Sign-on Bonus contract terms

Nurses General Nursing

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I would be interested in hearing the contract terms other hospitals offer on sign-on bonuses, after my own recent (bad) experience with one.

I recently accepted a full time position in this hospital. At the time of interview, offer, and acceptance, there was no mention of a bonus nor of any commitment. When I started work, and filled out all the papers in HR, they said I was "eligible" for a sign-on bonus with a 4-year commitment and to speak with my supervisor if I was interested. I did, and she wasn't even aware of it, but checked into it and then came back and said I was eligible and gave me a contract and a separate promissory note, both already signed by 4 administrators of the hospital.

I looked it over for a day, and there were terms that made me very uncomfortable. Such as:

"Recruit agrees to execute a Promissory Note made payable to in the amount of bonus which will expire unpon the completion of the four years of service."

"If prior to the completion of four years of service, Recruit resigns, quits, self-terminates or otherwise leaves the service of for any reason including forced termination initiated by , Recruit agrees to pay the $7500.00 Bonus that he/she received in full within 90 of separation."

"If Recruit is terminated for just cause prior to the completion of four years of service, Recruit agrees to pay the $7500.00 Bonus that he/she received in full within 90 days of separation".

Well, my problems were many! First off, they would tax the you-know-what out of it, so that I would net maybe only $4000. Not really a lot of money for a 4-year commitment when you think about it.

Secondly, there was no proration clause. This was my first sign-on bonus, but I have worked several seasonal contracts where they have a monthly stipend bonus and there is always a proration clause, where if you don't finish the contract, you owe them a prorated amount based on how much time you did finish.

Thirdly, I was hired for a newly created position in this hospital. What if they eliminated the position and did not have another comparable full time position? What if I got sick with some longterm illness or injury and had to leave? Not only would I be cash-strapped, but I would have this debt to the hospital!

Lastly, a legal promissory note? In my mind, that then makes it a loan, and not a bonus. In fact, there would be interest (at an unspecified rate) if not paid back within 90 days, and clauses about having to pay their legal expenses if I defaulted and they had to collect. This was not a bonus!!

I asked them if we could modify and reword the contract, and they said no. So I told them that I would decline the bonus, thank you very much for the offer, etc. I kept the original unsigned contract in my possession.

There is more to the story. In a nutshell, they actually paid me the bonus by direct deposit to my bank account, after I had verbally declined it! And then (I felt) the HR guy tried to coerce me into accepting it and signing the contract, even after I had declined it.

(I gave the net amount back, and they finally agreed that, since it was their "mistake", to be responsible for getting the taxes back from the IRS. (I hope it doesn't screw up my taxes for this year!))

My question for you is this: For those who had received sign-on bonuses, what kind of terms did they give you? What was the length of your commitment? Was there any kind of prorated schedule if you left before your commitment? Could they initiate a "forced termination" and then demand the money back? Did they make you sign an actual legal promissory note?

I'm really interested in hearing how other hospitals handle this. Thanks!

Specializes in SICU, PACU, Public health.

My 3500 bonus was worded in the contract as a loan. I received it while I was still in school, and it is prorated monthly. I promised to give them 18 months for 3500. I also got the same loan through the state and luckily they are both being counted at the same time. The state loan says as long as I am working full time in Georgia as an RN, they pay my loan back. they send me a form every 3 months for my supervisor to sign. The nice thing about these service canceallable loans is that they can't be counted as income, and are not taxed. Our hopsital does not do sign on bonuses anymore.

Specializes in Tele, ICU, ER.

My hospital doesn't do sign-on bonuses. But if you accept tuition reimbursement, you owe them time, or you pay it back. Generally, I don't accept anything from my job that's based on my staying there. I love my job, but you know what? I want my options. That's worth more than the money to me. And yep, I'm paying out of pocket for my BSN. Sure keeps me studying hard!

Specializes in ER/Trauma.
the hospitals that do offer bonuses (to my knowledge) pro-rate the payback rather than wanting the whole amount back.

That's the case at mine.

