair is great however there can be challenges that you will encounter.

These include:

  • Housing it can be tricky to find housing for two in the same city,
  •  Assignments: it can also be difficult to find an assignment depending on what specialty you work in where the hospital and unit have more than one need.
  • Being roommates: not all friends make good room mates. So, make sure whoever you decide to travel with you can also live with.

With these things in mind take away the thought that traveling as travel nurse pair is exciting and you know no matter where you end up you have someone to explore and hang out with.  Also, you have someone in your same situation and that speaks volumes because this lifestyle isn’t for everyone and only those of us that live it understand that.

I hope you found these travel nurse pair tips helpful. Have you traveled with another travel nurse? Do you have any travel nurse pair tips to share? Comment them below!