
This is one of the most common questions we hear and one of the most misunderstood.
If you’ve spent any time in travel nurse groups, you’ve probably seen everything from “You need 5 years minimum” to “I traveled after one year and it was fine.” The truth is somewhere in the middle, and it depends a lot on your specialty and where you’ve worked.
At Junxion Med Staffing, we place travelers in ICU, OR, CVOR, Cath Lab, IR, ER, and L&D across community, rural, and higher-acuity hospitals.
Why Two Years Comes Up So Often
Two years isn’t a hard rule, it’s a comfort level.
Facilities bring in travelers because they need people who can get up to speed quickly and work safely with limited orientation. Around the two-year mark, most clinicians have seen enough variation- codes, complications, short staffing, things not going to plan – to trust their judgment instead of relying on constant direction.
That doesn’t mean someone with less experience can’t succeed. It just means there’s less room for hesitation, especially in busier or higher-risk environments.
Rural Hospitals and Experience
Rural and community hospitals can be excellent places to build experience, especially early in your career.
In many rural settings, clinicians:
- Get broader exposure
- See a wider range of patient needs
- Have opportunities to float or cross-train
- Learn to think independently and problem-solve
That kind of experience can absolutely prepare you for travel.
However, this is where expectations matter.
Floating in a rural hospital does not always mean the same thing as floating in a large health system.
In a rural setting, floating might mean:
- Helping cover a small step-down or med/surg unit
- Assisting in ED holds or overflow
- Supporting another unit within a limited scope
In a large system, floating often means:
- Being assigned full patient loads on different specialty units
- Managing higher census and acuity
Both have value but they are not interchangeable on paper. When facilities review travel profiles, they look closely at what “floating” actually involved, not just whether it happened.
Rural experience builds adaptability and confidence. Larger systems tend to test depth and volume. Strong candidates usually have a mix of both or a clear understanding of where their experience fits best.
ICU Travel: What Facilities Actually Look For
For ICU travelers, total years matter less than how independent you are and what you’ve handled.
Most hospitals look for:
- Around 2 years of recent ICU experience
- Comfort with vents, drips, and unstable patients
- Experience in a similar ICU type (medical, surgical, cardiac, neuro)
Common requirements:
- BLS
- ACLS
- NIHSS for stroke centers
CCRN helps, especially when competition is tight, but it’s not required everywhere. We place solid ICU travelers without it all the time.
What matters most is whether you can manage critical patients confidently without needing constant backup.
OR Travel: Experience Counts More Here
OR is one of the least forgiving specialties to travel in.
Most facilities expect:
- 2–3 years of circulating experience
- A solid case mix (ortho, general, neuro, trauma)
- The ability to work independently after a short orientation
BLS is standard. ACLS is sometimes required. CNOR isn’t mandatory everywhere, but it can help, especially with larger systems.
In smaller hospitals, OR nurses often gain versatility by circulating multiple service lines. That flexibility is valuable but facilities will still want to see repeat exposure and real independence, not just occasional coverage.
Cath Lab, IR, CVOR, and Other Specialized Roles
Specialty roles are more straightforward.
Most facilities require:
- At least 2 years in the exact specialty
- Call experience
- Comfort with specific devices and procedures
Certifications like ACLS and specialty credentials (RCIS, CVOR competencies) are often non-negotiable. These roles pay well because facilities expect travelers to step in immediately, with little margin for learning on the job.
Do You Need a BSN to Travel?
Usually, no.
In 2026:
- Experience carries more weight than degree type
- ADN nurses with strong specialty backgrounds travel successfully
- Some academic or magnet hospitals still prefer BSN
- Many community and rural hospitals do not
If you’re clinically solid and appropriately certified, a BSN is rarely the deciding factor.
How We Help at Junxion
Not everyone is ready to travel right away and pushing it too early usually causes problems.
We help clinicians:
- Understand which certifications matter
- Use community or rural roles strategically to build experience
- Be honest about how their experience will be viewed by facilities
- Avoid spending money on credentials that don’t change outcomes
Our goal isn’t to place you fast. It’s to place you successfully.
Bottom Line
For most ICU and OR travel roles in 2026:
- Around two years of recent experience is the sweet spot
- Certifications matter more than degrees
- Specialty depth matters
- Rural hospitals can be a great place to build experience—but how that experience translates depends on scope and responsibility.
Travel healthcare doesn’t reward shortcuts. It rewards being ready and knowing how your background fits.
and then