Travel Nurse in Canada by Roaming RN

Travel Nurse in Canada by Roaming RN

Welcome to RoamingRN Radio! Are you a travel nurse in Canada or thinking about becoming one? Join us on RoamingRN Radio, where we dive deep into the dynamic world of travel nursing. From navigating the pros and cons of this adventurous career to mastering financial strategies, our podcast is your ultimate guide to thriving in the travel nursing industry. In each episode, we cover topics such as: The Pros and Cons of Being a Travel Nurse in Canada: Discover the unique benefits and challenges of travel nursing in the Great White North. Hear from experienced travel nurses about their firsthand experiences and gain valuable insights to help you make informed decisions about your career. How to Make More Money and Pay Less Tax: Learn expert tips and strategies to maximize your earnings and minimize your tax liabilities. We’ll explore deductions, tax breaks, and financial planning tactics tailored specifically for travel nurses. Investing Your Profit Tax-Free: Unlock the secrets to smar

Episodes

  1. 1D AGO

    The Day I Realized Nursing Will Take Everything You Don’t Protect

    The System Doesn’t Bend for Your Family (And What to Do About It as a Nurse) If you’re an employed staff nurse and you’ve ever felt torn in half—family on one side, work on the other—this is for you. Because there’s a truth that hurts… but it can also set you free: The system doesn’t bend for your family. Not because everyone in healthcare is bad.Not because managers are heartless.A lot of people are stuck too. But the system is built to protect staffing first.And if you don’t build control on purpose… your life becomes the thing that bends. Quick disclaimer This is education only—not legal/tax advice. Talk to a qualified professional for your situation. The moment it became real for me (father lens, anonymous) I don’t tell this story often.Because it’s still raw. It was one of those stretches where you’re already running on fumes.Functioning… but not really living. Then life happened.My son had a seizure. If you’re a nurse, you know what that does to your brain.The sound in the room changes.Your nervous system goes from normal… to emergency. I felt exposed.Like all the “I can handle it” I’d been carrying… just cracked. And as a father, you don’t care about anything else.You just want to be there. So I tried to get time off.No details. No names. No workplace specifics. But the message was clear: No. And that “no” did something to me.Because it wasn’t just a scheduling issue. It was a reality check.It was the system saying: We don’t bend. The lesson (no bitterness, just reality) Let me say this carefully: Most people in healthcare are not evil.A lot of units are drowning.A lot of leaders are drowning too. But if your plan is: “I’ll keep being the reliable one… and they’ll take care of me when I need it…” I’m telling you with love—that’s not a plan. That’s hope. And hope isn’t strong enough to protect your kids.Or your marriage.Or your health. What changed everything: same nursing, different structure Not long after that, another nurse said something casually—like it was normal: “You can set up a nursing practice and get paid that way… instead of getting paid like an employed staff nurse.” And I remember thinking: Wait.So I’m not trapped in one setup? Same nursing.Different structure. That’s when I stopped trying to “outwork” the system… and started learning options. Five moves you can start this week to build more control (without leaving nursing) 1) Name your non-negotiables Write down 3 non-negotiables.If you don’t name them… the schedule will. Examples: I will be home for bedtime X nights per week I will protect one full recovery day after nights I will not pick up overtime two weeks in a row 2) Build a simple “family emergency protocol” This sounds dramatic, but it’s practical. Decide now: Who do you call? Who covers the other kids? What shift swaps are acceptable? What’s your script when you need time? Because in an emergency, you don’t rise to the occasion.You fall to your preparation. 3) Stop negotiating with guilt Guilt is not a staffing plan. Being a good nurse doesn’t mean being endlessly available.You can care deeply… and still have boundaries. 4) Learn options (without overexplaining) If you’ve never explored travel nursing…or how stipend works…or how different structures can change your control… Start learning. One line only:There are ways to set up your nursing practice with more control.I’m not breaking it down here — it’s inside Frontliners Hub. 5) Choose one 90-day “control goal” Pick one. Keep it simple. Examples: Reduce overtime by 30–50% Build a travel nursing option Create a schedule boundary and keep it for 90 days Get clarity on your nursing practice setup Small wins.Consistency.Control. Common objections (and the calm truth) “But my unit needs me.”I hear you.But your unit will replace your shifts.Your family can’t replace you. “I’m scared to say no.”That’s normal.Start with one boundary. One month. One protected thing. “I don’t want to burn bridges.”You don’t have to.Boundaries can be calm, respectful, and consistent. Want templates + the full breakdown of the “structure” thing? Join Frontliners Hub on Skool: frontlinershub.com (link in the description).If you want the templates + the full breakdown of the “structure” thing, it’s all inside. Quick disclaimer: education only—not legal/tax advice. Talk to a qualified professional for your situation. Your career should serve your family, not cost them. The post The Day I Realized Nursing Will Take Everything You Don’t Protect first appeared on Roaming RN Resources.

