PACU Travel Nurse Salary Guide: Pay Ranges, Top States & Contract Tips (2026)

PACU Travel Nurse Salary Guide: Pay Ranges, Top States & Contract Tips (2026)

Editorial Note: Pay figures in this guide reflect 2026 travel nurse contract data compiled from multiple staffing platforms and salary aggregators, including AMN Healthcare active listings (March 2026) and ZipRecruiter salary data (December 2025-January 2026). Weekly rates include both taxable base pay and tax-free stipends where applicable. All figures are estimates — your actual package will vary by agency, location, facility, and experience level.

PACU travel nursing sits at the intersection of surgical expertise and critical care — and the pay reflects it. As one of the more specialized perioperative roles, PACU consistently commands premium contract rates, particularly in states where surgical volume is high and experienced recovery room nurses are hard to find.

This guide breaks down what PACU travel nurses earn in 2026, how the pay stacks up against comparable OR and Cath Lab roles, what certifications move the needle on your rate, and which states are currently offering the strongest contracts.

What Is a PACU Travel Nurse?

PACU stands for Post-Anesthesia Care Unit — the recovery area where patients go immediately after surgery as they emerge from general, regional, or local anesthesia. PACU nurses are the first clinicians those patients see when they wake up, and they are responsible for monitoring for life-threatening complications during one of the most vulnerable windows in a patient’s surgical experience.

Travel PACU nurses take 13-week contract assignments at hospitals and surgical centers across the country, filling staffing gaps in a specialty that requires a very specific clinical background. Unlike med-surg or telemetry assignments, you cannot typically walk into a PACU without prior perioperative or critical care experience — which is exactly why these contracts pay well.

Travel PACU contracts almost exclusively cover Phase I recovery — the high-acuity immediate post-operative period where patients are most unstable and require intensive one-on-one monitoring. Phase II recovery (the step-down discharge lounge where ambulatory patients are prepared to go home) is a lower-acuity setting and rarely commands the premium contract rates associated with PACU travel nursing. When a recruiter or posting references PACU, assume Phase I unless stated otherwise.

Core PACU responsibilities include:

  • Continuous monitoring of vital signs, oxygen saturation, and consciousness levels as anesthesia wears off
  • Managing post-operative pain, nausea, vomiting, and anesthesia side effects
  • Identifying and responding to acute complications including airway compromise, respiratory depression, and hemodynamic instability
  • Operating arterial lines, IV infusions, epidural lines, and analgesia pumps
  • Coordinating discharge readiness with the surgical team and anesthesiologist
  • Educating patients and families on post-operative care instructions

How Much Do PACU Travel Nurses Make in 2026?

PACU travel nurse pay in 2026 ranges from approximately $1,800 to $3,200 per week depending on location, facility type, and whether crisis rates are active. The following figures reflect typical contract ranges — not top-of-market outliers.

Pay Tier Weekly Range Typical Scenario
Low end $1,800 – $2,000/week Lower-demand states, smaller surgical facilities, new traveler rates
Mid-range $2,100 – $2,600/week Most standard 13-week contracts at acute care hospitals nationwide
High end $2,700 – $3,200/week High-demand states (CA, WA, HI), Level I trauma centers, CPAN-certified nurses
Crisis / rapid response $3,200 – $3,800+/week Acute facility shortages, rapid response contracts, select metro markets

AMN Healthcare listed active PACU travel contracts in March 2026 ranging from $1,366 to $3,165 per week across their platform, with the national high reaching $3,793 in Van Nuys, California. The broader ZipRecruiter dataset for PACU travel RNs shows a 25th-to-75th percentile weekly range of roughly $1,827 to $2,788.

For context, the average staff PACU nurse earns approximately $96,800 per year ($47/hour) according to Salary.com’s March 2026 data. Travel premiums routinely push total compensation 30-50% higher than staff rates once stipends are factored in.

PACU vs. OR vs. Cath Lab: How the Pay Compares

PACU, OR, and Cath Lab are the three most closely related perioperative specialties in travel nursing. Understanding how they stack up helps you make strategic decisions about which assignment type to pursue next — and how to position your experience when negotiating.

Specialty Typical Weekly Range Key Differentiator
PACU $1,800 – $3,200 Post-anesthesia recovery; rapid patient turnover; CPAN preferred
OR / Perioperative $2,000 – $3,400 Intraoperative scrub/circulator; higher ceiling due to complexity
Cath Lab $2,200 – $3,600 Interventional cardiology; on-call premiums; highest ceiling of the three

PACU generally sits slightly below OR in base pay, and meaningfully below Cath Lab — primarily because Cath Lab nurses carry on-call obligations and work with a narrower, more technically complex patient population that commands additional premiums. That said, PACU contracts tend to have more consistent scheduling and less call exposure, which many travelers prefer for quality-of-life reasons.

