Is it bad to retract your job offer?

Nurses General Nursing

Published

Hi! So I was offered a job at Hospital A and am now in the process of paperwork. I am scheduled for orientation in April and was told that I will sign the letter this week. However, I just received a call today from a recruiter from Hospital B (which I wished to work and is my top choice on my job search list) that she will fwd my resume and schedule an interview. So the scenario is... if I get a possible interview with Hospital B and it all goes well ...and they end up giving me an offer.... assuming that this will all happen before April.... is it bad to retract Hospital A's offer? Has anyone done this before? How should I inform Hospital A if I really made the decision ? And also, it can be very risky if everything is up in the air.

I'm looking forward to everyone's advice. Please don't beat me up :p thanks!!

Specializes in RN, BSN, CHDN.

Congratulations on your good news. Lots of people have several job opportunities and most people if they could would love the choice. When you get the job you want either phone the HR and let them know you had a couple of job offers and decided to take another opportunity, thank them for giving you the chance to interview at their hospital and stress it was a difficult decision. Or you can do it in writing both are acceptable. Make sure you dont close the door behind you, you never know when you may want to return.

Specializes in Home Care.

Its really no different than job hunting in the business world.

Go to the interview with hospital B, if B offers you a job take it and let A know. If B doesn't offer a job, you still have A.

Of course do not take back your acceptance until, and if, you get the offer in writing, from the place where you want to work. If it doesn't materialize, or falls through, you could end up with nothing if you took back your acceptance of the first offer prematurely. You know what they say about the bird in the hand and the bird in the bush.

Specializes in Respiratory Care/Step-down.

I was in the same position. If you get both positions take the job that will make you the happiest in the long run. No one is going to hold it against you. Like the other posters said, don't do anything until you have the firm offer. Good luck!

Specializes in operating room.
Or you can do it in writing both are exceptable.

Exceptable? .... sigh

Specializes in SRNA.

There's nothing wrong with it, in my opinion. Make sure your 2nd job offer is secure.

Specializes in SRNA.
Exceptable? .... sigh

Thank you for your valuable contribution to this thread. :down:

thanks for everyone's input!

if you retract your offer after signing... would you be burning the bridges with that hospital? what if you want to apply to their hospital in the future?

Specializes in Gerontology, nursing education.

Actually, a potential employee does not retract the job offer. He/she declines the offer (politely, of course, so as not to burn bridges). The potential employer is the one who retracts the job offer, rescinding it after it has already been offered to the prospective employee. There's a LOT of that nonsense going around in health care due to the oversupply of nurses and it is rude, and unprofessional on the part of the employer to retract an offer unless there's a pretty good reason (e.g., the prospective employee failed a drug test.)

I think you are showing a lot of wisdom to be concerned about declining the first job offer. There are some folks who might be kind of casual about it and then run the risk of alienating the first employer. (And yes, if you decline the first offer, please do so in a business letter, not verbally or via email. The facility will be disappointed to lose out on you but this way you part ways with them having a good impression about you.)

Awesome that you got an offer! :yeah: I hope all works out very well for you.

Moogie, i meant ... is it bad to tell them that I've decided to go somewhere else AFTER signing the letter? I want to be safe and accept the offer because I don't have an actual interview with hospital B yet ...(this is just a scenario but I'm curious as to how to approach it if it really happened). ugh! i feel greedy now haha new grads should NOT be greedy right?! Both hospitals are great but I like hospital B more.... AND i've done clinical there during school so I would love to work there.

+ Add a Comment