I signed on for a $2000 for a 12 month contract. If I am terminated or I quit, I have to pay the remainder.

I would not sign a 4 year contract! That's just asking for trouble! :eek:

Specializes in ICU of all kinds, CVICU, Cath Lab, ER..

Here is my story. I made the move from Staff RN to Travel Nurse so that I could move back to my home town (no plans to remain there) - long story short, I learned the hard way to ALWAYS GET IT IN WRITING! As a Travel RN, there were several times I got cheated out of "verbal" promises. So! When the time came to move to my current state of residence, I used my head and insisted that when I moved to the town near Mickey Mouse land, I went as a staff RN and had every offer of bonus, compensation, allowance, etc. put in writing and signed by the head of HR for the huge hospital I agreed to work for (3 year contract).

Part of the contract was that on the day I showed up for work/orientation, I would receive several thousand dollars as compensation for housing, moving costs, etc. I had that in writing because it was actually the headline in the advertisement to entice nurses to move.

Imagine my shock when I walked into Human Resources and they announced, "oh we don't do that anymore...we will give you the first part of reimbursement for the move after you've been with us for 3 months".

I calmly pulled out my contract, insisted they photocopy it and let the head of HR know that when they agreed to honor my contract, they could reach me at the home I had rented when I moved to Mickey Mouse land to work for them. "Oh, and by the way, don't wait too long because I had plans to apply at another hospital on the way home from this meeting."

Two and one-half years later, they tried again to make a change, i.e., they announced in the newspaper that they no longer needed to pay 35% night shift differential.. they would be lowering it to 25%. I marched into the HR offices with my contract and reminded them that I was supposed to receive the 35% shift differential for the final 6 months of my contract - they refused to continue the 35% and I gave two weeks notice and took a position 30 miles closer to my home for more money.

I have a lawyer in my family and I followed his advice and came out ahead; I would also say that I would NEVER sign any agreement to repay the hospital for the bonus. The hours I worked were valid hours; I did not feel the need to compensate the hospital for hiring me.

Specializes in ICU, Research, Corrections.

5K for one year. If I quit, I have to pay it ALL back. It is paid out in 3 installments and it is taxed.

All in all, it has worked out fine. I would have taken the job without a bonus.

Here is my story. I made the move from Staff RN to Travel Nurse so that I could move back to my home town (no plans to remain there) - long story short, I learned the hard way to ALWAYS GET IT IN WRITING! As a Travel RN, there were several times I got cheated out of "verbal" promises. So! When the time came to move to my current state of residence, I used my head and insisted that when I moved to the town near Mickey Mouse land, I went as a staff RN and had every offer of bonus, compensation, allowance, etc. put in writing and signed by the head of HR for the huge hospital I agreed to work for (3 year contract).

Part of the contract was that on the day I showed up for work/orientation, I would receive several thousand dollars as compensation for housing, moving costs, etc. I had that in writing because it was actually the headline in the advertisement to entice nurses to move.

Imagine my shock when I walked into Human Resources and they announced, "oh we don't do that anymore...we will give you the first part of reimbursement for the move after you've been with us for 3 months".

I calmly pulled out my contract, insisted they photocopy it and let the head of HR know that when they agreed to honor my contract, they could reach me at the home I had rented when I moved to Mickey Mouse land to work for them. "Oh, and by the way, don't wait too long because I had plans to apply at another hospital on the way home from this meeting."

Two and one-half years later, they tried again to make a change, i.e., they announced in the newspaper that they no longer needed to pay 35% night shift differential.. they would be lowering it to 25%. I marched into the HR offices with my contract and reminded them that I was supposed to receive the 35% shift differential for the final 6 months of my contract - they refused to continue the 35% and I gave two weeks notice and took a position 30 miles closer to my home for more money.

I have a lawyer in my family and I followed his advice and came out ahead; I would also say that I would NEVER sign any agreement to repay the hospital for the bonus. The hours I worked were valid hours; I did not feel the need to compensate the hospital for hiring me.