    11 min
  2. FEB 19

    Overtime Isn’t Loyalty—It’s a Trade (And You’re Paying With Time)

    Stop Renting Your Life to Overtime: A Nurse-to-Nurse Wake-Up Call If you’re an employed staff nurse and overtime feels like the only way to get ahead, you’re not alone. Overtime promises relief, but it often becomes a lifestyle—and the real cost is your time, your presence, and your family. Why Overtime Feels Responsible (But Isn’t) Overtime doesn’t just take your energy. It takes weekends, patience, and the version of you your family actually needs. The scariest part? It feels responsible. But years from now, you won’t regret missing overtime—you’ll regret missing life. The 40-Year Regret Frame Picture yourself decades from now. What will you wish you did differently? Most nurses won’t regret not picking up more shifts. They’ll regret missing seasons, dinners, and mornings with family—always being tired, always catching up. The Trap: Why Overtime Becomes a Lifestyle Overtime looks like discipline on paper, but in real life, it can become a cage. The system will always accept your extra shifts—and still treat you as replaceable. If you don’t build boundaries, your life becomes the thing that bends. Story: The Moment It Hit Me I did the grind. I did the “push through.” I did overtime to feel like a good provider. But I realized I was trading my best energy for a pay bump—and my family got what was left. The real shift came at 2:30am on a night shift when a fellow nurse said, “You can set up a nursing practice and get paid that way… instead of getting paid like an employed staff nurse.” Suddenly, I saw other options. The Framework: Overtime Is Expensive Overtime isn’t evil, but it’s expensive. Not in money, but in time. You cannot “pick up” time later. Use overtime as a tool, not a lifestyle. If it’s your long-term plan, you’re building dependency—not freedom. Your career should serve your family, not cost them. Five Moves to Get Your Time Back Do the real math: Calculate the true cost of each extra shift—recovery time, missed moments, patience lost. Set a “no overtime” boundary for one month: Prove to yourself you can breathe without it. If you can’t, your setup needs to change. Replace overtime with one option: Explore travel nursing, a new contract strategy, or learn about nursing practice structure. Use a simple boundary script: “I can’t pick up extra right now. I’m protecting my recovery and my family time. If something changes, I’ll let you know.” Make a 90-day plan that doesn’t rely on more shifts: Reduce overtime, build a travel nursing option, or create a family budget that doesn’t require constant extra shifts. Common Objections “But I need overtime to survive.”This isn’t about shame—it’s about building an exit from survival mode. “But I don’t want to let my team down.”Your team won’t raise your kids or protect your health. “But I don’t know what else to do.”That’s why you need a plan and a community. Five Actions to Take This Week Write your “40-year regret” list. Choose one month to limit or pause overtime. Tell your family your new boundary. Pick one option to replace overtime. Get support from nurses building time-first careers. Join Frontliners Hub on Skool — Link in the description: frontlinershub.com. Templates • scripts • checklists • step-by-step systems. Your career should serve your family, not cost them. The post Overtime Isn’t Loyalty—It’s a Trade (And You’re Paying With Time) first appeared on Roaming RN Resources.

