Nursing Job Board
Our nursing job board offers thousands of up-to-date listings in most specialties — including ER nurses, ICU nurses, pediatric nurses, surgical nurses, home-health nurses, telemetry, oncology, geriatrics, psychiatric nursing, and more. Each listing provides transparent salary ranges, certification requirements, benefits, and employer reviews so you can make informed career decisions.
You will find them categorized in either Hospital & Facility or Community & Other
We offer two Job Board Company option links by each career field options LinkedIn & Indeed.
Hospital & Facility
Certified Nursing Assistant (CNA) — Provides basic patient care (bathing, feeding, vital signs) under supervision of nursing staff.
Licensed Practical Nurse / Licensed Vocational Nurse (LPN / LVN) — Works under an RN or physician to provide routine nursing care in long-term care, clinics, hospitals.
Registered Nurse (RN) — The broadest category: assesses patients, administers treatments, coordinates care in hospitals, clinics, home health, etc.
Charge Nurse / Unit Nurse Manager — An RN who oversees a specific unit/shift, manages staffing, workflow, and may still provide direct care.
Clinical Nurse Specialist (CNS) — Advanced practice nurse specializing in a particular area (e.g., oncology, cardiology), also involved in research, education, quality improvement.
Labor & Delivery (L&D) Nurse — Specialized RN in obstetrics, caring for women in labor, delivery, postpartum care.
Neonatal Nurse (NICU Nurse) — Works with newborns, especially premature or critically ill infants, in neonatal intensive care units.
Pediatric Nurse — Cares for children from infancy through adolescence across a variety of settings (hospitals, clinics, schools).
Medical-Surgical Nurse (Med-Surg Nurse) — A very common RN role caring for adult patients with a wide variety of medical conditions; often viewed as a “generalist” adult care floor.
Critical Care / ICU Nurse — RN who cares for the most critically ill patients, often in intensive care units, requires advanced skills.
Emergency Room (ER) Nurse — Works in the emergency department, dealing with urgent, unpredictable, acute medical conditions and trauma.
Operating Room (OR) Nurse / Perioperative Nurse — Manages nursing care before, during, and after surgical procedures, assists surgical team.
Oncology Nurse — Specializes in caring for patients with cancer; administers chemotherapy, manages side-effects, supports patients through treatment.
Geriatric / Long-Term Care Nurse — Works with elderly patients in nursing homes, assisted living, or in-home, focusing on chronic conditions, aging issues.
Nurse Case Manager — Coordinates care for patients across settings (hospital to home), manages resources, ensures continuity and cost-effective care.
Nurse Practitioner (NP) — Advanced practice RN who can diagnose, treat, prescribe (in many states independently); various specialties exist (family, adult, pediatrics, psych).
Nurse Anesthetist (CRNA – Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetist) — Advanced practice nurse providing anesthesia and perioperative pain management; one of the highest paid nursing roles.
Travel / Float Pool Nurse — RN who moves between units, hospitals, or locations, filling staffing needs; may require adaptability and broad skill set.
Director of Nursing / Chief Nursing Officer (CNO) — Executive leadership role overseeing nursing staff, policy, budgeting, quality of care at facility or system level.
Community & Other
Nurse Educator — Works in academic or clinical settings training students or staff, developing curricula, ensuring professional development.
Nurse Informaticist / Informatics Nurse — Focuses on healthcare information systems, data management, improving workflows via technology.
Home Health Nurse — Provides nursing care in patients’ homes, often for chronic illness management, post-hospitalization recovery.
School Nurse — Works in educational settings caring for children/adolescents, managing health concerns, screenings, health education.
Telehealth / Remote Monitoring Nurse — Uses technology to monitor patients remotely, manage care outside traditional hospital settings.
Travel Nurse — Often highly experienced RNs who take short-term contracts in different locations, often to fill staffing shortages.
Nurse Midwife (Certified Nurse Midwife – CNM) — Advanced practice nurse providing obstetric, gynecologic, and newborn care; may work in hospitals or birthing centers.
Nurse Practitioner (NP) — Advanced practice RN who can diagnose, treat, prescribe (in many states independently); various specialties exist (family, adult, pediatrics, psych).
Public Health Nurse / Community Health Nurse — Works in population health, prevention, health education, clinic outreach, policy and program development.
Informatics / Quality Improvement Nurse — Focus on using data/technology to improve patient care, outcomes, workflows, reduce costs.
Travel / Float Pool Nurse — RN who moves between units, hospitals, or locations, filling staffing needs; may require adaptability and broad skill set.
Clinical Research Nurse — Works in research trials, manages patient enrollment, data collection, monitors safety, ensures protocol compliance.
Flight Nurse - On Helicopters and other transport air support vehicles to aid in emergency transport of the patient.
Forensic / Correctional Nurse — Works in legal or correctional settings (jails, prisons), provides care to incarcerated individuals, deals with specific challenges of environment.