GI/Endoscopy Travel Nurse Salary Guide: Pay Ranges, Top States & Contract Tips (2026)
GI and endoscopy nursing is one of the more underappreciated travel specialties — consistently in demand, procedurally driven, and well-compensated relative to its reputation as a “lower acuity” specialty. The reality is that experienced GI nurses manage complex procedural environments, administer moderate sedation, and handle a high daily procedure volume that few other nursing units match.
For travel nurses with GI or endoscopy experience, the market in 2026 is solid. Demand is steady across hospitals, outpatient surgery centers, and freestanding endoscopy suites. Job availability is more predictable than crisis-driven specialties, and the procedural nature of the work makes each assignment a skill-building experience regardless of where you go.
This guide covers current GI/endoscopy travel nurse pay, what drives it, top-paying markets, and what to watch for in endoscopy-specific contracts.
GI/Endoscopy Travel Nurse Salary: 2026 Snapshot
| Metric | Weekly Pay |
|---|---|
| National average (Vivian Health, March 2026) | $2,342/week |
| National average (AMN Healthcare, February 2026) | $2,263/week |
| Typical range | $1,800 – $2,800/week |
| High-demand market ceiling | $3,000 – $3,600+/week |
| Premium above general nursing average | ~8-9% above national RN average |
Sources: Vivian Health (March 2026, based on 1,114 active job listings); AMN Healthcare (February 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.
GI/endoscopy travel nurses earn a modest but consistent premium above the general nursing average — typically 8-9% — reflecting the specialty’s procedural demands without the ICU-level acuity premium. The pay ceiling is pushed by high-cost-of-living markets like California and New York, where packages can reach well above the national average.
GI/Endoscopy Travel Nurse Pay by State
| State | Average Weekly Pay | High-End Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| California | $2,606/week | Up to $3,423/week | Highest average in the country; high volume of outpatient GI centers; non-compact state |
| New York | $2,818/week | Up to $3,204/week | NYC hospitals and academic centers drive above-average packages; non-compact state |
| Washington | $2,500+/week | Up to $3,567/week | Highest single package recorded nationally (Kirkland, February 2026); no state income tax; compact state |
| Texas | ~$2,100/week | $2,600+/week | No state income tax; compact state; high volume of outpatient endoscopy in Houston and Dallas |
| Massachusetts | ~$2,400/week | $2,900+/week | Strong academic GI programs; NLC enacted, awaiting implementation |
| Florida | ~$2,000/week | $2,500+/week | No state income tax; compact state; strong outpatient GI market |
| Ohio | ~$1,900/week | $2,300+/week | Cleveland Clinic and OhioHealth GI programs; compact state |
| Virginia | ~$2,000/week | $2,500+/week | VCU Health and Inova GI programs; compact state; Richmond noted as active market by AMN |
Sources: Vivian Health and AMN Healthcare, February-March 2026. Non-compact state licensing notes based on NLC status as of April 2026 — see our NLC Compact States guide for current status.
What GI/Endoscopy Travel Nurses Actually Do
GI nursing is a perioperative procedural specialty. GI nurses work in hospital-based endoscopy units, outpatient surgery centers, and freestanding endoscopy suites, supporting gastroenterologists and surgical teams through a high daily volume of diagnostic and therapeutic procedures.
Common procedures GI nurses support include:
- Upper endoscopy (EGD) — esophagus, stomach, and duodenum visualization
- Colonoscopy — diagnostic and screening, with polypectomy
- ERCP (endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography) — biliary and pancreatic duct procedures
- EUS (endoscopic ultrasound) — imaging and fine needle aspiration
- Flexible sigmoidoscopy
- Capsule endoscopy monitoring
- Percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy (PEG) tube placement
- Hemorrhoid banding and anorectal procedures
GI nurses typically rotate through multiple roles within the suite: circulating nurse (pre-procedure prep and patient assessment), procedure nurse (assisting during the procedure, managing sedation), and recovery nurse (post-procedure monitoring until discharge criteria are met). Comfort with all three roles is expected from travel nurses, who are rarely given a lengthy orientation period.
What Drives GI/Endoscopy Travel Nurse Pay
Facility type: hospital vs. outpatient
Hospital-based endoscopy units typically pay more than freestanding outpatient endoscopy centers, reflecting the higher acuity patient population and the broader scope of procedures performed. ERCP, EUS, and complex therapeutic procedures are concentrated in hospital-based programs with full anesthesia and surgical backup. Outpatient centers run primarily routine screening colonoscopies and upper endoscopies at higher daily volume but lower complexity.
Both settings have active travel nurse markets. Hospital-based positions pay better; outpatient positions often offer more predictable schedules and less on-call exposure.
Sedation administration
A significant variable in GI nursing is who administers sedation. At facilities where RNs independently administer moderate sedation (conscious sedation), the role carries additional responsibility and often additional pay. At facilities using anesthesia providers (CRNAs or anesthesiologists) for all cases, the RN scope is narrower. Know which model a facility uses before you accept the assignment — the clinical demands and pay structure can differ meaningfully.
Procedure volume and case mix
High-volume facilities that run 40 to 60 cases per day in a multi-room suite have a different demand profile than lower-volume programs. High-volume programs pay more and expect travelers who can move efficiently through the suite without extended orientation. If your GI background is from a lower-volume setting, be transparent about your case volume history — facilities will ask.