    12 min
  3. FEB 12

    Travel Nursing in Canada: What No One Tells You (Expectations vs. Reality)

    The Truth About Travel Nursing in Canada: Expectations vs. Reality Thinking about travel nursing? You’ve probably heard the highlight reel: more money, more freedom, pick your schedule, see the country. It sounds perfect—until you’re actually in it. Here’s the real breakdown: expectations vs. reality, with no facility names and no sugarcoating. Why Nurses Really Choose Travel Nursing Most nurses don’t choose travel nursing for the adventure. They choose it because they’re trying to save their life back. You realize you’re “home” but not present—your brain is still at work, and your family just… stops asking for you. That regret window moves fast. Expectation vs. Reality: The Big Five 1. “Travel nursing means freedom.”Reality: Only if you build it that way. Recruiters will pressure you to “sign today” or accept dropping rates. If you don’t build clarity, boundaries, and leverage, you just become a well-paid version of “always available.” 2. “It’s just more money.”Reality: More money doesn’t fix the main problem—control does. If your life is collapsing at home, money alone won’t repair it. Focus on building a year on purpose, not just chasing the highest rate. 3. “You get to pick your schedule.”Reality: You can negotiate, but staffing still runs a machine. Unless it’s written, you’re living on hope. Hope is not a strategy when your family’s on the other side of your calendar. 4. “New place, fresh start.”Reality: If you were burnt out before, you’ll bring that with you. A new city, badge, or rules won’t heal you—a new structure will. 5. “Agencies will take care of me.”Reality: Some will, some won’t. If it’s not in writing, it doesn’t exist. The system bends for documentation, not for your family. The Real Truth: Travel Nursing Is Leverage (If You Use It Right) Travel nursing isn’t just a job change—it’s a leverage change. When you have options, urgency tactics lose power, and you start building a year that fits your actual life. Security isn’t a job; security is having options. How to Do Travel Nursing Right (Action Plan) Decide what you’re optimizing for: Pick one—time stability, recovery, family presence, or income. Don’t try to optimize for everything. Create a “No” list: Protect your family with non-negotiables (no “sign today” pressure, no vague floating, no unclear call-back). Run the calendar test: Ask, “What will my family experience while I’m on this contract?” Make decisions based on their reality, not just your earnings. Don’t confuse anxiety with intuition: Urgency is a tactic. Clarity is the standard. Build options before you need them: The best time to negotiate is when you’re calm and willing to walk away. The Punchline: Reset Your Expectations If you expect travel nursing to magically fix your life, you’ll be disappointed. But if you use it as a tool to regain control, you can get your life back. The real win isn’t more money—it’s being present for your family again. Want the templates, questions, and decision frameworks that make this simpler?Link in the description: frontlinershub.com Your career should serve your family, not cost them. The post Travel Nursing in Canada: What No One Tells You (Expectations vs. Reality) first appeared on Roaming RN Resources.

    17 min
  4. FEB 5

    Top 20 Myths About Structure for Travel Nurses (And What’s Actually True)

