Pay Difference Between Full Time and PRN?

Nurses General Nursing

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Hi, I was wondering if there is usually a pay difference between being full time and PRN? A friend and I work at the same place and have the same amount of experience, but she makes $1 an hour more than me. Could it be because I am PRN and she is full time?

Specializes in med-surg, IMC, school nursing, NICU.

I'm not sure about CNA pay rates but when I was working a PRN job, I was making 39 dollars/hour plus diff. At my full time, I made 27 plus diff. Huge difference. Working PRN can be tough sometimes plus there's no benefits or PTO so they need that high pay rate to be an incentive. First to float, first to get cancelled, hard to bond with your coworkers, a very short orientation, certain charge nurses taking it upon themselves to give you the worst assignments since you aren't around that much... I wouldn't have done it if the pay wasn't so good!

It's usually the full time employee that gets paid less per hour. However, full time also (usually) comes with benefits such as insurance, PTO, merit raises, and stable hours (not frequently cancelled). If I worked full time years ago, my pay would have been cut in half. I had insurance through my husband as well as a couple agency jobs to pick up hours when I was cancelled, so there was no way I'd work staff.

The only time I've seen PRN get paid the same per hour was if there was no commitment to work weekend, holidays, or many days at all (Ex: day shift, works one 'wednesday' a month (chose this day as an example, usually not a day that people insist on having off)).

I cannot remember ever seeing a PRN employee make less, something doesn't seem right.

Specializes in mental health / psychiatic nursing.

PRN is typically paid higher to compensate for lack of benefits as others have pointed out. Is your hospital unionized and how long have the two of you been working at this place? Reason I ask is because the union contact at my facility dictates when pay raises occur. Base pay changes on "years of experience" and those "years" are defined by hours worked. A full-time employee, particularly one who works periodic overtime will see that base pay increase much sooner than some one working part-time or per-diem.

Specializes in Behavioral Health.

Hey, I don't think anyone has mentioned this yet, but usually PRN staff are paid more. Oh, wait, every single person has said the same thing over and over again? Shucks, maybe we ought to try reading a post or two before replying.

It's always good to try to negotiate pay as others have mentioned.. One way to do it is to find out general rates for your area...I've found sites like this one helpful. That way you know what you're aiming for as lowest and can work from there. Always ask for more than you're willing to work for and then be willing to drop a bit.

Specializes in Med/Surg, Tele, Psych.

Thanks for the tips! Now that I have 2 years of acute experience I will make sure to negotiate at my next PRN job!

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