This is why nurses need to be Independant Contractors, who have their pay, compensation, benefits, and working conditions, written out in a contract by attorneys who they hired, and who have THEIR BEST INTERESTS AT HEART!

The concept of being an employee has worn out its welcome.

Lindarn, RN, BSN, CCRN

Spokane, Washington

My hospital does not have a sign-on bonus ... but instead, offers a retention bonus. You get the bonus on your anniversary date at intervals throughout your length of employment. As your seniority increases, so does the amount of the bonus.

By giving the bonuses this way, there is no need for a contract and "no strings attached" to the bonuses. If you stay long enough to reach your anniversary, you get some extra money. If you leave prior to your anniversary date, you don't. It gives you an incentive to stay, but there is no "punishent" if you leave and no hassles with paperwork, taxes, etc.

I think it is a better idea than giving bonuses "up front" and then having to deal with all of the possible "what if'" scenarios in a contract.

I actually like this idea a WHOLE LOT better than the sign-ons! My facility gives a no-strings attached bonus for new grads in high need areas (like nights)that comes in the form of a grand up front (in the first month anyway), then another two grand after a few more months, then the last thousand on the one-year anniversary for a total of $4,000. And you know what? Everyone gets their first check (thanks for the thousand bucks!) and sometimes the second one (if they haven't switched to a shift that doesn't offer that bonus by then). After that, I've seen new grads leave immediately. They wait out the five or six months then outta there to the next sign-on! Ridiculous. Job hopping, but that's another thread.

I like the idea of getting a few bucks up front (it's a nice gift to a new grad who's trying to catch up on bills) but then giving the big bang at the one year mark. That's when 75% of them are gone!

Here is my story. I made the move from Staff RN to Travel Nurse so that I could move back to my home town (no plans to remain there) - long story short, I learned the hard way to ALWAYS GET IT IN WRITING! As a Travel RN, there were several times I got cheated out of "verbal" promises. So! When the time came to move to my current state of residence, I used my head and insisted that when I moved to the town near Mickey Mouse land, I went as a staff RN and had every offer of bonus, compensation, allowance, etc. put in writing and signed by the head of HR for the huge hospital I agreed to work for (3 year contract).....

--Edited for brevity of responding post--

I have a lawyer in my family and I followed his advice and came out ahead; I would also say that I would NEVER sign any agreement to repay the hospital for the bonus. The hours I worked were valid hours; I did not feel the need to compensate the hospital for hiring me.

A person after my own heart! People think I'm too particular sometimes, but you know what? I don't get screwed over ;)

Specializes in Diabetes ED, (CDE), CCU, Pulmonary/HIV.

I've never liked the idea of sign-on bonuses. Better would be to increase hourly rate or salary. Then the increase is permanent--not just a one time deal. Also would count toward retirement, 403(b) or 401(k) plans, and group life insurance, etc.

I was offered $3,000 sign on bonus once for one year commitment, after 3 months of orientation. Not too bad of a deal, but place was so bad, I left after four months without taking a bonus.

(I gave the net amount back, and they finally agreed that, since it was their "mistake", to be responsible for getting the taxes back from the IRS. (I hope it doesn't screw up my taxes for this year!))

This has me a bit concerned. Did they give you a check with a stub showing taxes were taken out under your social security #?! Did you see that amount adjusted on a follow-up pay stub?! It needs to be. I would check with your accountant ASAP. They might want you to get something in writing on this. They might also be willing to check your stubs and verify the company did indeed straighten this out. This is important. I know someone who had a similiar problem regarding a bonus and it was a mess come tax time. Good luck.

Specializes in ICU, L&D, Home Health.

I went went to nursing school I signed a tuition agreement to work for the hospital or its affiliates for two years full-time after graduation. This was the equivalent of $12 grand. If I left before the two years time I had to pay everything back within 30 days on a prorated basis.

Of course, I met my husband three weeks into nursing school (and post contract-signing). After a little over a year of traveling two hours each way to work, I left. Thank God it wasn't a four year contract. The one the OP was offered sounds a bit draconian!

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