    Top 20 Myths About “Structure” for Travel Nurses (And What’s Actually True) If you’re an employed staff nurse thinking about travel nursing, you’ve probably heard a lot of rumors about “structure.” Sometimes, it’s just one scary sentence in a comment section—and suddenly you’re wide awake at 2am, worried you’re about to make a huge mistake. Let’s clear it up. Here are the top 20 myths about structure for travel nurses—debunked with real talk and what’s actually true. What Do We Mean by “Structure” for Travel Nurses? When we talk about “structure,” we mean setting yourself up to operate and get paid like a nursing practice—not just picking up a travel contract. Same license, different lens, different system. The Top 20 Myths (with the Truth) Myth: Structure is only for nurses who make huge money.Truth: It’s about how you get paid, not how much. Even one contract can teach you the system. Myth: It’s basically tax cheating.Truth: Structure means being organized—track income, expenses, and report properly. Boring is good. Myth: It’s too risky—CRA will come after you.Truth: The risk is doing it sloppy, not the structure itself. Keep things clean, get guidance. Myth: You need to be a finance person.Truth: You just need a routine and a checklist. Myth: It’s paperwork every day.Truth: With the right setup, it’s a weekly habit—not a daily grind. Myth: You can’t do travel nursing with structure.Truth: Many travel nurses operate as a nursing practice. Just confirm agency requirements. Myth: Agencies hate it and won’t work with you.Truth: Some agencies support it, some don’t. Have 2–3 options. Myth: You’ll lose job security.Truth: Real security is relationships, repeatable process, and savings. Myth: You need a lawyer and accountant before you do anything.Truth: Not on day one—just know when to bring in a pro. Myth: You can write off everything.Truth: Only legitimate practice expenses. When in doubt, ask your accountant. Myth: You’ll automatically keep way more money.Truth: Structure helps, but you need to run the system and track money. Myth: Just copy what your friend does.Truth: Your situation is unique—get guidance for your setup. Myth: You have to quit your staff job completely.Truth: Many nurses transition gradually—test, learn, then scale up. Myth: You’ll never get approved for a mortgage.Truth: Clean bookkeeping and documentation are key. Work with a lender who understands contracts. Myth: If you focus on money, you’re less of a nurse.Truth: Fair pay reduces burnout. You can be patient-centered and still run a nursing practice. Myth: Structure is only for “entrepreneur” personalities.Truth: Just follow a process, ask questions, and protect your time. Myth: If you mess up once, you’re done.Truth: Most mistakes are fixable—catch them early and ask for help. Myth: You don’t need insurance—your agency covers everything.Truth: Coverage varies. Know your gaps, ask questions, and get advice. Myth: You only need one agency.Truth: 2–3 agencies give you leverage and backup options. Myth: Once you set up structure, you’re locked in forever.Truth: You’re in control. Adjust as your life changes. The Real Truth Most of the fear comes from treating structure like a mystery. When you look at it as a nursing practice, it’s just a process. The nurses who thrive are the ones who follow the steps, keep things clean, and don’t try to do it alone. Want the step-by-step roadmap to set up your structure, get contract-ready, and operate like a real nursing practice?Join us at FrontlinersHub.com. Inside, you’ll get checklists, templates, and real coaching—no more piecing it together from random comments. If this helped, drop a comment with “STRUCTURE” and your province. Let’s get you clarity and confidence for your next contract. More Blogs here>>> The post Top 20 Myths About Structure for Travel Nurses (And What’s Actually True) first appeared on Roaming RN Resources.

    23 min
  5. JAN 29

    Agencies 101 for Nursing Practice: How to Choose, Negotiate, and Avoid Getting Lowballed

    Agencies 101 for Nursing Practice: How to Choose, Negotiate, and Avoid Getting Lowballed If you’ve ever finished a chat with a recruiter and thought, “Did I just get lowballed?”—you’re not alone. For nurses moving from an employed staff nurse role to building their own nursing practice, agencies are more than just a contract source. They’re a relationship, and your approach to agencies can make or break your pay, schedule, and sanity. Why Agencies Matter for Your Nursing Practice Structure Agencies are your pipeline. An employed staff nurse relies on one employer. A nursing practice builds options. The mistake? Treating agencies like a one-time transaction. Instead, think relationship: compare offers, negotiate clearly, and protect your interests. How to Choose the Right Agencies Don’t rely on one agency: Even if you love them, have 2–3 options for stability. Match your goals: Do they place in your provinces, units, and preferred schedules? Is their reputation solid when things get tough? Watch recruiter behavior: Green flags—direct answers, clear process, no rush. Red flags—vague pay answers, pressure, dodging questions. If they’re unorganized now, it won’t improve later. Understanding Pay: Rate, Stipend, and Accommodations When reviewing offers, break down: Hourly rate: Regular, overtime, and stat holiday rates—ask for all. Stipend: Is there one? Is it taxed? What makes it change? Accommodations: Provided or allowance? Where, what, how much, and when paid? Travel reimbursement: How much, when, and what receipts are needed? Questions to Ask So You Don’t Get Lowballed “What’s the bill rate for this contract?” “Can you send the full pay package breakdown in writing?” “What’s the cancellation policy?” “What are the expectations on floating?” “What’s the schedule and how locked is it?” “What’s the fastest way to increase my rate?” Simple Negotiation Scripts for Nurses “Can you walk me through the pay package? I’m comparing two other options.” “I’m interested, but at that rate it doesn’t make sense for my nursing practice. If we can get to $X/hour, I can commit today.” “If the hourly rate can’t move, what can we adjust—stipend, travel reimbursement, completion bonus, or schedule?” “I’m not comfortable signing until I have the full breakdown in writing.” “I appreciate it. I’m going to pass on this one. If something comes up closer to $X, let’s revisit.” The Mindset Shift: You’re Not Begging, You’re Building Operating as a nursing practice means you’re doing due diligence—not asking permission. You’re protecting your time, license, and pay structure. That’s professionalism. Recap Choose 2–3 agencies Get everything in writing Ask about bill rate, pay breakdown, cancellation, floating, schedule Negotiate calmly and professionally If you do these things, you’ll avoid most lowball situations. The post Agencies 101 for Nursing Practice: How to Choose, Negotiate, and Avoid Getting Lowballed first appeared on Roaming RN Resources.