If you have OR experience and are considering a PACU assignment, many agencies will accept the crossover — particularly if you have critical care in your background. The reverse (moving from PACU to OR) typically requires more formal onboarding.

What Drives Your PACU Travel Nurse Pay Package

Several variables have more impact on your weekly rate than most nurses realize going into their first contract negotiations.

Geographic Location

Location is the single largest lever in PACU travel pay. California, Washington, Hawaii, New York, and Massachusetts consistently produce the highest contract rates due to a combination of high cost of living, strong union influence on floor wages that creates a higher bill rate floor, and persistent staffing shortages. States like Tennessee, Oklahoma, and rural areas of the Southeast tend to offer lower rates — though your net take-home may be competitive once cost of living is factored in.

Facility Type

Level I trauma centers and large academic medical centers typically pay more than community hospitals or outpatient surgical centers. Volume, acuity, and patient complexity all push rates up. Ambulatory surgery centers often pay less but offer predictable hours and no call.

CPAN Certification

The Certified Post Anesthesia Nurse (CPAN) credential — administered by the American Board of Perianesthesia Nursing Certification (ABPANC) — is the primary specialty certification for PACU nurses. It is not universally required for travel contracts, but holding it strengthens your negotiating position and makes you the preferred candidate when facilities have multiple qualified applicants. To sit for the CPAN exam, you need a current unrestricted RN license and at least 1,200 hours of direct Phase I post-anesthesia clinical experience within the prior two years. Recertification requires 900 hours of perianesthesia practice over the three-year certification period.

Experience Level

Most PACU travel contracts require a minimum of one to two years of recent PACU-specific experience. Nurses with two or more years of dedicated PACU experience — especially those who have also worked in ICU or OR — will be prioritized over those transitioning from general med-surg or step-down backgrounds. More experience translates directly into higher base offers and more leverage in negotiation.

Additional Certifications

Beyond CPAN, the following certifications are commonly listed as preferred or required on PACU travel contracts:

  • ACLS (Advanced Cardiovascular Life Support) — effectively required at most hospital facilities
  • BLS — baseline requirement
  • PALS (Pediatric Advanced Life Support) — required at facilities that treat pediatric surgical patients
  • CAPA (Certified Ambulatory Perianesthesia Nurse) — relevant for outpatient surgical center assignments
Note on Tax-Free Stipends: A significant portion of your weekly PACU travel pay comes as non-taxable housing and meal stipends. These are only legally tax-free if you maintain a legitimate tax home — a permanent residence in another location where you incur duplicated living expenses. If you give up your tax home and travel full-time without a home base, stipends become taxable income. This distinction has a material impact on your actual take-home pay. See our guide on Travel Nurse Tax Home Rules for a full breakdown.

Highest-Paying States for PACU Travel Nurses in 2026

The following states consistently appear at the top of PACU travel pay rankings. Rates reflect general contract averages — individual packages will vary by facility and agency.

State Estimated Weekly Range Why It Pays More
California $2,700 – $3,800 Nurse-to-patient ratios, high COL, persistent shortages in surgical centers
Washington $2,500 – $3,400 No state income tax, high base wages, strong surgical volume in Seattle area
Hawaii $2,400 – $3,200 Geographic isolation drives premium rates; housing stipend offsets island COL
New York $2,300 – $3,100 High demand at NYC metro hospitals; strong union wage floors create high bill rates
Massachusetts $2,300 – $3,000 Academic medical centers (MGH, Brigham) drive competitive contract rates
Alaska $2,400 – $3,200 No state income tax; remote premiums; limited qualified local applicant pool
Oregon $2,200 – $2,900 NLC compact state; growing surgical demand in Portland metro

A note on California: the state income tax (up to 13.3% at higher income levels) is a significant deduction that many nurses overlook when evaluating California contracts. A $3,200/week California package may net similarly to a $2,700/week Washington contract once state taxes are applied. Always run the full numbers before committing.

What to Look for in a PACU Travel Contract

PACU contracts have a few specific terms worth scrutinizing beyond the standard red flags that apply to any travel assignment.

Patient Ratio Language

Most PACU units operate on a 1:1 or 1:2 patient ratio during Phase I recovery. If your contract does not specify expected ratios — or if it gives the facility broad discretion over staffing — ask your recruiter to get written clarification before you sign. Understaffed PACUs are a real quality-of-life issue and a patient safety concern.

On-Call Requirements

Some PACU assignments include mandatory call shifts — particularly at hospitals that run emergency or trauma surgical programs overnight. Call pay varies significantly by agency. Make sure any call obligations are spelled out in your contract with the associated pay rate (typically $4-8/hour for on-call status, with an activation rate when called in).

Guaranteed Hours

PACU surgical volume can be unpredictable, particularly at facilities that cancel elective cases. Look for contracts that guarantee a minimum of 36 hours per week regardless of census. Without guaranteed hours language, slow surgical weeks can result in significant income loss. See our guide on Travel Nurse Contract Red Flags for a full breakdown of what to watch for before signing.

