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

Editorial Note: Pay figures in this guide are sourced from Vivian Health (March 2026), AMN Healthcare (January-April 2026), and ZipRecruiter (February 2026). Ranges reflect active job listings and recently filled positions. IR travel nurse pay varies significantly by facility, shift, on-call requirements, and contract terms. Always verify current rates with your agency before accepting an assignment.

Interventional radiology is one of the fastest-growing specialties in travel nursing — and one of the most consistently well-compensated. IR nurses work alongside radiologists on minimally invasive, image-guided procedures that now touch nearly every organ system: vascular access, stroke intervention, oncology procedures, and more. The specialty requires a distinct technical skillset, comfort with complex equipment, and the ability to adapt quickly across different procedure types and patient populations.

That skillset commands a premium. IR travel nurses earn meaningfully above the general nursing average, with strong demand at academic medical centers, comprehensive stroke centers, and high-volume outpatient imaging facilities. If you are an IR-trained nurse evaluating the travel market, this guide covers what the pay actually looks like in 2026, what drives it, and what to watch for in IR-specific contracts.

IR Travel Nurse Salary: 2026 Snapshot

Metric Weekly Pay
National average (Vivian Health, March 2026) $2,729/week
National average (AMN Healthcare, early 2026) $2,339/week
Typical range $1,900 – $3,200/week
High-demand market ceiling $3,500 – $4,400+/week
Premium above general nursing average ~20% above national RN average

Sources: Vivian Health (March 2026, based on 6,829 active job listings); AMN Healthcare (early 2026, based on active and recently filled positions). Pay includes taxable hourly rate plus non-taxable housing and meal stipends. Actual take-home varies based on tax home status and filing situation.

Why the averages differ: Vivian Health’s $2,729 average reflects all active IR listings across agencies, weighted toward higher-demand markets. AMN Healthcare’s $2,339 average reflects their specific job inventory. Neither figure is wrong — they reflect different slices of the same market. The practical range for most IR travelers in 2026 is $2,100 to $3,000/week, with top-market outliers above that.

IR Travel Nurse Pay by State

State Average Weekly Pay High-End Range Notes
California $2,537/week Up to $4,128/week Highest ceiling in the country; non-compact state requires separate license
New York ~$2,400/week Up to $2,950/week NYC academic centers drive top packages; non-compact, plan licensing early
Texas $2,168/week Up to $2,809/week No state income tax; compact state; high-volume IR market in Houston and Dallas
Washington ~$2,400/week $2,700+/week No state income tax; UW Medical Center and Providence systems; compact state
Massachusetts ~$2,500/week $3,000+/week High cost of living offset by strong packages; NLC enacted, not yet implemented
Florida ~$2,100/week $2,600+/week No state income tax; compact state; high IR volume at large health systems
Minnesota ~$2,300/week $2,700+/week Mayo Clinic is one of the highest-volume IR centers in the country; legislation pending
Ohio ~$2,100/week $2,500+/week Cleveland Clinic and OhioHealth systems; compact state

State averages: AMN Healthcare and Vivian Health, January-April 2026. High-end figures reflect top active listings, not guaranteed rates. Non-compact state licensing notes based on NLC status as of April 2026 — see our NLC Compact States guide for current status.

What IR Travel Nurses Actually Do

IR nursing is a perioperative specialty — IR nurses manage patient care before, during, and after image-guided procedures performed in the interventional radiology suite. Unlike general radiology, IR involves active intervention: procedures that diagnose or treat conditions rather than simply image them.

Common IR procedures IR nurses support include:

  • Angioplasty and stent placement (arterial and venous)
  • Thrombectomy and thrombolysis (clot treatment)
  • PICC line and central venous catheter placement
  • Drainage procedures (abscess, biliary, nephrostomy)
  • Biopsy (CT-guided, ultrasound-guided)
  • Embolization procedures (uterine fibroid, tumor, trauma)
  • IVC filter placement and retrieval
  • Stroke intervention (mechanical thrombectomy) at comprehensive stroke centers
  • TIPS (transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt)

IR nurses work in a hybrid environment — part procedural, part critical care. You need to be comfortable with moderate sedation, contrast administration, radiation safety, sterile technique, and rapid patient assessment. The pace varies significantly by facility: outpatient IR centers run high-volume routine cases, while hospital-based IR suites handle emergencies at any hour.

What Drives IR Travel Nurse Pay

Facility type and case complexity

Academic medical centers and comprehensive stroke centers run the most complex IR cases — and generally pay the most. High-volume interventional programs at institutions like Mayo Clinic, Cleveland Clinic, Stanford, and NYP command premium packages because the technical demands are higher and the learning curve for per diem or float coverage is steep. Community hospitals with lower-volume IR programs tend to pay less but may offer a more manageable on-call burden.

On-call requirements

On-call is the single biggest variable in IR travel nurse pay — and the one most often under-negotiated. Many IR assignments include mandatory on-call shifts for emergent cases (stroke interventions, trauma embolizations, acute limb ischemia). On-call compensation structures vary significantly:

  • On-call hourly rate: Typically $5 to $10/hour while on standby
  • Call-back rate: Usually 1.5x to 2x base rate when called in
  • Minimum call-back hours: Some contracts guarantee a minimum of 2 to 4 hours pay per call-back regardless of time spent

Before accepting any IR assignment, get the full on-call structure in writing. An assignment with heavy on-call that pays $2,200/week can outperform a $2,500/week assignment with minimal on-call — or it can significantly underperform depending on frequency and callback rate.