    28 min
  6. JAN 22

    Staff Nurse → Nursing Practice: The Identity Shift That Changes Your Pay, Freedom, and Options

    The Difference Isn’t Skill—It’s Identity If you’re an employed staff nurse right now and you’ve been watching travel nurses make more money, get more flexibility, and somehow still have a life… it can mess with your head. You start wondering: “Am I missing something?” “Do I need more experience?” “Is it just luck?” Nurse-to-nurse, here’s what I’ve seen over and over: The biggest difference usually isn’t skill. It’s identity. Because the moment you stop thinking like an employed staff nurse—and you start thinking like a nursing practice—you make different decisions. And those decisions change your pay, your freedom, and your options. The Core Idea: Same Nurse, Same License, Different Lens Here’s the simplest way to explain it: An employed staff nurse asks: “What am I allowed to do?” A nursing practice asks: “What’s the smartest move for my practice, my income, and my future?” Same nurse. Same license. Different lens. Once you put that lens on, everything changes: how you negotiate how you choose contracts how you track money how you protect yourself how you build long-term stability The Moment the Switch Flips (A Real-Life Pattern) I remember talking to a nurse who was solid—great clinician, reliable, respected on her unit. She wanted to travel, but she kept saying things like: “I don’t want to bother recruiters.” “I don’t want to ask for more.” “I don’t want to look difficult.” And I told her: You’re not being difficult. You’re being clear. Because when you’re an employed staff nurse, you’re trained to keep the peace. You’re trained to be grateful. You’re trained to accept the system. But when you’re operating as a nursing practice, your job is different. Your job is to protect your time, your energy, your income, and your future. That doesn’t mean being rude. It means being professional. Perspective Shift #1: From “I Need a Job” to “I’m Choosing a Contract” This is the first identity shift. An employed staff nurse thinks: “I need a job. Please pick me.” A nursing practice thinks: “I’m choosing a contract that fits my goals.” When you feel like you “need” the contract, you’ll tolerate: messy schedules unclear expectations low rates bad housing situations last-minute changes But when you’re choosing the contract, you start screening opportunities like a professional. Questions a Nursing Practice Asks What’s the actual take-home after travel and living costs? What’s the schedule pattern—nights, days, rotation? What’s the cancellation policy? What support is on the unit? What’s the real workload? You’re not being picky. You’re being responsible. Perspective Shift #2: From “I Hope They Pay Me Fairly” to “I Know My Value and I Negotiate” A lot of nurses freeze here. We’re taught negotiating is greedy. Or awkward. Or that it makes you look ungrateful. But negotiation is a normal part of professional contracting. A nursing practice doesn’t negotiate with emotion. It negotiates with clarity. Simple Negotiation Language (Clean, Not Aggressive) “Based on my experience and the current market, I’m looking for a rate closer to X. What can we do to make that happen?” “I’m comparing a couple offers right now. If you can get me to X with this schedule, I can commit today.” If you’re thinking, “I don’t even know what X should be,” that’s normal. That’s why you need a process (and ideally a community) so you’re not guessing. Perspective Shift #3: From “I Get Paid and Spend It” to “I Run a Money System” This one is huge. An employed staff nurse is used to: taxes coming off automatically pay being predictable money being personal A nursing practice thinks: “My income has a system.” Meaning: you set aside money intentionally you track what comes in and what goes out you keep receipts you separate personal spending from practice spending And it doesn’t have to be complicated. A Simple Money System (Starter Version) One account for income One account for set-asides One account for paying yourself The point is: you stop hoping it works out, and you start running it like a practice. Perspective Shift #4: From “I’m Alone” to “I Build a Team Around My Practice” An employed staff nurse is used to HR, payroll, managers, and policies. A nursing practice builds a team: a solid accountant who understands contract work a lawyer when needed other nurses who share rates and red flags mentors who’ve already done it You don’t need to know everything. You just need to know the next step. “Am I Ready?” Checklist You might be ready for the shift if: You’re tired of capped pay and want income tied to your choices You want more control over schedule and location You’re willing to learn a simple system for money and paperwork You’re open to being coached instead of figuring it out alone And if you’re not ready yet, that’s okay. But now you know what you’re aiming for. Common Fear: “Does This Make Me Less of a Nurse?” Some nurses worry that thinking like a nursing practice makes you “too money focused.” I actually think it can make you safer. Because when you’re financially stable and in control of your schedule: you’re less burnt out you make better decisions you protect your energy You can still be deeply patient-centered. You’re just not sacrificing your future to prove you care. Come Hang Out: Free Private Community If you want the step-by-step roadmap to build your structure, get contract-ready, and start operating like a real nursing practice, come join us at https://frontlinershub.com. That’s where we walk you through the process, give you checklists and templates, and support you so you’re not doing this alone. Suggested Internal Links (RoamingRN.ca) Frontliners Hub community page (https://frontlinershub.com) Travel nurse agency onboarding guide (Click here) Bookkeeping basics for nursing practice structure ( Click Here ) Negotiation scripts for travel nurse contracts (https://frontlinershub.com) The post Staff Nurse → Nursing Practice: The Identity Shift That Changes Your Pay, Freedom, and Options first appeared on Roaming RN Resources.