ERCP and EUS experience
ERCP and EUS are the most complex procedures in GI nursing, requiring specialized positioning knowledge, specific equipment familiarity, and the ability to manage longer, more technically demanding cases. Nurses with documented ERCP experience command stronger packages and have access to a more selective pool of high-paying assignments at tertiary care centers.
Certifications
The following certifications are valued in GI travel nursing:
- CGRN (Certified Gastroenterology Registered Nurse) — offered by the American Board of Certification for Gastroenterology Nurses (ABCGN); the primary specialty certification for GI nurses. Requires two years of GI/endoscopy experience. Demonstrates specialty expertise and is increasingly preferred at hospital-based programs.
- ACLS (Advanced Cardiac Life Support) — required at most hospital-based GI programs, particularly for units administering moderate sedation.
- Moderate Sedation certification — facility-specific in many cases; confirm requirements before your start date.
- BLS — baseline requirement everywhere.
GI vs. Related Procedural Specialties: How Pay Compares
| Specialty | Typical Weekly Range (2026) | Compared to GI/Endoscopy |
|---|---|---|
| GI/Endoscopy | $1,800 – $2,800+ | Baseline |
| PACU | $2,000 – $2,800 | Comparable to slightly higher |
| Interventional Radiology | $2,100 – $3,200+ | Higher — especially with on-call |
| OR | $2,200 – $3,200+ | Higher |
| Cath Lab | $2,300 – $3,500+ | Higher |
| Oncology | $1,900 – $2,600 | Comparable |
| Float Pool | $1,900 – $2,600 | Comparable |
GI/endoscopy sits in the mid-tier of procedural specialty pay. It earns more than general med-surg and telemetry, is broadly comparable to PACU and oncology, and trails higher-acuity procedural specialties like OR, IR, and Cath Lab. The trade-off is a more predictable schedule, lower on-call burden, and strong job availability across a wider range of facility types.
GI-Specific Contract Red Flags
Beyond the standard issues covered in our Contract Red Flags guide, watch for these GI-specific issues before you sign:
- Sedation scope not specified. The contract should clearly state whether you will be administering moderate sedation independently or working alongside anesthesia providers. These are meaningfully different roles. If the sedation model is vague or changes after you arrive, that is a significant issue.
- Daily case volume expectations not discussed. High-volume GI units can run 50+ cases per day across multiple rooms. If you have not worked at that pace before, ask about expected daily case load during your recruiter conversation — not after you arrive on day one.
- Float expectations into pre-op or PACU. Some facilities float GI travelers into adjacent perioperative areas during slow periods. Confirm which areas you could be floated to and whether you are credentialed and comfortable there.
- Equipment familiarity requirements. Different facilities use different endoscopy systems (Olympus, Pentax, Fujifilm). Most travelers adapt quickly, but some facilities have strict equipment orientation requirements that affect your start date. Confirm equipment type during your pre-acceptance call.
- On-call for after-hours GI emergencies. Hospital-based GI programs that handle urgent ERCP or GI bleeding cases may have on-call requirements. Outpatient centers rarely do. If on-call is not mentioned in the offer, ask directly.
Who GI/Endoscopy Travel Nursing Is Best For
GI travel nursing is a strong fit for nurses who:
- Want a procedural specialty with consistent demand and more predictable scheduling than high-acuity ICU or OR roles
- Have genuine GI experience — ideally across all three suite roles (circulating, procedure, recovery) — and can function independently from day one
- Hold or are pursuing their CGRN certification to access higher-paying hospital-based assignments
- Are comfortable with moderate sedation administration in settings where that is the RN’s responsibility
- Want broad geographic flexibility — GI jobs are available across hospital and outpatient settings in virtually every market, making it one of the more geographically flexible travel specialties
GI travel nursing is less well suited for nurses whose GI experience is limited to a single facility type or a narrow procedure mix. The self-sufficiency expectation on travel assignments is high — GI suites move fast, and orientations are short.
How to Find the Best GI/Endoscopy Travel Assignments
- Document your procedure experience specifically. List your experience by procedure type and estimated volume — ERCP, EUS, colonoscopy, upper endoscopy — not just “GI experience.” Detailed procedure documentation significantly improves submission quality and increases callback rates at higher-paying facilities.
- Submit to multiple agencies. GI positions are competitive in high-paying markets. Submitting to two or three agencies simultaneously increases your odds of getting in front of the right facility. Use Vivian Health to compare offers on the same position. See our Vivian Health Review for how that works.
- Target outpatient centers for schedule predictability, hospital programs for pay. If maximizing pay is the priority, target hospital-based GI programs with complex case mixes. If schedule quality and work-life balance matter more, outpatient endoscopy centers offer more consistent hours with less on-call exposure.
- Build your California license proactively. California has the highest average GI travel nurse pay in the country. The CA BRN takes 10-16 weeks to process endorsements. Apply well before you need it. See our NLC Compact States guide for full licensing strategy.
- Negotiate the sedation scope and case volume before you sign. These two variables affect your daily workload more than almost anything else in a GI assignment. See our Contract Negotiation guide for how to have that conversation effectively.
For a broader look at how GI/endoscopy compares to other travel nursing specialties, see our Highest Paying Travel Nurse Specialties guide.
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