Travel Nursing in New Hampshire (2026)
What to expect from a travel nursing contract in New Hampshire — including licensing rules, agencies that staff there, and how to get started.
Licensing for travel nurses in New Hampshire
This is a Nurse Licensure Compact (NLC) state — RNs holding a multistate license from any compact state can practice here without applying for a separate license.
Source: National Council of State Boards of Nursing (NCSBN) Nurse Licensure Compact roster.
Travel nurse pay in New Hampshire
Pay packages for travel nursing contracts in New Hampshire depend on three big variables: specialty (ICU, ER, OR, L&D pay above med-surg), the specific hospital and metro market within the state, and contract type (crisis or rapid-response contracts pay more than standard 13-week assignments).
As a general rule, the blended weekly take-home on a travel contract — taxable hourly wages plus tax-free housing, meal, and incidental stipends — runs 30-100% above what the same hospital pays its staff RNs. Marketplaces like Vivian Health publish current pay packages for active New Hampshire contracts so you can see real numbers before talking to a recruiter.
For state-by-state Bureau of Labor Statistics RN wage data (staff RN baseline), see BLS OEWS 29-1141.
Top agencies serving New Hampshire
Full comparison →Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need a separate license to take a travel assignment in New Hampshire?
New Hampshire is a Nurse Licensure Compact (NLC) member state. If you hold a multistate license from any compact state, you can practice in New Hampshire without applying for a separate license.
How much do travel nurses make in New Hampshire?
Pay packages in New Hampshire depend heavily on specialty, contract type, and the cost-of-living of the specific city. As a rule of thumb, blended weekly take-home (taxable wages plus housing/per-diem stipends) is typically 30-100% above equivalent staff RN positions at the same hospital. Use a marketplace like Vivian Health to see real, current pay packages for New Hampshire contracts before committing to an agency.
Which travel agencies have the most New Hampshire contracts?
Aya Healthcare and Vivian Health typically have the deepest job boards across all 50 states, including New Hampshire. Trusted Health is strong if you prefer a digital-first booking experience. Trustaff and Medical Solutions have especially strong relationships with regional hospital systems.
What experience do I need for a travel contract in New Hampshire?
Most New Hampshire hospitals require 1-2 years of recent acute-care experience in your specialty. ICU, ER, OR, and L&D usually need 2 years; med-surg often opens at 1 year. Letters from current managers help expedite credentialing.