    17 min
  7. JAN 15

    Staff Nurse vs Travel Nurse vs Nursing Practice: The First Contract Roadmap (Cashflow Quadrant)

    Introduction: If You’re Burned Out, It Might Not Be “Nursing”… It Might Be Structure If you’re an employed staff nurse right now, you’ve probably felt it: More patients. More charting. More responsibility. And somehow… the pay stays almost the same. Nurse-to-nurse, I want to say this clearly: burnout isn’t always a “you problem.” A lot of the time, it’s a payment structure problem. In this post, I’m going to walk you through a simple roadmap: Staff nurse → travel nurse → getting paid as your own nursing practice (what I call the “structure thing”). And I’ll connect it to a framework that helps you see the bigger picture—so you can stop feeling trapped and start moving with a plan. Staff Nurse vs Travel Nurse vs Nursing Practice: What’s the Real Difference? Let’s keep this practical. 1) Employed Staff Nurse: Stable… But Capped As an employed staff nurse, you might have benefits and a predictable routine. But the hard part is this: Your income is capped by a wage grid Your workload can increase without your pay increasing Your freedom is limited by scheduling, staffing, and unit needs When ratios get worse and support disappears, it can feel like you’re stuck. 2) Travel Nurse: More Choice… But You Can Still Get Trapped Travel nursing can be a huge upgrade: Better pay potential More flexibility in where you work The ability to take time off between contracts But here’s the trap I see all the time: If you stop working, you stop getting paid. So some nurses build a higher-paying version of the same burnout—still trading time for dollars. 3) Nursing Practice: Same Nurse… Different Structure This is the paradigm shift line that changed everything for me: You can set up a nursing practice and get paid that way… instead of getting paid like an employed staff nurse. This isn’t about becoming “a business person.” It’s about having a professional practice structure—and getting paid through that structure. The Cashflow Quadrant (Simple Framework for Nurses) There’s a popular framework that describes four ways people earn money: Employee Self-employed Business owner Investor Nurse-to-nurse, I’m not sharing this to turn you into someone you’re not. I’m sharing it because it helps you see why you can work harder every year and still feel like you’re not getting ahead. Employed staff nurse often maps to the Employee side Travel nurse often maps to the Self-employed side Nursing practice structure can become the bridge to building systems that don’t rely on constant extra shifts And with consistent systems, investing becomes more doable My Story: The Moment It Clicked I was a registered nurse for 13 years. Then I did travel nursing for 4 years. At first, I thought the only way to make more was to work more. Overtime. Extra shifts. Sacrifice. But then I saw other nurses doing something different. They weren’t working harder. They changed the way they got paid. Once I set up the right structure and started getting paid as my own nursing practice, it wasn’t just about making more per hour. It was about building something repeatable. Something that could grow. The First Contract Roadmap: 6 Steps to Get Paid as Your Own Nursing Practice This is the simple roadmap I wish I had when I was starting. Step 1: Decide Your Non-Negotiables (Lifestyle + Money) Before you talk to agencies, get clear on: What schedule you want What provinces/cities you’re open to What unit you thrive in Your minimum rate to make it worth it Step 2: Learn the “Structure Thing” Basics (So You Don’t Get