The Ultimate Guide to Travel Healthcare Housing in 2026
Finding the right housing is one of the most important aspects of a travel healthcare assignment. Whether you’re moving to a new city for a few weeks or several months, having comfortable, safe, and affordable housing accommodations can make a huge difference in your overall experience. In 2026, the housing landscape for travel healthcare professionals continues to evolve, offering more independent options, resources, and tools than ever before.

Know Your Housing Options
There are many housing routes you can take. Here are a few:
- Short-term/furnished rentals — from apartments to houses to condos — with furnished rooms and utilities included.
- Extended-stay hotels or corporate-style short-term rentals — sometimes a good fallback for short assignments or last-minute placements.
- Month-to-month furnished apartments — giving flexibility to match assignment length without signing long-term leases.
- Sublets or temporary leases from landlords aware of travel-staff needs — occasionally available if you negotiate terms carefully.
Helpful Websites & Platforms for Travel Healthcare Housing
Here are several trusted resources that many healthcare travelers use when looking for housing:
| Website / Platform | What It Offers / Why It’s Useful |
| Furnished Finder | One of the largest dedicated marketplaces for furnished, short-term rentals for travel nurses and other healthcare travelers. Their listings tend to be month-to-month, furnished, and often more stable than vacation-style rentals. furnishedfinder.com |
| Anyplace | Offers flexible-term furnished apartments that are move-in ready, including utilities and often with short-term lease options. Useful for assignments needing quick, flexible housing. anyplace.com |
| Transplant Housing | Specializes in furnished rentals tailored to traveling healthcare professionals, including condos, apartments, and houses across many U.S. cities. transplanthousing.com |
| General rental platforms like Zillow, VRBO, Airbnb | Sometimes these platforms list furnished or short-term rentals. Useful when specialized housing sites have limited inventory, but check lease terms carefully. |
| Local / peer-based networks & social platforms (e.g., Facebook housing groups for travel nurses) | Many traveling staff find sublets or roommates through social groups. Offers flexibility and sometimes affordability, but do due diligence. The Gypsy Nurse offers a great housing group. |
How to Budget & Plan Smart When Finding Housing
- Know your stipend amount and aim to stay under it. If you find housing below your allotted stipend, it is most likely extra income in your pocket. (TNAA | TotalMed lets you keep all of this; other agencies may not. Be sure to check.)
- Compare rental rates, commute times, and amenities. Sometimes, slightly farther housing with lower rent or better amenities is preferable to high-cost units near the hospital.
- Negotiate directly when possible. Many furnished-rental platforms allow landlords to adjust terms or offer discounts, especially for typical 12-week assignments.
What to Look For in a Furnished Short-Term Rental
When evaluating potential housing, make sure the unit:
- Is furnished (bed, basic furniture, kitchen, etc.), so you don’t have to buy or bring furniture.
- Includes utilities (electricity, water, internet, etc.) to simplify costs and logistics.
- Offers short-term or month-to-month lease options to match your assignment duration.
- Is in a safe neighborhood with a reasonable commute to your facility.
- Has amenities: kitchen, in-unit or on-site laundry, parking (if needed), and reliable internet.
- Provides clear lease agreements with transparent deposit, termination, and sub-leasing policies.
Practical Tips to Make Housing Work for You
- Submit multiple housing requests on broader marketplaces like Furnished Finder to increase your chances of responses.
- If you use general rental or vacation platforms (Airbnb, VRBO, Zillow), always confirm lease length and furnished status before committing.
- Secure housing before your assignment starts to avoid costly last-minute options.
- Network with other travel staff — they may know local landlords who are open to short-term leases or sublets.
Why This Guide Matters for 2026 Healthcare Travelers
In 2026, many travel healthcare professionals are opting to control their own housing rather than rely on agency-provided accommodations. That means knowing where to look, what to expect, and how to budget becomes key. With the right strategy and trusted platforms, you can find housing that’s comfortable, affordable, and flexible enough to match your assignments.
Your next adventure deserves a comfy place to stay. Explore travel healthcare jobs with housing perks on the TNAA | TotalMed job board.







