Stock Markets May 26, 2026 10:21 AM

Temporary nursing demand edges higher as staffing indices climb

Jefferies data shows week-over-week uptick in temp nursing needs while bill rates remain largely steady

By Jordan Park
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AMN

Demand for temporary nursing staff rose 3.6% week-over-week following a 3.2% gain the prior week, according to Jefferies data. Nursing demand outpaced allied health within the Aya Travel RN & Allied Health Demand Index, while the JEF Bill Rate Index ticked up modestly to roughly $2,218 per week. Job listings data were mixed across vendors, and AMN signaled flat year-over-year demand with guidance suggesting sequential pressure for the next quarter.

Temporary nursing demand edges higher as staffing indices climb
AMN
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Key Points

  • Temporary nursing demand rose 3.6% week-over-week, following a 3.2% increase the prior week.
  • The Aya nursing component increased 4.4% week-over-week while allied rose 2.6%; the JEF Bill Rate Index moved up 0.1% to about $2,218 per week.
  • Aya reported total jobs available climbed 1.0% to 40,043; Vivian reported declines in travel RN and allied listings.

Data released by Jefferies on Tuesday show that demand for temporary nursing personnel increased 3.6% week-over-week, building on a 3.2% rise the previous week. The lift was driven by stronger movement in nursing roles relative to allied health positions, according to the Aya Travel RN & Allied Health Demand Index.

Within the Aya index, the nursing component climbed 4.4% week-over-week, while the allied component recorded a 2.6% week-over-week gain. Those shifts sit alongside a modest move in bill rates: the JEF Bill Rate Index, which aggregates pay rates from multiple sources, rose 0.1% week-over-week to about $2,218 per week after a 0.4% increase the prior week.

The JEF Bill Rate Index also contains forward quarter projections. It shows a flat quarter-over-quarter change of 0.0% for the second quarter of 2026 and a projected decline of 0.3% quarter-over-quarter for the third quarter of 2026.

Recruiting-platform-level data were mixed. Aya Healthcare reported total jobs available increased 1.0% week-over-week to 40,043. By contrast, data from Vivian indicated week-over-week declines in travel job availability, with registered nurse listings down 3.6% and allied health positions down 5.8%.

The broader Aya Index has trended higher in recent months, rising 24% over the past 12 weeks and reaching its highest reading since December 9, 2025. Despite that recent run, the index remains about 29% below pre-COVID levels.

On the corporate front, AMN Healthcare Services reported during its first quarter 2026 earnings call that demand for nurse and allied roles was roughly flat year-over-year. The company also provided second quarter guidance for nurse and allied revenue that, when excluding strike-related activity, implies a sequential decrease.

Taken together, the metrics depict a staffing market with near-term demand gains concentrated in nursing, modest upward pressure on bill rates, and divergent platform-level job availability. Forward-looking bill rate projections suggest stabilization in the near term followed by a modest decline into the third quarter of 2026.


Key points

  • Temporary nursing demand rose 3.6% week-over-week; the prior week saw a 3.2% increase.
  • The Aya nursing component grew 4.4% week-over-week versus a 2.6% rise in allied health; the JEF Bill Rate Index increased 0.1% to approximately $2,218 per week.
  • Aya-reported job listings were up 1.0% to 40,043, while Vivian reported declines in RN and allied travel job availability.

Risks and uncertainties

  • Bill rate projections show a potential decline of 0.3% quarter-over-quarter in Q3 2026, which could pressure staffing revenue - impacting healthcare staffing firms and provider labor costs.
  • Divergent platform data on job availability introduces uncertainty about the persistence of demand gains - affecting hospital staffing operations and temporary workforce planning.
  • AMN's guidance implies sequential revenue pressure for nurse and allied lines excluding strike activity, creating potential near-term earnings risk for staffing providers.

Risks

  • JEF Bill Rate Index projects a 0.3% quarter-over-quarter decline in Q3 2026, which could compress staffing revenues and affect provider labor costs.
  • Inconsistent job listing trends across data vendors create uncertainty about the durability of demand, impacting hospital staffing and temporary workforce planning.
  • AMN's second quarter guidance implies a sequential decrease in nurse and allied revenue excluding strike-related activity, posing near-term earnings risk for staffing firms.

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