Burned) You don’t need to become an expert. You need a simple understanding of: How you get paid as a nursing practice Why bookkeeping is non-negotiable How to track legitimate expenses with clean documentation Step 3: Set Up the Structure (Paperwork + Timeline) This is the setup phase. Most nurses delay here because it feels intimidating. But with a checklist, it becomes straightforward. Step 4: Agency Onboarding (Ask the Right Questions) Not every agency supports nurses getting paid this way. You need to ask direct questions and watch for red flags. Examples of what to clarify: Do you support nurses getting paid through their own nursing practice? How does pay work (hourly + stipend breakdown)? What documentation do you need from me before contract start? Step 5: Lock In Your First Contract (Paid the Right Way) Your goal isn’t just “a contract.” Your goal is a contract that pays you as your nursing practice—clean, compliant, and repeatable. Step 6: Build Systems So You Can Repeat It Freedom isn’t a number. It’s a system you can repeat. Think: A simple bookkeeping rhythm Documentation habits A tax set-aside routine Separate accounts so you’re not mixing everything Common Objections (And the Nurse-to-Nurse Truth) “This sounds complicated.” It’s usually only complicated when you’re doing it alone with random info online. “What if I mess it up?” That’s why you follow a checklist and get proper guidance. “I don’t want to be a business person.” Perfect. Don’t. Be a nurse with a nursing practice structure—like the professionals we already work beside. Your Next 5 Actions (Quick Checklist) Write down what’s burning you out right now (be specific) Decide what your ideal contract life looks like Start a list of agencies you want to talk to Learn the basics of the structure thing so you can ask smart questions Get a roadmap you can follow step-by-step Come Hang Out: Free Private Community If you want the full roadmap—checklists, scripts, and weekly support—come join the free private community at https://frontlinershub.com. That’s where we walk through the steps from employed staff nurse → travel nurse → getting paid as your own nursing practice. FAQ: Staff Nurse vs Travel Nurse vs Nursing Practice (Canada) Is travel nursing in Canada worth it? For many nurses, yes—because it can increase pay and flexibility. But the key is having a plan so you don’t just trade one kind of burnout for another. What is a “stipend” in travel nursing? A stipend is typically a non-wage portion of compensation meant to help cover travel-related costs (like accommodations or meals). How it’s structured can vary by contract and agency. Do all travel nurse agencies support getting paid as a nursing practice? No. That’s why asking the right onboarding questions matters. Closing You’ve carried heavy loads. If you’re feeling that quiet thought after shift—“I can’t do this forever”—you’re not alone. The goal isn’t to work more hours. The goal is to change the structure so your time finally starts to come back to you. Engagement Prompt Comment “READY” + your province. I read them. Suggested Internal Links (RoamingRN.ca) Frontliners Hub community page (https://frontlinershub.com) Travel nurse agency onboarding guide (Click here) Bookkeeping basics for nursing practice structure ( Click Here ) Negotiation scripts for travel nurse contracts (https://frontlinershub.com) Suggested External Link (optional) Cashflow Quadrant overview (link to an official or reputable summary page) The post Staff Nurse vs Travel Nurse vs Nursing Practice: The First Contract Roadmap (Cashflow Quadrant) first appeared on Roaming RN Resources.