Shift type

Standard IR shifts are days. Night and evening IR positions are less common but command shift differentials — typically $4 to $8/hour above base rate. Weekend differentials follow similar patterns. Confirm shift differential pass-through in your contract — some agencies absorb differentials into their margin rather than passing them fully to the traveler.

Certifications

The following certifications are valued by IR facilities and can influence pay:

  • ARLS (Advanced Radiology Life Support) — increasingly required or preferred at high-volume IR centers
  • ACLS (Advanced Cardiac Life Support) — standard requirement across most IR facilities
  • Moderate Sedation certification — required at facilities where IR nurses independently administer sedation
  • Radiation safety training — ALARA principles; often facility-specific but documentable

Experience and procedure volume

IR facilities want travelers who can function independently from day one. Nurses with broad procedure experience — particularly in high-acuity cases like stroke intervention, embolization, and complex vascular access — command higher packages and have more assignment options. If your IR background is primarily PICC and routine drainage at a lower-volume program, be realistic about which facilities will consider you and at what pay tier.

IR vs. Related Specialties: How Pay Compares

Specialty Typical Weekly Range (2026) Compared to IR
Interventional Radiology $2,100 – $3,200+ Baseline
Cardiac-Vascular (Cath Lab, CVOR) $2,200 – $3,500+ Comparable to slightly higher at top end
OR $2,200 – $3,200+ Comparable
ICU $2,100 – $3,000+ Comparable
PACU $2,000 – $2,800 Slightly lower
Cath Lab $2,300 – $3,500+ Comparable to slightly higher

IR sits comfortably in the upper tier of travel nursing pay alongside Cath Lab, OR, and CVOR. The key differentiator within IR is on-call structure — a high on-call IR assignment can total more hours and more compensation than a comparable OR position with no call.

IR-Specific Contract Red Flags

IR contracts have specific nuances beyond the standard travel nursing contract review. In addition to the standard red flags covered in our Contract Red Flags guide, watch for these IR-specific issues:

  • Vague on-call language. “On-call as needed” without specifying frequency, callback rate, or minimum pay guarantee is a significant red flag. Get the exact on-call expectations — days per week, frequency of callouts, and compensation structure — before signing.
  • Procedure scope mismatch. Some IR assignments are primarily vascular access (PICC lines, ports) at low-volume outpatient centers. Others are full-scope interventional suites with complex vascular, oncology, and stroke cases. Know what you are signing up for and confirm the procedure mix matches your experience level and expectations.
  • Radiation safety requirements not specified. Confirm what radiation safety training or documentation the facility requires before your start date. Failing to meet requirements can delay your start and cost you days of pay.
  • Float expectations into OR or procedural areas. Some facilities float IR travelers into the OR, GI suite, or cardiac cath lab when IR volume is low. If floating is possible, confirm which areas you could be floated to and whether you are credentialed and comfortable there.
  • Shift differential not passed through. IR night and weekend differentials should appear as separate line items in your pay breakdown. If they are not listed, ask explicitly whether they are included in your base rate or paid as additional compensation.

How to Find the Best IR Travel Assignments

IR travel positions are less abundant than general med-surg or telemetry jobs but more stable once you are in the market. A few strategies that work for IR travelers specifically:

  1. Work with agencies that have strong Magnet hospital relationships. Academic medical centers run the highest-volume, highest-acuity IR programs — and they are more likely to use agencies with established MSP or VMS relationships. Cross Country Nurses and AMN Healthcare have particularly strong Magnet facility networks.
  2. Submit to multiple agencies simultaneously. IR positions are competitive. Submitting to two or three agencies increases your odds of getting in front of the right facility faster. Use Vivian Health to compare agency offers on the same position. See our Vivian Health Review for how that works.
  3. Document your procedure experience specifically. IR facility managers want to know exactly what procedures you have performed and at what volume — not just that you have “IR experience.” A specific procedure list on your resume significantly improves your submission quality and increases callback rates.
  4. Build your license portfolio proactively. California is the highest-paying IR market in the country. If you are not already licensed there, apply now — the CA BRN takes 10-16 weeks. See our NLC Compact States guide for full licensing strategy.
  5. Negotiate on-call terms before you sign. On-call is negotiable more often than travelers realize. Minimum callback guarantees, maximum call frequency per week, and callback rates are all worth discussing before you accept. See our Contract Negotiation guide for how to approach that conversation.

Is IR Right for Travel Nursing?

IR is one of the best specialties for travel nursing for nurses who are genuinely prepared for it. The pay premium is real, the specialty is in demand at major health systems nationally, and the procedure-based nature of the work means each assignment builds transferable technical skills regardless of where you go next.

The cautions are also real. IR facilities expect independent function from day one. The on-call burden at high-volume programs can be significant. And the procedure scope varies enough between facilities that a nurse whose IR experience is primarily outpatient access may not meet the expectations of a high-acuity hospital-based program.

Know your procedure history, be honest about your comfort level with complex cases, and negotiate the on-call structure before you sign. Done right, IR travel nursing is among the most financially rewarding paths in the specialty.

For a broader look at how IR compares to other high-paying specialties, see our Highest Paying Travel Nurse Specialties guide.

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Disclaimer: Pay figures in this guide reflect active market data as of early 2026 and are subject to change. Individual compensation varies based on specialty, experience, certifications, facility type, shift, on-call requirements, and agency. This guide is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or career advice. Always verify current rates and contract terms directly with your agency before accepting an assignment.

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