Float Expectations

Clarify upfront whether you can be floated outside the PACU — to pre-op, same-day surgery, or even step-down units when census is low. If you are specialized in PACU and not comfortable in other perioperative environments, get float restrictions documented before you accept.

Understanding Your PACU Pay Package Breakdown

Travel nurse pay is structured differently than staff nurse pay. Your weekly total is typically composed of several components, and understanding each one helps you evaluate whether a package is actually competitive.

Component Taxable? Typical Range
Base hourly wage Yes $22 – $45/hour (varies widely by agency and state)
Housing stipend No (if tax home maintained) $800 – $1,600/week depending on assignment location
Meal and incidental stipend No (if tax home maintained) $250 – $500/week
Travel reimbursement No One-time, typically $500 – $1,000 per contract
Completion bonus Yes $500 – $2,000 per contract (not universal)

When comparing packages across agencies, focus on the blended rate — your total weekly compensation divided by your weekly hours. This normalizes the taxable vs. non-taxable mix and gives you a true apples-to-apples comparison. An agency offering a lower hourly wage but higher stipends may actually net you more take-home pay than one with a high base and smaller stipends.

For a detailed breakdown of how travel nurse pay packages work from the ground up, see our guide on What Is a Travel Nurse Pay Package?

How to Land Your First PACU Travel Contract

PACU is a competitive specialty. Facilities want experienced recovery room nurses — not candidates transitioning in from unrelated units with minimal PACU exposure. Here is what most facilities and agencies expect before offering a PACU travel contract:

  • Minimum 1-2 years recent PACU experience — and most high-paying contracts prefer 2+ years. “Recent” typically means within the last 2-3 years at the same experience level.
  • Critical care or OR background — nurses coming from ICU or the OR are viewed as strong PACU candidates. Step-down or telemetry background alone is typically not sufficient.
  • Active ACLS certification — non-negotiable at hospital-based PACU assignments.
  • BLS certification — required universally.
  • CPAN certification preferred — not always required, but it differentiates you in competitive markets and supports higher base offers.
  • PALS — required at any facility treating pediatric surgical patients.

Your best positioning strategy as a first-time PACU traveler is to target facilities that resemble where you currently work — same patient population, similar surgical volume, comparable acuity. A nurse from a high-volume academic center will have the easiest transition to a similar academic PACU assignment. Asking your recruiter to match your experience profile to the facility profile is not just smart — it protects your license.

On the agency side, look for recruiters with specific perioperative experience. PACU contracts have nuances — call structure, patient ratios, Phase I vs. Phase II scope, cross-training expectations — that a recruiter without surgical specialization may not flag. A recruiter who has placed PACU nurses before knows what questions to ask the facility on your behalf.

Is your travel package competitive?

The 2026 Travel Nurse Pay Decoder compares your weekly package against current benchmarks for your specialty and market — free, takes 60 seconds.

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Bottom Line

PACU travel nursing is a consistently well-compensated specialty that rewards clinical experience, certification, and geographic flexibility. Mid-range contracts run $2,100-$2,600/week nationally, with high-demand states like California, Washington, and Hawaii pushing packages to $3,200/week and above. The CPAN credential and documented Phase I experience are the two most reliable levers for improving your rate and expanding your assignment options.

PACU sits slightly below OR and Cath Lab on the pay spectrum but offers more scheduling predictability and less call exposure than either — a trade-off many perioperative travelers actively prefer. For nurses with the right background, it is one of the more accessible high-paying travel specialties in the perioperative cluster.

References

Pay Data
AMN Healthcare. Active PACU travel nurse contract listings. March 2026. Weekly range $1,366-$3,793 observed across active postings.
ZipRecruiter. PACU Travel RN salary data. December 2025-January 2026. 25th-75th percentile weekly range $1,827-$2,788.
Salary.com. Staff PACU nurse average annual salary $96,800 (~$47/hr). March 2026.

Certifications
American Board of Perianesthesia Nursing Certification (ABPANC). CPAN certification eligibility requirements — 1,200 hours Phase I experience within prior 2 years; RN license required. Accessed April 2026.
American Heart Association. ACLS and BLS certification requirements. Accessed April 2026.

Methodology
Weekly pay ranges are estimates derived from active agency listings and salary aggregator data as of early 2026. Individual packages will vary by agency, location, facility type, certifications, and experience level. Tax-free stipend eligibility requires maintaining a valid tax home — see linked tax home guide for full requirements. Last updated: April 2026.

Disclaimer: This guide is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, or career advice. Pay figures are estimates based on publicly available data as of early 2026 and will vary by specialty, facility, location, and agency. travelhealthcarepay.com/ is independently operated and receives no compensation from any agency or facility referenced in this guide.

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