    17 min
  8. 06/14/2024

    The Secret to Success: Focusing on Yourself and Taking Action

    Overcoming Overwhelming Struggles: A Journey of Self-Discovery Picture this: you’re standing on the edge of a boat, your heart pounding with anticipation. You’ve made the decision to pursue your dreams, whether it’s becoming a freelancer, opening your own small business, or becoming a coach or trainer. The possibilities are endless, but the path ahead seems overwhelming and uncertain. Where do you even begin? In this blog post, we will explore the struggles and issues you may encounter on this journey, and how a paradigm shift can ultimately lead to overcoming these challenges. The Initial Overload When embarking on a new venture, it’s natural to feel overwhelmed. The fear of the unknown and the multitude of tasks ahead can be paralyzing. But here’s the thing: instead of focusing on external factors, the key to success lies in focusing on yourself. The Power of Self-Education Investing in self-education is the first step towards understanding what you truly need to succeed. Instead of blindly following trends or seeking validation from others, take the time to gain knowledge and skills that are relevant to your goals. Allocate a portion of your resources to learning and implement what you learn right away. Remember, knowledge is power, and it will empower you to navigate the challenges that lie ahead. Learning from the Masters Success leaves clues, and one way to fast-track your progress is by learning from those who are already crushing it in your field of interest. Seek out mentors or role models who have achieved what you aspire to accomplish. Study their systems, approaches, and mindset. By modeling their strategies, you can avoid common pitfalls and accelerate your own growth. The Power of Reflective Mentoring Finding a mentor who asks you thought-provoking questions and helps you uncover your true desires is invaluable. A mentor is not someone who tells you what to do; instead, they guide you towards self-reflection and self-discovery. Through meaningful exercises and introspection, you will gain clarity on what went wrong in the past and what you can do differently in the future. Embrace these opportunities for self-reflection, as they will pave the way for personal and professional growth. Breaking Free from External Expectations Many people fall into the trap of investing in things that impress others, rather than focusing on their own journey. But here’s the secret: success is not about impressing others; it’s about focusing on yourself, educating yourself, generating ideas, and taking action. Embrace the mindset shift from seeking external validation to prioritizing your own growth and fulfillment. Embracing the Journey The initial phase of any journey is often the most challenging. Doubts and fears may arise, but remember that every successful individual started somewhere. Embrace the struggles as part of your growth process, and trust that with dedication, perseverance, and self-belief, you will overcome them. Inspiring Quotes to Motivate You “The only way to do great work is to love what you do.” – Steve Jobs “Success is not final, failure is not fatal: It is the courage to continue that counts.” – Winston Churchill “Believe you can and you’re halfway there.” – Theodore Roosevelt One Key Takeaway As you embark on your own journey of self-discovery, remember this: the key to success lies in investing in yourself and taking action. Education, self-reflection, and perseverance are your guiding lights. Embrace the struggles, learn from them, and keep moving forward. You have the power to shape your own destiny. The post The Secret to Success: Focusing on Yourself and Taking Action first appeared on Roaming RN Resources.

    4 min

About

Welcome to RoamingRN Radio! Are you a travel nurse in Canada or thinking about becoming one? Join us on RoamingRN Radio, where we dive deep into the dynamic world of travel nursing. From navigating the pros and cons of this adventurous career to mastering financial strategies, our podcast is your ultimate guide to thriving in the travel nursing industry. In each episode, we cover topics such as: The Pros and Cons of Being a Travel Nurse in Canada: Discover the unique benefits and challenges of travel nursing in the Great White North. Hear from experienced travel nurses about their firsthand experiences and gain valuable insights to help you make informed decisions about your career. How to Make More Money and Pay Less Tax: Learn expert tips and strategies to maximize your earnings and minimize your tax liabilities. We’ll explore deductions, tax breaks, and financial planning tactics tailored specifically for travel nurses. Investing Your Profit Tax-Free: Unlock the secrets to smar